Blue Team Tools

#RoadMap As a junior blue team member, focusing on foundational tools and concepts is key. Here’s a breakdown of essential tools to learn, categorized for clarity: 1. Security Information and Event Management (SIEM): Splunk: A widely used SIEM platform for log analysis, threat detection, and incident response. Understanding Splunk query language (SPL) is crucial. ELK Stack (Elasticsearch, Logstash, Kibana): An open-source alternative to Splunk, excellent for log management and analysis. Learning how to configure and use these components is valuable. Wazuh: A free and open-source host-based intrusion detection system (HIDS) and security information and event management (SIEM) system. 2. Intrusion Detection/Prevention Systems (IDS/IPS): Suricata: A powerful network IDS/IPS capable of real-time threat detection. Learn to write and understand Suricata rules. Snort: Another popular network IDS, similar to Suricata. Understanding Snort rules is essential. Zeek (Bro): A network security monitoring tool that analyzes network traffic and generates detailed logs. 3. Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR): Osquery: A tool for querying operating system data using SQL. Helps with host monitoring and threat detection. Sysmon (Windows): A Windows system service that logs detailed information about process creation, network connections, and file changes. 4. Log Analysis and Forensics: grep, awk, sed (Linux): Essential command-line tools for parsing and analyzing logs. PowerShell (Windows): A powerful scripting language for system administration and log analysis. Autopsy: A digital forensics platform for analyzing disk images and recovering files. 5. Vulnerability Scanning and Management: Nessus Essentials: A vulnerability scanner for identifying security weaknesses in systems. OpenVAS: An open-source vulnerability scanner. Nmap: A network scanning tool for discovering hosts and services. 6. Incident Response and Case Management: TheHive: An open-source incident response platform. CyberChef: A web-based tool for analyzing and decoding data. 7. Scripting and Automation: Python: A versatile language for scripting and automating security tasks. Bash (Linux): Essential for automating tasks in Linux environments. PowerShell (Windows): For Windows automation. Key Concepts to Learn: Networking Fundamentals: TCP/IP, network protocols, network topologies. ...

May 28, 2025 · 3 min · 0xAshes

My DFIR CTF Toolkit

This Roadmap outlines the core tools for tackling Digital Forensics and Incident Response (DFIR) Capture The Flag (CTF) challenges. It includes a brief description of each tool and links to learning resources. Core DFIR Tools Disk and File System Analysis Autopsy: A powerful, open-source digital forensics platform with a graphical user interface. It allows for disk imaging, file system analysis, data carving, keyword searching, web artifact analysis, and more through a modular design. ...

May 28, 2025 · 4 min · 0xAshes

CTF Categories

To play Capture the Flag (CTF) competitions you’ll need to build on your foundational knowledge in cybersecurity and develop hands-on skills in offensive and defensive techniques.CTFs often include both red team (offensive) and blue team (defensive) elements. Here’s a structured path: 🔰 Core Knowledge (Must-Have) Before diving into CTFs, make sure you’re solid on: Networking: TCP/IP, UDP, DNS, HTTP(S), ARP, ICMP, ports & protocols. Operating Systems: Linux: Bash, file permissions, process management, cron, logs. ...

May 28, 2025 · 2 min · 0xAshes

Welcome to 0xL33T Blog

Welcome to the official blog of the 0xL33T team! We post CTF writeups, tools, and hacking adventures.

May 28, 2025 · 1 min