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Fresh Installation

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Fresh Installation

Pre-Installation Checklist

Before you begin, check the following:

  • Ensure that your system can connect to the network. You will be asked to provide a DNS Server and a host that can be resolved by the DNS Server and responds to ping. The host can either be an internal host or a public domain host like google.com.

  • Deployment type – Enterprise or Service Provider. The Service Provider deployment provides multi-tenancy.
  • Whether FIPS should be enabled
  • Install type:
    • All-in-one with Supervisor only, or
    • Cluster with Supervisor and Workers
  • Storage type
    • Online – Local or NFS or Elasticsearch
    • Archive – NFS or HDFS
  • Before beginning FortiSIEM deployment, you must configure external storage
  • Determine hardware requirements:
Node vCPU RAM Local Disks
Supervisor (All in one) Minimum – 12
Recommended - 32

Minimum

  • without UEBA – 24GB
  • with UEBA - 32GB

Recommended

  • without UEBA – 32GB
  • with UEBA - 64GB

OS – 25GB

OPT – 100GB

CMDB – 60GB

SVN – 60GB

Local Event database – based on need

Supervisor (Cluster) Minimum – 12
Recommended - 32

Minimum

  • without UEBA – 24GB
  • with UEBA - 32GB

Recommended

  • without UEBA – 32GB
  • with UEBA - 64GB

OS – 25GB

OPT – 100GB

CMDB – 60GB

SVN – 60GB

Workers Minimum – 8
Recommended - 16

Minimum – 16GB

Recommended – 24GB

OS – 25GB

OPT – 100GB

Collector Minimum – 4
Recommended – 8 ( based on load)

Minimum – 4GB

Recommended – 8GB

OS – 25GB

OPT – 100GB

Note: compared to FortiSIEM 5.x, you need one more disk (OPT) which provides a cache for FortiSIEM.

For OPT - 100GB, the 100GB disk for /opt will consist of a single disk that will split into 2 partitions, /OPT and swap. The partitions will be created and managed by FortiSIEM when configFSM.sh runs.

Before proceeding to FortiSIEM deployment, you must configure the external storage.

  • For NFS deployment, see FortiSIEM - NFS Storage Guide here.
  • For Elasticsearch deployment, see FortiSIEM - Elasticsearch Storage Guide here.

All-in-one Installation

This is the simplest installation with a single Virtual Appliance. If storage is external, then you must configure external storage before proceeding with installation.

Import FortiSIEM GCP Image into Google Cloud Image

  1. Go to the Fortinet Support website https://support.fortinet.com to download the GCP package fortisiem-gcp-6-4-0-1412.tar.gz. See Downloading FortiSIEM Products for more information on downloading products from the support website.
  2. Identify the Google Cloud storage bucket where you plan to upload the FortiSIEM GCP image. Refer to the Google Cloud documentation on how to create a storage bucket in the appropriate location/region. For example: fsm-image-bucket.

  3. Click UPLOAD FILES and navigate to the downloaded FortiSIEM gcp image file - fortisiem-gcp-6-4-0-1412.tar.gz.


  4. Wait for upload to complete by keeping track of the progress information/bar.


  5. Once the upload is complete, navigate to Google Cloud Images service.

  6. Click CREATE IMAGE.


  7. From the Create an image section, take the following steps.

    1. In the Name field, enter the name of the image as fortisiem-gcp-6-4-0-1412 (lowercase alphanumeric with dashes allowed only).

    2. From the Source drop-down list, choose Cloud Storage file.

    3. Click BROWSE and browse to the storage bucket where you uploaded the image tar.gz file.

    4. Select the bucket, and then select the uploaded file fortisiem-gcp-6-4-0-1412.tar.gz.


    5. For Location, select Multi-regional, and choose your location. You can leave the rest of the options as default unless you have specific requirements to change them.

    6. When done, click CREATE.


  8. Click on Filter, select Name and type in fortisiem-gcp to see the image you have created. Make sure this image exists.


  9. Click on the 3 dots below the Actions column and click Create instance.


  10. Choose defaults for all remaining items until the Firewall section. Choose Allow HTTPS Traffic.

  11. For the Networking section, you can leave it as default unless you need to change some values.

  12. In the Disks section, add an extra three disks by clicking Add NEW DISK. Assign to them, the disk image size of 100GB, 60GB, and 60GB respectively with Disk source type as blank, appropriate Disk type – Balanced, Extreme, SSD, or Standard (Refer to Google Cloud documentation for details on performance differences). Click Save to save the result. Make sure to name your disks properly so each disk can be found/identified easily.

