1. Meet the [system requirements](#requirements). The T-Pot installation needs at least 4 GB RAM and 64 GB free disk space as well as a working internet connection.
- All docker images have been rebuilt as micro containers based on Alpine Linux to even further reduce the image size and leading to image sizes (compressed) below the 50 MB mark. The uncompressed size of eMobility and the ELK stack could each be reduced by a whopping 600 MB!
- A "Everything" installation now takes roughly 1.6 GB download size
- **docker-compose**
- T-Pot containers are now being controlled and monitored through docker-compose and a single configuration file `/etc/tpot/tpot.yml` allowing for greater flexibility and resulting in easier image management (i.e. updated images).
- As a benefit only a single `systemd` script `/etc/systemd/system/tpot.service` is needed to start `systemctl start tpot` and stop `systemctl stop tpot` the T-Pot services.
- There are four pre-configured compose configurations which do reflect the T-Pot editions `/etc/tpot/compose`. Simply stop the T-Pot services and copy i.e. `cp /etc/tpot/compose/all.yml /etc/tpot/tpot.yml`, restart the T-Pot services and the selcted edition will be running after downloading the required docker images.
- **Introducing** [Spiderfoot](https://github.com/smicallef/spiderfoot) a open source intelligence automation tool.
- **Installation** procedure simplified
- Within the Ubuntu Installer you only have to choose language settings
- After the first reboot the T-Pot installer checks if internet and required services are reachable before the installation procedure begins
- T-Pot Installer now uses a “dialog” which looks way better than the old text based installer
-`tsec` user & password dialog is now part of the T-Pot Installer
- The self-signed certificate is now created automatically to reduce unnecessary overhead for novice users
- New ASCII logo and login screen pointing to web and ssh logins
- Hostnames are now generated using an offline name generator, which still produces funny and collision free hostnames
- **CVE IDs for Suricata**
- Our very own [Listbot](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/listbot) builds translation maps for Logstash. If Logstash registers a match the events' CVE ID will be stored alongside the event within Elasticsearch.
- **IP Reputations**
- [Listbot](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/listbot) also builds translation maps for blacklisted IPs
- Based upon 30+ publicly available IP blacklisting sources listbot creates a logstash translation map matching the events' source IP addresses against the IPs reputation
- If the source IP is known to a blacklist service a corresponding tag will be stored with the event
- Updates occur on every logstash container start; by default every 24h
- **Persistence** is now enabled by default and will keep honeypot logs and tools data in `/data/` and its sub-folders by default for 30 days. You may change that behavior in `/etc/tpot/logrotate/logrotate.conf`. ELK data however will be kept for 90 days by default. You may change that behavior in `/etc/tpot/curator/actions.yml`. Scripts will be triggered through `/etc/crontab`.
- We now have **160+ Visualizations** pre-configured and compiled to 14 individual **Kibana Dashboards** for every honeypot. Monitor all *honeypot events* locally on your T-Pot installation. Aside from *honeypot events* you can also view *Suricata NSM, Syslog and NGINX* events for a quick overview of local host events.
- View available IP reputation of any source IP address
T-Pot is based on the network installer of Ubuntu Server 16.04.x LTS.
The honeypot daemons as well as other support components being used have been containerized using [docker](http://docker.io).
This allows us to run multiple honeypot daemons on the same network interface while maintaining a small footprint and constrain each honeypot within its own environment.
While data within docker containers is volatile we do now ensure a default 30 day persistence of all relevant honeypot and tool data in the well known `/data` folder and sub-folders. The persistence configuration may be adjusted in `/etc/tpot/logrotate/logrotate.conf`. Once a docker container crashes, all other data produced within its environment is erased and a fresh instance is started from the corresponding docker image.<br>
Within the T-Pot project, we provide all the tools and documentation necessary to build your own honeypot system and contribute to our [community data view](http://sicherheitstacho.eu/?peers=communityPeers), a separate channel on our [Sicherheitstacho](http://sicherheitstacho.eu) that is powered by T-Pot community data.
The source code and configuration files are stored in individual GitHub repositories, which are linked below. The docker images are pre-configured for the T-Pot environment. If you want to run the docker images separately, make sure you study the docker-compose configuration (`/etc/tpot/tpot.yml`) and the T-Pot systemd script (`/etc/systemd/system/tpot.service`), as they provide a good starting point for implementing changes.
Depending on your installation type, whether you install on [real hardware](#hardware) or in a [virtual machine](#vm), make sure your designated T-Pot system meets the following requirements:
The installation of T-Pot is straight forward and heavily depends on a working, transparent and non-proxied up and running internet connection. Otherwise the installation **will fail!**
Firstly, decide if you want to download our prebuilt installation ISO image from [GitHub](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/tpotce/releases) ***or*** [create it yourself](#createiso).
We provide an installation ISO image for download (~50MB), which is created using the same [tool](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/tpotce) you can use yourself in order to create your own image. It will basically just save you some time downloading components and creating the ISO image.
You can download the prebuilt installation image from [GitHub](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/tpotce/releases) and jump to the [installation](#vm) section.
For transparency reasons and to give you the ability to customize your install, we provide you the [ISO Creator](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/tpotce) that enables you to create your own ISO installation image.
The script will download and install dependencies necessary to build the image on the invoking machine. It will further download the ubuntu network installer image (~50MB) which T-Pot is based on.
