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Capture HTTP traffic
editCapture HTTP traffic
editThe HTTP protocol has several specific configuration options. Here is a
sample configuration for the http
section of the packetbeat.yml
config file:
packetbeat.protocols: - type: http ports: [80, 8080, 8000, 5000, 8002] hide_keywords: ["pass", "password", "passwd"] send_headers: ["User-Agent", "Cookie", "Set-Cookie"] split_coookie: true real_ip_header: "X-Forwarded-For"
Configuration options
editAlso see Common protocol options.
hide_keywords
editA list of query parameters that Packetbeat will automatically censor in
the transactions that it saves. The values associated with these parameters are replaced
by 'xxxxx'
. By default, no changes are made to the HTTP messages.
Packetbeat has this option because, unlike SQL traffic, which typically only contains the hashes of the passwords, HTTP traffic may contain sensitive data. To reduce security risks, you can configure this option to avoid sending the contents of certain HTTP POST parameters.
This option replaces query parameters from GET requests and top-level
parameters from POST requests. If sensitive data is encoded inside a
parameter that you don’t specify here, Packetbeat cannot censor it. Also, note that if
you configure Packetbeat to save the raw request and response fields (see the send_request
and the send_response
options), sensitive data may be present in those
fields.
redact_authorization
editWhen this option is enabled, Packetbeat obscures the value of
Authorization
and Proxy-Authorization
HTTP headers, and censors
those strings in the response.
You should set this option to true for transactions that use Basic Authentication because they may contain the base64 unencrypted username and password.
send_headers
editA list of header names to capture and send to Elasticsearch. These
headers are placed under the headers
dictionary in the resulting JSON.
send_all_headers
editInstead of sending a white list of headers to Elasticsearch, you can send all headers by setting this option to true. The default is false.
include_body_for
editThe list of content types for which Packetbeat exports the full HTTP payload. The HTTP body is available under
http.request.body
and http.response.body
for these Content-Types.
In addition, if send_response
option is enabled, then the HTTP body is exported together with the HTTP
headers under response
and if
send_request
enabled, then request
contains the entire HTTP message including the body.
In the following example, the HTML attachments of the HTTP responses are exported under the response
field and under
http.request.body
or http.response.body
:
packetbeat.protocols: - type: http ports: [80, 8080] send_response: true include_body_for: ["text/html"]
split_cookie
editIf the Cookie
or Set-Cookie
headers are sent, this option controls whether
they are split into individual values. For example, with this option set, an
HTTP response might result in the following JSON:
"response": { "code": 200, "headers": { "connection": "close", "content-language": "en", "content-type": "text/html; charset=utf-8", "date": "Fri, 21 Nov 2014 17:07:34 GMT", "server": "gunicorn/19.1.1", "set-cookie": { "csrftoken": "S9ZuJF8mvIMT5CL4T1Xqn32wkA6ZSeyf", "expires": "Fri, 20-Nov-2015 17:07:34 GMT", "max-age": "31449600", "path": "/" }, "vary": "Cookie, Accept-Language" }, "phrase": "OK" }
The default is false.
real_ip_header
editThe header field to extract the real IP from. This setting is useful when
you want to capture traffic behind a reverse proxy, but you want to get the geo-location
information. If this header is present and contains a valid IP addresses, the
information is used for the real_ip
field.
max_message_size
editIf an individual HTTP message is larger than this setting (in bytes), it will be trimmed to this size. Unless this value is very small (<1.5K), Packetbeat is able to still correctly follow the transaction and create an event for it. The default is 10485760 (10 MB).