Assets
The Assets feature display your network traffic by domain, geolocation, IP address, URL path, or user agent. For detailed information about your traffic, select an option from the left pane.
Domain
The Domain page displays all the recent attack traffic by the attacks target domain. This page displays the data in a tabular and graphical format. You can set the date range as, 1 hr, 3 hr, 1 day, 7 day, 30 day, 90 day and so forth. You can also export the graphical data as an image or PDF and you can export the table as a csv or json file.
Geolocation
The Geolocation page displays all the recent violations by the attack source country. The page displays the data in a tabular and graphical format. You can set the date range as, 1 hr, 3 hr, 1 day, 7 day, 30 day, 90 day and so forth. You can also export the graphical data as an image or PDF and you can export the table as a csv or json file.
IP Address
The IP Address page displays all the recent violations by the Destination IP. This page is broken into two sections – a table representation and a graphical representation. You can set the date range from the following options (1 hr, 3 hr, 1 day, 7 day, 30 day, 90 day). You can also export the graph as an image or PDF and you can export the table as a csv or json file by selecting the export option buttons above the data.
URL Path
The URL Path page displays all the recent violations for the URL path. This page is broken into two sections – a table representation and a graphical representation. You can set the date range from the following options (1 hr, 3 hr, 1 day, 7 day, 30 day, 90 day). You can also export the graph as an image or PDF and you can export the table as a csv or json file by selecting the export options.
Manage asset configuration
From the Assets page, click Edit next to the host name field of the configuration you prefer to update. The update configuration screen will be displayed. Here you can make any changes you want make and click Save to submit the updated configuration.
Validate your asset configuration
To test your website using your own domain name BEFORE DNS
propagation has completed, you can use your local computer’s HOSTS
file. Your computer uses the entries in your HOSTS
file first before it tries to use your ISP to look up the DNS information for your domain.
The HOSTS
file is a special file on your workstation computer that stores IP address and name information. This file is checked before DNS, so if you place an entry in this file it supersedes anything set in DNS. This feature is useful in testing websites as it allows you to control which IP your local computer visits regardless of what is set in the DNS. The format of the HOSTS
file is simple. Each line has an IP address and a host name separated by one or more spaces. By default, hosts files typically contain entries for the local host and some comment text describing the file and its use. It is best not to change any of these lines.
Example:
1.2.3.4 example.com
1.2.3.4 www.example.com
<!--NeedCopy-->
Windows:
- From the Start menu, search for “Notepad” (Win 8, 10) or navigate to:
All Programs ->
Accessories -> Notepad (Win XP, Vista, 7)`. - Right-click Notepad and select
Run As Administrator
. - In Notepad, click “Open” and select the file -
C:\Windows\System32\Drivers\etc\hosts
. - Edit the file and save.
Linux:
- Open a terminal window.
- Edit the file
/etc/hosts
as root with a text editor. Example:sudo nano /etc/hosts
.
Validate your Settings:
- Open a command prompt.
- Type:
ping -c2 example.com
- The ping results show the IP address and confirm that it is responding.
- Open your browser on the local computer where the host settings have been configured. The browser is now connected to the website.
Note:
When you are finished testing, remember to remove the custom lines that you added to your Hosts file.