    Disk Size Disk Name
    Disk 2 100GB

    /opt

    For OPT - 100GB, the 100GB disk for /opt will consist of a single disk that will split into 2 partitions, /OPT and swap. The partitions will be created and managed by FortiSIEM when configFSM.sh runs.

    Disk 3 60GB /cmdb
    Disk 4 60GB /svn
    Disk 5 60GB+ /data (see the following note)

    Note on Hard Disk 5

    • Add a 5th disk if using local storage in an All In One deployment. Otherwise, a separate NFS share or Elasticsearch cluster must be used for event storage.

    • 60GB is the minimum event DB disk size for small deployments, provision significantly more event storage for higher EPS deployments. See the FortiSIEM Sizing Guide for additional information.

    • NFS or Elasticsearch event DB storage is mandatory for multi-node cluster deployments.


  13. Under Deletion rule, select Delete disk.

  14. Under the Security section, select Manage Access. If you would like to ssh access the instance from your own terminal, then you will need to provide manually generated ssh public keys (RSA or DSA) with a user name at the end like below.

    ssh-rsa <public-key> <username>

    If you only wish to connect to the instance from GCP’s browser based terminal, you should choose Control VM access through IAM permissions.


  15. Leave Management and Tenancy sections with their default values unless you need to change it per your needs.

  16. Click Create.

  17. The VM Instances page should now appear. In the Name Filter, enter your VM instance name, for example, fsm-640-super-gcp. This will show your instance. You can click on SSH button.

  18. When you click on SSH, you will be logged in on the browser based ssh console. You can now run sudo su - to get to root.

    At this point, you can continue configuring FortiSIEM by using the GUI.

Configure FortiSIEM via GUI

Follow these steps to configure FortiSIEM by using a simple GUI.

  1. At the command prompt, go to /usr/local/bin and enter configFSM.sh, for example:

    # configFSM.sh

  2. In VM console, select 1 Set Timezone and then press Next.

  3. Select your Region, and press Next.

  4. Select your Country, and press Next.

  5. Select the Country and City for your timezone, and press Next.

  6. Select 1 Supervisor. Press Next.

    note icon

    Regardless of whether you select Supervisor, Worker, or Collector, you will see the same series of screens.

  7. If you want to enable FIPS, then choose 2. Otherwise, choose 1. You have the option of enabling FIPS (option 3) or disabling FIPS (option 4) later.
    Note: After Installation, a 5th option to change your network configuration (5 change_network_config) is available. This allows you to change your network settings and/or host name.



  8. Determine whether your network supports IPv4-only, IPv6-only, or both IPv4 and IPv6 (Dual Stack). Choose 1 for IPv4-only, choose 2 for IPv6-only, or choose 3 for both IPv4 and IPv6.

  9. If you choose 1 (IPv4) or choose 3 (Both IPv4 and IPv6), and press Next, then you will move to step 11. If you choose 2 (IPv6), and press Next, then skip to step 12.
  10. Configure the network by entering the following fields. Press Next.

    OptionDescription
    IPv4 AddressThe Supervisor's IPv4 address
    NetMaskThe Supervisor's subnet
    GatewayNetwork gateway address
    DNS1, DNS2Addresses of the DNS servers


  11. If you chose 1 in step 9, then you will need to skip to step 13. If you chose 2 or 3 in step 9, then you will configure the IPv6 network by entering the following fields, then press Next.
    OptionDescription
    IPv6 AddressThe Supervisor's IPv6 address
    prefix (Netmask)The Supervisor's IPv6 prefix
    Gateway ipv6IPv6 Network gateway address
    DNS1 IPv6, DNS2 IPv6Addresses of the IPv6 DNS server 1 and DNS server2


    Note: If you chose option 3 in step 9 for both IPv4 and IPv6, then even if you configure 2 DNS servers for IPv4 and IPv6, the system will only use the first DNS server from IPv4 and the first DNS server from the IPv6 configuration.
    Note: In many dual stack networks, IPv4 DNS server(s) can resolve names to both IPv4 and IPv6. In such environments, if you do not have an IPv6 DNS server, then you can use public IPv6 DNS servers or use IPv4-mapped IPv6 address.

