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falco/rules
Mark Stemm edce729bd9 Use a wider range of priorities in rules.
Review the priorities used by each rule and try to use a consistent set
that uses more of the possible priorities. The general guidelines I used
were:

 - If a rule is related to a write of state (i.e. filesystem, etc.),
   its priority is ERROR.
 - If a rule is related to an unauthorized read of state (i.e. reading
   sensitive filees, etc.), its priority is WARNING.
 - If a rule is related to unexpected behavior (spawning an unexpected
   shell in a container, opening an unexpected network connection, etc.), its priority
   is NOTICE.
 - If a rule is related to behaving against good practices (unexpected
   privileged containers, containers with sensitive mounts, running
   interactive commands as root), its priority is INFO.

One exception is that the most FP-prone rule (Run shell untrusted) has a
priority of DEBUG.
2017-05-24 18:54:14 -07:00
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