Phoenix Studio

Convert indexed Sigma rules into analyst-ready detections.

This studio is built around Phoenix's own rule corpus, not a blank editor. Search by title or rule id, choose a live sigma-cli backend, then reveal pipelines only when you actually need them.

Indexed Rules

3,707

Ready to search

Backends

17

Live from sigconverter.io

CLI Versions

10

Newest: 2.0.2

Translation Workspace

Shape the rule before it leaves Phoenix

Tune Translation

Active Rule

PsExec Tool Execution From Suspicious Locations - PipeName

Target Profile

Splunk

Splunk SPL & tstats data model queries

Format Mode

Default

Plain SPL queries

Conversion Output

PsExec Tool Execution From Suspicious Locations - PipeName

Using Splunk · Default · sigma-cli 2.0.2

Translation controls

Adjust the rule on the left, then regenerate when you want a fresh backend-native query.

BackendSplunkFormatDefaultVersion2.0.2
title: PsExec Tool Execution From Suspicious Locations - PipeName
id: 41504465-5e3a-4a5b-a5b4-2a0baadd4463
related:
    - id: f3f3a972-f982-40ad-b63c-bca6afdfad7c
      type: derived
status: test
description: Detects PsExec default pipe creation where the image executed is located in a suspicious location. Which could indicate that the tool is being used in an attack
references:
    - https://www.jpcert.or.jp/english/pub/sr/ir_research.html
    - https://jpcertcc.github.io/ToolAnalysisResultSheet
author: Nasreddine Bencherchali (Nextron Systems)
date: 2022-08-04
modified: 2023-09-20
tags:
    - attack.execution
    - attack.t1569.002
    - attack.s0029
logsource:
    category: pipe_created
    product: windows
    definition: 'Note that you have to configure logging for Named Pipe Events in Sysmon config (Event ID 17 and Event ID 18). The basic configuration is in popular sysmon configuration (https://github.com/SwiftOnSecurity/sysmon-config), but it is worth verifying. You can also use other repo, e.g. https://github.com/Neo23x0/sysmon-config, https://github.com/olafhartong/sysmon-modular. How to test detection? You can check powershell script from this site https://svch0st.medium.com/guide-to-named-pipes-and-hunting-for-cobalt-strike-pipes-dc46b2c5f575'
detection:
    selection:
        PipeName: '\PSEXESVC'
        Image|contains: # Add or remove locations depending on how and if you execute Psexec in your env
            - ':\Users\Public\'
            - ':\Windows\Temp\'
            - '\AppData\Local\Temp\'
            - '\Desktop\'
            - '\Downloads\'
    condition: selection
falsepositives:
    - Rare legitimate use of psexec from the locations mentioned above. This will require initial tuning based on your environment.
level: medium

CLI command

Copy the exact command to reproduce this translation locally.

sigma convert --without-pipeline -t splunk -f default rules/windows/pipe_created/pipe_created_sysinternals_psexec_default_pipe_susp_location.yml