  12. Configure Hostname for Supervisor. Press Next.

    Note: FQDN is no longer needed.
  13. Test network connectivity by entering a host name that can be resolved by your DNS Server (entered in the previous step) and can respond to a ping. The host can either be an internal host or a public domain host like google.com. Press Next.

    Note: By default, “google.com” is shown for the connectivity test, but if configuring IPv6, you must enter an accessible internally approved IPv6 DNS server, for example: “ipv6-dns.fortinet.com"
    Note: When configuring both IPv4 and IPv6, only testing connectivity for the IPv6 DNS is required because the IPV6 takes higher precedence. So update the host field with an approved IPv6 DNS server.

  14. The final configuration confirmation is displayed. Verify that the parameters are correct. If they are not, then press Back to return to previous dialog boxes to correct any errors. If everything is OK, then press Run.


    The options are described in the following table.

    OptionDescription
    -rThe FortiSIEM component being configured
    -zThe time zone being configured
    -iIPv4-formatted address
    -mAddress of the subnet mask
    -gAddress of the gateway server used
    --hostHost name
    -fFQDN address: fully-qualified domain name
    -tThe IP type. The values can be either 4 (for ipv4) or 6 (for v6) or 64 (for both ipv4 and ipv6).

    --dns1, --dns2

    Addresses of the DNS servers

    --i6

    IPv6-formatted address

    --m6

    IPv6 prefix

    --g6

    IPv6 gateway

    -o

    Installation option (install_without_fips, install_with_fips, enable_fips, disable_fips, change_network_config*)
    *Option only available after installation.

    -zTime zone. Possible values are US/Pacific, Asia/Shanghai, Europe/London, or Africa/Tunis

    --testpinghost

    The URL used to test connectivity

  15. It will take some time for this process to finish. When it is done, proceed to Upload the FortiSIEM License. If the VM fails, you can inspect the ansible.log file located at /usr/local/fresh-install/logs to try and identify the problem.

Upload the FortiSIEM License

note icon

Before proceeding, make sure that you have obtained valid FortiSIEM license from Forticare. For more information, see the Licensing Guide.

You will now be asked to input a license.

  1. Open a Web browser and log in to the FortiSIEM UI. Use link https://<supervisor-ip> to login. Please note that if you are logging into FortiSIEM with an IPv6 address, you should input https://[IPv6 address] on the browser tab.
  2. The License Upload dialog box will open.

  3. Click Browse and upload the license file.

    Make sure that the Hardware ID shown in the License Upload page matches the license.

  4. For User ID and Password, choose any Full Admin credentials.

    For the first time installation, enter admin as the user and admin*1 as the password. You will then be asked to create a new password for GUI access.

  5. Choose License type as Enterprise or Service Provider.

    This option is available only for a first time installation. Once the database is configured, this option will not be available.

  6. Proceed to Choose an Event Database.

Choose an Event Database

For a fresh installation, you will be taken to the Event Database Storage page. You will be asked to choose between Local Disk, NFS or Elasticsearch options. For more details, see Configuring Storage.

After the License has been uploaded, and the Event Database Storage setup is configured, FortiSIEM installation is complete. If the installation is successful, the VM will reboot automatically. Otherwise, the VM will stop at the failed task.

You can inspect the ansible.log file located at /usr/local/fresh-install/logs if you encounter any issues during FortiSIEM installation.

After installation completes, ensure that the phMonitor is up and running, for example:

# phstatus

The response should be similar to the following.

Cluster Installation

For larger installations, you can choose Worker nodes, Collector nodes, and external storage (NFS or Elasticsearch).

Install Supervisor

Follow the steps in All-in-one Install with two differences:

  • Setting up hardware - you do not need an event database.
  • Setting up an Event database - Configure the cluster for either NFS or Elasticsearch.

    NFS

    Elasticsearch

You must choose external storage listed in Choose an Event Database.

Install Workers

Once the Supervisor is installed, follow the same steps in All-in-one Install to install a Worker except you need to only choose OS and OPT disks. The recommended settings for Worker node are:

  • CPU = 8
  • Memory = 24 GB
  • Two hard disks:
    • OS – 25GB
    • OPT – 100GB
      For OPT - 100GB, the 100GB disk for /opt will consist of a single disk that will split into 2 partitions, /OPT and swap. The partitions will be created and managed by FortiSIEM when configFSM.sh runs.