You may want to run T-Pot in a virtualized environment. The virtual system configuration depends on your virtualization provider.
We successfully tested T-Pot with [VirtualBox](https://www.virtualbox.org) and [VMWare](http://www.vmware.com) with just little modifications to the default machine configurations.
It is important to make sure you meet the [system requirements](#requirements) and assign a virtual harddisk >=64 GB, >=4 GB RAM and bridged networking to T-Pot.
If you want to use a wifi card as primary NIC for T-Pot, please be aware of the fact that not all network interface drivers support all wireless cards. E.g. in VirtualBox, you then have to choose the *"MT SERVER"* model of the NIC.
If you decide to run T-Pot on dedicated hardware, just follow these steps:
1. Burn a CD from the ISO image or make a bootable USB stick using the image. <br>
Whereas most CD burning tools allow you to burn from ISO images, the procedure to create a bootable USB stick from an ISO image depends on your system. There are various Windows GUI tools available, e.g. [this tip](http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows) might help you.<br> On [Linux](http://askubuntu.com/questions/59551/how-to-burn-a-iso-to-a-usb-device) or [MacOS](http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-mac-osx) you can use the tool *dd* or create the USB stick with T-Pot's [ISO Creator](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec).
2. Boot from the USB stick and install.
*Please note*: We will ensure the compatibility with the Intel NUC platform, as we really like the form factor, looks and build quality.
The installation requires very little interaction, only a locale and keyboard setting has to be answered for the basic linux installation. The system will reboot and please maintain an active internet connection. The T-Pot installer will start and ask you for an installation type, password for the **tsec** user and credentials for a **web user**. Everything else will be configured automatically. All docker images and other componenents will be downloaded. Depending on your network connection and the chosen installation type, the installation may take some time. During our tests (50Mbit down, 10Mbit up), the installation is usually finished within a 30 minute timeframe.
Once the installation is finished, the system will automatically reboot and you will be presented with the T-Pot login screen. On the console you may login with the **tsec** user:
Make sure your system is reachable through the internet. Otherwise it will not capture any attacks, other than the ones from your internal network! We recommend you put it in an unfiltered zone, where all TCP and UDP traffic is forwarded to T-Pot's network interface.
Basically, you can forward as many TCP ports as you want, as honeytrap dynamically binds any TCP port that is not covered by the other honeypot daemons.
In case you need external SSH access, forward TCP port 64295 to T-Pot, see below.
T-Pot requires outgoing git, http, https connections for updates (Ubuntu, Docker, GitHub, PyPi) and attack submission (ewsposter, hpfeeds). Ports and availability may vary based on your geographical location.
By default, the SSH daemon only allows access on **tcp/64295** with a user / password combination from RFC1918 networks. However, if you want to be able to login remotely via SSH you need to put your SSH keys on the host as described below.<br>
It is configured to prevent password login from official IP addresses and pubkey-authentication must be used. Copy your SSH keyfile to `/home/tsec/.ssh/authorized_keys` and set the appropriate permissions (`chmod 600 authorized_keys`) as well as the correct ownership (`chown tsec:tsec authorized_keys`).
If you do not have a SSH client at hand and still want to access the machine via SSH you can do so by directing your browser to `https://<your.ip>:64297`, enter
and **Kibana** will automagically load. The Kibana dashboard can be customized to fit your needs. By default, we haven't added any filtering, because the filters depend on your setup. E.g. you might want to filter out your incoming administrative ssh connections and connections to update servers.
If new versions of the components involved appear, we will test them and build new docker images. Those new docker images will be pushed to docker hub and downloaded to T-Pot and activated accordingly.
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## Community Data Submission
We provide T-Pot in order to make it accessible to all parties interested in honeypot deployment. By default, the data captured is submitted to a community backend. This community backend uses the data to feed a [community data view](http://sicherheitstacho.eu/?peers=communityPeers), a separate channel on our own [Sicherheitstacho](http://sicherheitstacho.eu), which is powered by our own set of honeypots.
Some features may be provided with updated docker images, others may require some hands on from your side.
You are always invited to participate in development on our [GitHub](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/tpotce) page.
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# Disclaimer
- We don't have access to your system. So we cannot remote-assist when you break your configuration. But you can simply reinstall.
- The software was designed with best effort security, not to be in stealth mode. Because then, we probably would not be able to provide those kind of honeypot services.
- You install and you run within your responsibility. Choose your deployment wisely as a system compromise can never be ruled out.
- Honeypots should - by design - not host any sensitive data. Make sure you don't add any.
- By default, your data is submitted to the community dashboard. You can disable this in the config. But hey, wouldn't it be better to contribute to the community?
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# FAQ
Please report any issues or questions on our [GitHub issue list](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/tpotce/issues), so the community can participate.
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# Contact
We provide the software **as is** in a Community Edition format. T-Pot is designed to run out of the box and with zero maintenance involved. <br>
We hope you understand that we cannot provide support on an individual basis. We will try to address questions, bugs and problems on our [GitHub issue list](https://github.com/dtag-dev-sec/tpotce/issues).
For general feedback you can write to cert @ telekom.de.
Without open source and the fruitful development community we are proud to be a part of T-Pot would not have been possible. Our thanks are extended but not limited to the following people and organizations:
Coffee just does not cut it anymore which is why we needed a different caffeine source and consumed *215* bottles of [Club Mate](https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Club-Mate) during the development of T-Pot 17.10 😇