Book Image

Microsoft Sentinel in Action - Second Edition

By : Richard Diver, Gary Bushey, John Perkins
Book Image

Microsoft Sentinel in Action - Second Edition

By: Richard Diver, Gary Bushey, John Perkins

Overview of this book

Microsoft Sentinel is a security information and event management (SIEM) tool developed by Microsoft that helps you integrate cloud security and artificial intelligence (AI). This book will teach you how to implement Microsoft Sentinel and understand how it can help detect security incidents in your environment with integrated AI, threat analysis, and built-in and community-driven logic. The first part of this book will introduce you to Microsoft Sentinel and Log Analytics, then move on to understanding data collection and management, as well as how to create effective Microsoft Sentinel queries to detect anomalous behaviors and activity patterns. The next part will focus on useful features, such as entity behavior analytics and Microsoft Sentinel playbooks, along with exploring the new bi-directional connector for ServiceNow. In the next part, you’ll be learning how to develop solutions that automate responses needed to handle security incidents and find out more about the latest developments in security, techniques to enhance your cloud security architecture, and explore how you can contribute to the security community. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned how to implement Microsoft Sentinel to fit your needs and protect your environment from cyber threats and other security issues.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
1
Section 1: Design and Implementation
4
Section 2: Data Connectors, Management, and Queries
9
Section 3: Security Threat Hunting
15
Section 4: Integration and Automation
18
Section 5: Operational Guidance

Types of playbooks

Currently, there are two types of playbooks, those that use the When a response to an Microsoft Sentinel alert is triggered logic app trigger and those that use the When Microsoft Sentinel incident creation rule was triggered logic app trigger. Each has its uses, as described in the following section.

For those playbooks that use When a response to an Microsoft Sentinel alert is triggered, referred to as Alert Playbooks going forward, they only work against alerts. This can be useful since, at the time of writing, they are the only playbooks that can be run manually, meaning that when you are looking at the alerts in the incident's view full details page, these are the only ones that can be run by clicking on the playbooks link. However, to use these on analytic rules, they must be applied to each one.

Those playbooks that use When Microsoft Sentinel incident creation rule was triggered, referred to as Incident playbooks going forward, are the only ones...