Register Workers

Once the Worker is up and running, add the Worker to the Supervisor node.

  1. Go to ADMIN > License > Nodes.
  2. Select Worker from the drop-down list and enter the Worker's IP address and host name. Click Add.

  3. See ADMIN > Health > Cloud Health to ensure that the Workers are up, healthy, and properly added to the system.

Install Collectors

Once Supervisor and Workers are installed, follow the same steps in All-in-one Install to install a Collector except you need to only choose OS and OPT disks. The recommended settings for Collector node are:

  • CPU = 4
  • Memory = 8GB
  • Two hard disks:
    • OS – 25GB
    • OPT – 100GB
      For OPT - 100GB, the 100GB disk for /opt will consist of a single disk that will split into 2 partitions, /OPT and swap. The partitions will be created and managed by FortiSIEM when configFSM.sh runs.

Register Collectors

Collectors can be deployed in Enterprise or Service Provider environments.

Enterprise Deployments

For Enterprise deployments, follow these steps.

  1. Log in to Supervisor with 'Admin' privileges.
  2. Go to ADMIN > Settings > System > Event Worker.
    1. Enter the IP of the Worker node. If a Supervisor node is only used, then enter the IP of the Supervisor node. Multiple IP addresses can be entered on separate lines. In this case, the Collectors will load balance the upload of events to the listed Event Workers.
      Note: Rather than using IP addresses, a DNS name is recommended. The reasoning is, should the IP addressing change, it becomes a matter of updating the DNS rather than modifying the Event Worker IP addresses in FortiSIEM.
    2. Click OK.
  3. Go to ADMIN > Setup > Collectors and add a Collector by entering:
    1. Name – Collector Name
    2. Guaranteed EPS – this is the EPS that Collector will always be able to send. It could send more if there is excess EPS available.
    3. Start Time and End Time – set to Unlimited.
  4. SSH to the Collector and run following script to register Collectors:

    phProvisionCollector --add <user> '<password>' <Super IP or Host> <Organization> <CollectorName>

    The password should be enclosed in single quotes to ensure that any non-alphanumeric characters are escaped.

    1. Set user and password using the admin user name and password for the Supervisor.
    2. Set Super IP or Host as the Supervisor's IP address.
    3. Set Organization. For Enterprise deployments, the default name is Super.
    4. Set CollectorName from Step 2a.

      The Collector will reboot during the Registration.

  5. Go to ADMIN > Health > Collector Health for the status.

Service Provider Deployments

For Service Provider deployments, follow these steps.

  1. Log in to Supervisor with 'Admin' privileges.
  2. Go to ADMIN > Settings > System > Event Worker.
    1. Enter the IP of the Worker node. If a Supervisor node is only used, then enter the IP of the Supervisor node. Multiple IP addresses can be entered on separate lines. In this case, the Collectors will load balance the upload of events to the listed Event Workers.
      Note: Rather than using IP addresses, a DNS name is recommended. The reasoning is, should the IP addressing change, it becomes a matter of updating the DNS rather than modifying the Event Worker IP addresses in FortiSIEM.
    2. Click OK.

  3. Go to ADMIN > Setup > Organizations and click New to add an Organization.

  4. Enter the Organization Name, Admin User, Admin Password, and Admin Email.
  5. Under Collectors, click New.
  6. Enter the Collector Name, Guaranteed EPS, Start Time, and End Time.

    The last two values could be set as Unlimited. Guaranteed EPS is the EPS that the Collector will always be able to send. It could send more if there is excess EPS available.

  7. SSH to the Collector and run following script to register Collectors:

    phProvisionCollector --add <user> '<password>' <Super IP or Host> <Organization> <CollectorName>

    The password should be enclosed in single quotes to ensure that any non-alphanumeric characters are escaped.

    1. Set user and password using the admin user name and password for the Organization that the Collector is going to be registered to.
    2. Set Super IP or Host as the Supervisor's IP address.
    3. Set Organization as the name of an organization created on the Supervisor.
    4. Set CollectorName from Step 6.

      The Collector will reboot during the Registration.

  8. Go to ADMIN > Health > Collector Health and check the status.

Install Log

The install ansible log file is located here: /usr/local/fresh-install/logs/ansible.log.

Errors can be found at the end of the file.

