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Welcome to pyattck’s Documentation

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A Python package to interact with MITRE ATT&CK Frameworks
Current Version is 5.0.0

pyattck is a light-weight framework for MITRE ATT&CK Frameworks. This package extracts details from the MITRE Enterprise, PRE-ATT&CK, Mobile, and ICS Frameworks.

Why?

pyattck assist organizations and individuals with accessing MITRE ATT&CK Framework(s) in a programmatic way. Meaning, you can access all defined actors, malwares, mitigations, tactics, techniques, and tools defined by the Enterprise, Mobile, Pre-Attck, and ICS frameworks via a command-line utility or embedding into your own code base.

There are many reasons why you would want to access this data in an automated (scripted/coded) way but a few examples are:

  • Generate reports with additional details about a technique (or any object defined in the framework)
  • A build pipeline of detection rules with additional MITRE ATT&CK details for categorization
  • Quickly searching for specific details about a technique without navigating a web page

There are other benefits that pyattck provide as well which includes the ability to provide additional contextual data. You can find more information about this data here but the basics are that pyattck utilizes multiple open-source repositorties to gather additional contextual data like commands used to execute a technique, country and other details about a malicious actor, other variants of malware similar to a defined tool/malware, etc.

This additional context is what makes pyattck truly powerful and enables people to build more robust testing and validation of their detection rules, validates testing assumptions, etc. Truly there are countless ways that pyattck could be utilized to help blue, red, and purple teams defend organizations (and themselves).

Features

The pyattck package retrieves all Tactics, Techniques, Actors, Malware, Tools, and Mitigations from the MITRE ATT&CK Frameworks as well as any defined relationships within the MITRE ATT&CK dataset (including subtechniques).

In addition, Techniques, Actors, and Tools (if applicable) now have collected data from third-party resources that are accessible via properties on a technique. For more detailed information about these features, see External Datasets.

The pyattck package allows you to:

  • Specify a URL or local file path for the MITRE ATT&CK Enterprise Framework json, generated dataset, and/or a config.yml file.
  • Retrieve an image_logo of an actor (when available). If an image_logo isn’t available, it generates an ascii_logo.
  • Search the external dataset for external commands that are similar using search_commands.
  • Access data from the MITRE PRE-ATT&CK Framework
  • Access data from the MITRE Mobile ATT&CK Framework
  • Access data from the MITRE ICS ATT&CK Framework
  • Access subtechniques as nested objects or you can turn it off and access as normal technique
  • Access compliance controls (currently NIST 800-53 v5) related to a MITRE ATT&CK Technique

Table of Contents

  1. Installation
  2. Usage Example
  3. Configuration
  4. Notes

Installation

You can install pyattack on OS X, Linux, or Windows. You can also install it directly from the source. To install, see the commands under the relevant operating system heading, below.

Prerequisites

The following libraries are required and installed by pyattck:

requests
pendulum>=1.2.3,<1.3
pyfiglet==0.8.post1
PyYaml>=5.4.1
Pillow==8.2.0
fire==0.3.1

macOS, Linux and Windows:

pip install pyattck

Installing from source

git clone https://github.com/swimlane/pyattck.git
cd pyattck
python setup.py install

Usage example

To use pyattck you must instantiate an Attck object. Although you can interact directly with each class, the intended use is through a Attck object:

from pyattck import Attck

attack = Attck()

By default, subtechniques are accessible under each technique object. You can turn this behavior off by passing nested_subtechniques=False when creating your Attck object.

As an example, the default behavior looks like the following example:

from pyattck import Attck

attack = Attck()

for technique in attack.enterprise.techniques:
    print(technique.id)
    print(technique.name)
    for subtechnique in technique.subtechniques:
        print(subtechnique.id)
        print(subtechnique.name)

You can access the following main properties on your Attck object:

  • enterprise
  • preattack
  • mobile
  • ics

Once you specify the MITRE ATT&CK Framework, you can access additional properties.

Here are the accessible objects under the Enterprise property:

For more information on object types under the enterprise property, see Enterprise.

Here are the accessible objects under the PreAttck property:

For more information on object types under the preattck property, see PreAttck.

Here are the accessible objects under the Mobile property:

For more information on object types under the mobile property, see Mobile.

Here are the accessible objects under the ICS property:

For more information on object types under the ics property, see ICS.

