VMware
Overview
In this section, we’ll cover creating a virtual machine (VM) for our Security Onion 2 ISO image in VMware Workstation Pro and VMware Fusion. These steps should be fairly similar for most VMware installations. If you don’t already have VMware, you can download VMware Workstation Player from https://www.vmware.com/products/player/playerpro-evaluation.html.
Note
With the sniffing interface in bridged mode, you will be able to see all traffic to and from the host machine’s physical NIC. If you would like to see ALL the traffic on your network, you will need a method of forwarding that traffic to the interface to which the virtual adapter is bridged. This can be achieved with a tap or SPAN port.
ESXi
If you’re using VMware ESXi, then you’re likely familiar with VM creation and installation and so we won’t detail that here. There are a few things specific to ESXi that you might want to be aware of:
you may need to set your monitoring interface in the vSwitch to VLAN ID 4095 to allow all traffic through. You can read more about this at https://github.com/Security-Onion-Solutions/securityonion/discussions/7185.
if you’re trying to monitor multiple network interfaces, then you may need to enable the
Allow MAC Changesoption at both the vSwitch and Port Group levels. You can read more about this at https://github.com/Security-Onion-Solutions/securityonion/discussions/2676.
Workstation Pro
VMware Workstation is available for many different host operating systems, including Windows and several popular Linux distros. Follow the steps below to create a VM in VMware Workstation Pro for our Security Onion ISO image:
From the VMware main window, select File >> New Virtual Machine.
Select Typical installation >> Click
Next.Installer disc image file >> SO ISO file path >> Click
Next.Choose Linux, CentOS 7 64-Bit and click
Next.Specify virtual machine name and click
Next.Specify disk size (minimum 200GB), store as single file, click
Next.Customize hardware and increase Memory and Processors based on the Hardware Requirements section.
Network Adapter (NAT or Bridged – if you want to be able to access your Security Onion machine from other devices in the network, then choose Bridged, otherwise choose NAT to leave it behind the host) – in this tutorial, this will be the management interface.
Add >> Network Adapter (Bridged) - this will be the sniffing (monitor) interface.
Click
Close.Click
Finish.Power on the virtual machine and then follow the installation steps for your desired installation type in the Installation section.
Fusion
VMware Fusion is available for Mac OS. For more information about VMware Fusion, please see https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html.
Follow the steps below to create a VM in VMware Fusion for our Security Onion ISO image:
From the VMware Fusion main window, click
Fileand then clickNew.Select the Installation Methodappears. ClickInstall from disc or imageand clickContinue.Create a New Virtual Machineappears. ClickUse another disc or disc image..., select our ISO image, clickOpen, then clickContinue.Choose Operating Systemappears. ClickLinux, clickCentOS 7 64-bit, then clickContinue.Choose Firmware Typeappears. ClickLegacy BIOSand then clickContinue.Finishscreen appears. Click theCustomize Settingsbutton.Save Asscreen appears. Give the VM a name and click theSavebutton.Settingswindow appears. ClickProcessors & Memory.Processors & Memoryscreen appears. Increase processors and memory based on the Hardware Requirements section. Click theAdd Device...button.Add Devicescreen appears. ClickNetwork Adapterand click theAdd...button.Network Adapter 2screen appears. This will be the sniffing (monitor) interface. Select your desired network adapter configuration. Click theShow Allbutton.Settingsscreen appears. ClickHard Disk (SCSI).Hard Disk (SCSI)screen appears. Increase the disk size to at least200GBdepending on your use case. Click theApplybutton.Close the
Settingswindow.At the window for your new VM, click the
Playbutton to power on the virtual machine.Follow the installation steps for your desired installation type in the Installation section.
Tools
If using a graphical desktop, you may want to install open-vm-tools-desktop to enable more screen resolution options and other features. For example, using our ISO image or standard CentOS:
sudo yum install open-vm-tools-desktop