Fresh Installation

Pre-Installation Checklist

Before you begin, check the following:

  • Ensure that your system can connect to the network. You will be asked to provide a DNS Server and a host that can be resolved by the DNS Server and responds to ping. The host can either be an internal host or a public domain host like google.com.

  • Deployment type – Enterprise or Service Provider. The Service Provider deployment provides multi-tenancy.
  • Whether FIPS should be enabled
  • Install type:
    • All-in-one with Supervisor only, or
    • Cluster with Supervisor and Workers
  • Storage type
    • Online – Local or NFS or Elasticsearch
    • Archive – NFS or HDFS
  • Before beginning FortiSIEM deployment, you must configure external storage
  • Determine hardware requirements:
Node vCPU RAM Local Disks
Supervisor (All in one) Minimum – 12
Recommended - 32

Minimum

  • without UEBA – 24GB
  • with UEBA - 32GB

Recommended

  • without UEBA – 32GB
  • with UEBA - 64GB

OS – 25GB

OPT – 100GB

CMDB – 60GB

SVN – 60GB

Local Event database – based on need

Supervisor (Cluster) Minimum – 12
Recommended - 32

Minimum

  • without UEBA – 24GB
  • with UEBA - 32GB

Recommended

  • without UEBA – 32GB
  • with UEBA - 64GB

OS – 25GB

OPT – 100GB

CMDB – 60GB

SVN – 60GB

Workers Minimum – 8
Recommended - 16

Minimum – 16GB

Recommended – 24GB

OS – 25GB

OPT – 100GB

Collector Minimum – 4
Recommended – 8 ( based on load)

Minimum – 4GB

Recommended – 8GB

OS – 25GB

OPT – 100GB

Note: compared to FortiSIEM 5.x, you need one more disk (OPT) which provides a cache for FortiSIEM.

For OPT - 100GB, the 100GB disk for /opt will consist of a single disk that will split into 2 partitions, /OPT and swap. The partitions will be created and managed by FortiSIEM when configFSM.sh runs.

Before proceeding to FortiSIEM deployment, you must configure the external storage.

  • For NFS deployment, see FortiSIEM - NFS Storage Guide here.
  • For Elasticsearch deployment, see FortiSIEM - Elasticsearch Storage Guide here.

All-in-one Installation

This is the simplest installation with a single Virtual Appliance. If storage is external, then you must configure external storage before proceeding with installation.

Import FortiSIEM GCP Image into Google Cloud Image

  1. Go to the Fortinet Support website https://support.fortinet.com to download the GCP package fortisiem-gcp-6-4-0-1412.tar.gz. See Downloading FortiSIEM Products for more information on downloading products from the support website.
  2. Identify the Google Cloud storage bucket where you plan to upload the FortiSIEM GCP image. Refer to the Google Cloud documentation on how to create a storage bucket in the appropriate location/region. For example: fsm-image-bucket.

  3. Click UPLOAD FILES and navigate to the downloaded FortiSIEM gcp image file - fortisiem-gcp-6-4-0-1412.tar.gz.


  4. Wait for upload to complete by keeping track of the progress information/bar.


  5. Once the upload is complete, navigate to Google Cloud Images service.

  6. Click CREATE IMAGE.


  7. From the Create an image section, take the following steps.

    1. In the Name field, enter the name of the image as fortisiem-gcp-6-4-0-1412 (lowercase alphanumeric with dashes allowed only).

    2. From the Source drop-down list, choose Cloud Storage file.

    3. Click BROWSE and browse to the storage bucket where you uploaded the image tar.gz file.

    4. Select the bucket, and then select the uploaded file fortisiem-gcp-6-4-0-1412.tar.gz.


    5. For Location, select Multi-regional, and choose your location. You can leave the rest of the options as default unless you have specific requirements to change them.

    6. When done, click CREATE.


  8. Click on Filter, select Name and type in fortisiem-gcp to see the image you have created. Make sure this image exists.


  9. Click on the 3 dots below the Actions column and click Create instance.


  10. Choose defaults for all remaining items until the Firewall section. Choose Allow HTTPS Traffic.

  11. For the Networking section, you can leave it as default unless you need to change some values.

  12. In the Disks section, add an extra three disks by clicking Add NEW DISK. Assign to them, the disk image size of 100GB, 60GB, and 60GB respectively with Disk source type as blank, appropriate Disk type – Balanced, Extreme, SSD, or Standard (Refer to Google Cloud documentation for details on performance differences). Click Save to save the result. Make sure to name your disks properly so each disk can be found/identified easily.