Configuration

pyattck allows you to configure if you store external data and where it is stored.

from pyattck import Attck

attck = Attck(
    nested_subtechniques=True,
    use_config=False,
    save_config=False,
    config_file_path='~/pyattck/config.yml',
    data_path='~/pyattck/data',
    enterprise_attck_json="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitre/cti/master/enterprise-attack/enterprise-attack.json",
    pre_attck_json="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitre/cti/master/pre-attack/pre-attack.json",
    mobile_attck_json="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitre/cti/master/mobile-attack/mobile-attack.json",
    ics_attck_json="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitre/cti/master/ics-attack/ics-attack.json",
    nist_controls_json="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/center-for-threat-informed-defense/attack-control-framework-mappings/master/frameworks/ATT%26CK-v9.0/nist800-53-r5/stix/nist800-53-r5-controls.json",
    generated_attck_json="https://swimlane-pyattck.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/generated_attck_data.json",
    generated_nist_json="https://swimlane-pyattck.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/attck_to_nist_controls.json",
    **kwargs
)

By default, pyattck will (now) pull the latest external data from their respective locations using HTTP GET requests. pyattck currently pulls from the following locations:

  • enterprise_attck_json=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitre/cti/master/enterprise-attack/enterprise-attack.json”
  • pre_attck_json=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitre/cti/master/pre-attack/pre-attack.json”
  • mobile_attck_json=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitre/cti/master/mobile-attack/mobile-attack.json”
  • ics_attck_json=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mitre/cti/master/ics-attack/ics-attack.json”
  • nist_controls_json=”https://raw.githubusercontent.com/center-for-threat-informed-defense/attack-control-framework-mappings/master/frameworks/ATT%26CK-v9.0/nist800-53-r5/stix/nist800-53-r5-controls.json”
  • generated_attck_json=”https://swimlane-pyattck.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/generated_attck_data.json”
  • generated_nist_json=”https://swimlane-pyattck.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/attck_to_nist_controls.json”

You have several options when instantiating the Attck object. As of 4.0.0 you can now specify any of the following options:

  • use_config - When you specify this argument as True pyattck will attempt to retrieve the configuration specified in the config_file_path location. If this file is corrupted or cannot be found, we will default to retrieving data from the specified *_attck_json locations.
  • save_config - When you specify this argument as True pyattck will save the configuration file to the specified location set by config_file_path. Additionally, we will save all downloaded files to the data_path location specified. If you have specified a local path location instead of a download URL for any of the *_attck_json parameters we will save this location in our configuration and reference this location going forward.
  • config_file_path - The path to store a configuration file. Default is ~/pyattck/config.yml
  • data_path - The path to store any data files downloaded to the local system. Default is ~/pyattck/data

JSON Locations

Additionally, you can specify the location for each individual *_attck_json files by passing in either a URI or a local file path. If you have passed in a local file path, we will simply read from this file.

If you have used the default values or specified an alternative URI location to retrieve these JSON files from, you can additionally pass in **kwargs that will be passed along to the Requests python package when performing any HTTP requests.

Note

We understand that there are many different open-source projects being released, even on a daily basis, but we wanted to provide a straightforward Python package that allowed the user to identify known relationships between all verticals of the MITRE ATT&CK Framework.

If you are unfamiliar with the MITRE ATT&CK Framework, there are a few key components to ensure you have a firm grasp around. The first is Tactics & Techniques. When looking at the MITRE ATT&CK Framework, the Tactics are the columns and represent the different phases of an attack.

The MITRE ATT&CK Framework is NOT an all encompassing/defacto security coverage map - it is rather a FRAMEWORK and additional avenues should also be considered when assessing your security posture.

Techniques are the rows of the framework and are categorized underneath specific Tactics (columns). They are data points within the framework that provides guidance when assessing your security gaps. Additionally, (most) Techniques contain mitigation guidance in addition to information about their relationship to tools, malware, and even actors/groups that have used this technique during recorded attacks.

This means, if your organization is focused on TTPs (Tactics Techniques and Procedures) used by certain actors/groups then MITRE ATT&CK Framework is perfect for you. If you are not at this security maturing within your organization, no worries! The ATT&CK Framework still provides really good guidance in a simple and straightforward layout, but programmatically it is not straightforward–especially if you wanted to measure (or map) your security controls using the framework.

Developing and Testing

You can add features or bugs or run the code in a development environement.

  1. To get a development and testing environment up and running, use this Dockerfile.
  2. To use the Dockerfile run, cd to this repository directory and run:
docker build --force-rm -t pyattck .
  1. Next, run the docker container:
docker run pyattck

Running this calls the test python file in bin/test.py.

  1. Modify the test python file for additional testing and development.

Running the tests

Tests within this project should cover all available properties and methods. As this project grows the tests will become more robust but for now we are testing that they exist and return outputs.

Contributing

Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.

Versioning

We use SemVer for versioning.

Change Log

For details on features for a specific version of pyattck, see the CHANGELOG.md.

Authors

See also the list of contributors.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License.