    Disk Size Disk Name
    Disk 2 100GB

    /opt

    For OPT - 100GB, the 100GB disk for /opt will consist of a single disk that will split into 2 partitions, /OPT and swap. The partitions will be created and managed by FortiSIEM when configFSM.sh runs.

    Disk 3 60GB /cmdb
    Disk 4 60GB /svn
    Disk 5 60GB+ /data (see the following note)

    Note on Hard Disk 5

    • Add a 5th disk if using local storage in an All In One deployment. Otherwise, a separate NFS share or Elasticsearch cluster must be used for event storage.

    • 60GB is the minimum event DB disk size for small deployments, provision significantly more event storage for higher EPS deployments. See the FortiSIEM Sizing Guide for additional information.

    • NFS or Elasticsearch event DB storage is mandatory for multi-node cluster deployments.


  13. Under Deletion rule, select Delete disk.

  14. Under the Security section, select Manage Access. If you would like to ssh access the instance from your own terminal, then you will need to provide manually generated ssh public keys (RSA or DSA) with a user name at the end like below.

    ssh-rsa <public-key> <username>

    If you only wish to connect to the instance from GCP’s browser based terminal, you should choose Control VM access through IAM permissions.


  15. Leave Management and Tenancy sections with their default values unless you need to change it per your needs.

  16. Click Create.

  17. The VM Instances page should now appear. In the Name Filter, enter your VM instance name, for example, fsm-640-super-gcp. This will show your instance. You can click on SSH button.

  18. When you click on SSH, you will be logged in on the browser based ssh console. You can now run sudo su - to get to root.

    At this point, you can continue configuring FortiSIEM by using the GUI.

Configure FortiSIEM via GUI

Follow these steps to configure FortiSIEM by using a simple GUI.

  1. At the command prompt, go to /usr/local/bin and enter configFSM.sh, for example:

    # configFSM.sh

  2. In VM console, select 1 Set Timezone and then press Next.

  3. Select your Region, and press Next.

  4. Select your Country, and press Next.

  5. Select the Country and City for your timezone, and press Next.

  6. Select 1 Supervisor. Press Next.

    note icon

    Regardless of whether you select Supervisor, Worker, or Collector, you will see the same series of screens.

  7. If you want to enable FIPS, then choose 2. Otherwise, choose 1. You have the option of enabling FIPS (option 3) or disabling FIPS (option 4) later.
    Note: After Installation, a 5th option to change your network configuration (5 change_network_config) is available. This allows you to change your network settings and/or host name.



  8. Determine whether your network supports IPv4-only, IPv6-only, or both IPv4 and IPv6 (Dual Stack). Choose 1 for IPv4-only, choose 2 for IPv6-only, or choose 3 for both IPv4 and IPv6.

  9. If you choose 1 (IPv4) or choose 3 (Both IPv4 and IPv6), and press Next, then you will move to step 11. If you choose 2 (IPv6), and press Next, then skip to step 12.
  10. Configure the network by entering the following fields. Press Next.

    OptionDescription
    IPv4 AddressThe Supervisor's IPv4 address
    NetMaskThe Supervisor's subnet
    GatewayNetwork gateway address
    DNS1, DNS2Addresses of the DNS servers


  11. If you chose 1 in step 9, then you will need to skip to step 13. If you chose 2 or 3 in step 9, then you will configure the IPv6 network by entering the following fields, then press Next.
    OptionDescription
    IPv6 AddressThe Supervisor's IPv6 address
    prefix (Netmask)The Supervisor's IPv6 prefix
    Gateway ipv6IPv6 Network gateway address
    DNS1 IPv6, DNS2 IPv6Addresses of the IPv6 DNS server 1 and DNS server2


    Note: If you chose option 3 in step 9 for both IPv4 and IPv6, then even if you configure 2 DNS servers for IPv4 and IPv6, the system will only use the first DNS server from IPv4 and the first DNS server from the IPv6 configuration.
    Note: In many dual stack networks, IPv4 DNS server(s) can resolve names to both IPv4 and IPv6. In such environments, if you do not have an IPv6 DNS server, then you can use public IPv6 DNS servers or use IPv4-mapped IPv6 address.

  12. Configure Hostname for Supervisor. Press Next.

    Note: FQDN is no longer needed.
  13. Test network connectivity by entering a host name that can be resolved by your DNS Server (entered in the previous step) and can respond to a ping. The host can either be an internal host or a public domain host like google.com. Press Next.

    Note: By default, “google.com” is shown for the connectivity test, but if configuring IPv6, you must enter an accessible internally approved IPv6 DNS server, for example: “ipv6-dns.fortinet.com"
    Note: When configuring both IPv4 and IPv6, only testing connectivity for the IPv6 DNS is required because the IPV6 takes higher precedence. So update the host field with an approved IPv6 DNS server.

  14. The final configuration confirmation is displayed. Verify that the parameters are correct. If they are not, then press Back to return to previous dialog boxes to correct any errors. If everything is OK, then press Run.


    The options are described in the following table.

    OptionDescription
    -rThe FortiSIEM component being configured
    -zThe time zone being configured
    -iIPv4-formatted address
    -mAddress of the subnet mask
    -gAddress of the gateway server used
    --hostHost name
    -fFQDN address: fully-qualified domain name
    -tThe IP type. The values can be either 4 (for ipv4) or 6 (for v6) or 64 (for both ipv4 and ipv6).

    --dns1, --dns2

    Addresses of the DNS servers

    --i6

    IPv6-formatted address

    --m6

    IPv6 prefix

    --g6

    IPv6 gateway

    -o

    Installation option (install_without_fips, install_with_fips, enable_fips, disable_fips, change_network_config*)
    *Option only available after installation.

    -zTime zone. Possible values are US/Pacific, Asia/Shanghai, Europe/London, or Africa/Tunis

    --testpinghost

    The URL used to test connectivity

  15. It will take some time for this process to finish. When it is done, proceed to Upload the FortiSIEM License. If the VM fails, you can inspect the ansible.log file located at /usr/local/fresh-install/logs to try and identify the problem.

Upload the FortiSIEM License

note icon

Before proceeding, make sure that you have obtained valid FortiSIEM license from Forticare. For more information, see the Licensing Guide.

You will now be asked to input a license.

  1. Open a Web browser and log in to the FortiSIEM UI. Use link https://<supervisor-ip> to login. Please note that if you are logging into FortiSIEM with an IPv6 address, you should input https://[IPv6 address] on the browser tab.
  2. The License Upload dialog box will open.

  3. Click Browse and upload the license file.

    Make sure that the Hardware ID shown in the License Upload page matches the license.

  4. For User ID and Password, choose any Full Admin credentials.

    For the first time installation, enter admin as the user and admin*1 as the password. You will then be asked to create a new password for GUI access.

  5. Choose License type as Enterprise or Service Provider.

    This option is available only for a first time installation. Once the database is configured, this option will not be available.

  6. Proceed to Choose an Event Database.

Choose an Event Database

For a fresh installation, you will be taken to the Event Database Storage page. You will be asked to choose between Local Disk, NFS or Elasticsearch options. For more details, see Configuring Storage.

After the License has been uploaded, and the Event Database Storage setup is configured, FortiSIEM installation is complete. If the installation is successful, the VM will reboot automatically. Otherwise, the VM will stop at the failed task.

You can inspect the ansible.log file located at /usr/local/fresh-install/logs if you encounter any issues during FortiSIEM installation.

After installation completes, ensure that the phMonitor is up and running, for example:

# phstatus

The response should be similar to the following.

Cluster Installation

For larger installations, you can choose Worker nodes, Collector nodes, and external storage (NFS or Elasticsearch).

Install Supervisor

Follow the steps in All-in-one Install with two differences:

  • Setting up hardware - you do not need an event database.
  • Setting up an Event database - Configure the cluster for either NFS or Elasticsearch.

    NFS

    Elasticsearch

You must choose external storage listed in Choose an Event Database.

Install Workers

Once the Supervisor is installed, follow the same steps in All-in-one Install to install a Worker except you need to only choose OS and OPT disks. The recommended settings for Worker node are:

  • CPU = 8
  • Memory = 24 GB
  • Two hard disks:
    • OS – 25GB
    • OPT – 100GB
      For OPT - 100GB, the 100GB disk for /opt will consist of a single disk that will split into 2 partitions, /OPT and swap. The partitions will be created and managed by FortiSIEM when configFSM.sh runs.

Register Workers

Once the Worker is up and running, add the Worker to the Supervisor node.

  1. Go to ADMIN > License > Nodes.
  2. Select Worker from the drop-down list and enter the Worker's IP address and host name. Click Add.

  3. See ADMIN > Health > Cloud Health to ensure that the Workers are up, healthy, and properly added to the system.

Install Collectors

Once Supervisor and Workers are installed, follow the same steps in All-in-one Install to install a Collector except you need to only choose OS and OPT disks. The recommended settings for Collector node are:

  • CPU = 4
  • Memory = 8GB
  • Two hard disks:
    • OS – 25GB
    • OPT – 100GB
      For OPT - 100GB, the 100GB disk for /opt will consist of a single disk that will split into 2 partitions, /OPT and swap. The partitions will be created and managed by FortiSIEM when configFSM.sh runs.

Register Collectors

Collectors can be deployed in Enterprise or Service Provider environments.

Enterprise Deployments

For Enterprise deployments, follow these steps.

  1. Log in to Supervisor with 'Admin' privileges.
  2. Go to ADMIN > Settings > System > Event Worker.
    1. Enter the IP of the Worker node. If a Supervisor node is only used, then enter the IP of the Supervisor node. Multiple IP addresses can be entered on separate lines. In this case, the Collectors will load balance the upload of events to the listed Event Workers.
      Note: Rather than using IP addresses, a DNS name is recommended. The reasoning is, should the IP addressing change, it becomes a matter of updating the DNS rather than modifying the Event Worker IP addresses in FortiSIEM.
    2. Click OK.
  3. Go to ADMIN > Setup > Collectors and add a Collector by entering:
    1. Name – Collector Name
    2. Guaranteed EPS – this is the EPS that Collector will always be able to send. It could send more if there is excess EPS available.
    3. Start Time and End Time – set to Unlimited.
  4. SSH to the Collector and run following script to register Collectors:

    phProvisionCollector --add <user> '<password>' <Super IP or Host> <Organization> <CollectorName>

    The password should be enclosed in single quotes to ensure that any non-alphanumeric characters are escaped.

    1. Set user and password using the admin user name and password for the Supervisor.
    2. Set Super IP or Host as the Supervisor's IP address.
    3. Set Organization. For Enterprise deployments, the default name is Super.
    4. Set CollectorName from Step 2a.

      The Collector will reboot during the Registration.

  5. Go to ADMIN > Health > Collector Health for the status.

Service Provider Deployments

For Service Provider deployments, follow these steps.

  1. Log in to Supervisor with 'Admin' privileges.
  2. Go to ADMIN > Settings > System > Event Worker.
    1. Enter the IP of the Worker node. If a Supervisor node is only used, then enter the IP of the Supervisor node. Multiple IP addresses can be entered on separate lines. In this case, the Collectors will load balance the upload of events to the listed Event Workers.
      Note: Rather than using IP addresses, a DNS name is recommended. The reasoning is, should the IP addressing change, it becomes a matter of updating the DNS rather than modifying the Event Worker IP addresses in FortiSIEM.
    2. Click OK.

  3. Go to ADMIN > Setup > Organizations and click New to add an Organization.

  4. Enter the Organization Name, Admin User, Admin Password, and Admin Email.
  5. Under Collectors, click New.
  6. Enter the Collector Name, Guaranteed EPS, Start Time, and End Time.

    The last two values could be set as Unlimited. Guaranteed EPS is the EPS that the Collector will always be able to send. It could send more if there is excess EPS available.

  7. SSH to the Collector and run following script to register Collectors:

    phProvisionCollector --add <user> '<password>' <Super IP or Host> <Organization> <CollectorName>

    The password should be enclosed in single quotes to ensure that any non-alphanumeric characters are escaped.

    1. Set user and password using the admin user name and password for the Organization that the Collector is going to be registered to.
    2. Set Super IP or Host as the Supervisor's IP address.
    3. Set Organization as the name of an organization created on the Supervisor.
    4. Set CollectorName from Step 6.

      The Collector will reboot during the Registration.

  8. Go to ADMIN > Health > Collector Health and check the status.

Install Log

The install ansible log file is located here: /usr/local/fresh-install/logs/ansible.log.

Errors can be found at the end of the file.