Trisul Blog
New packages of Trisul Network Analytics have now landed on our download page. The features here are carefully selected to put advanced network traffic and security monitoring features into the hands of all enterprises big and small.
We just released a new version of Trisul Network Analytics 6.5. This release features a lot of stability and performance improvements that make it even more attractive to deploy Trisul Network Analytics as your frontline NSM platform (Network Security Monitoring and Traffic Analytics).
We are delighted to announce our latest release “Trisul 6.5”. We think this is our best yet. We have rolled into this lessons learnt from watching users of our previous releases and other tools. Our goal is to make Trisul the go-to tool for full blown NSM and deep network traffic analysis.
We are pleased to announced a new developer resource Trisul Devzone This will be useful for those using the Lua Scripting interface or the Ruby TRP API to automate Network Security Monitoring tasks.
We are excited to announce TrisulNSM Docker This is a new Network Security and Traffic Monitoring (NSM) platform that includes everything you need in a single easy to use docker container.
Using plain Lua you can write powerful network analytics scripts on the Trisul platform. We have packaged some of our frequently used scripts into production ready Trisul Apps. Take a look at our Lua API for more on that.
Trisul EDGE is the graph analysis feature in the latest version of Trisul Network Analytics. We believe it will take your deep network based security monitoring to the next level. Here is a technical feature brief.
Hey ! Trisul users. We’re excited to announce Trisul Apps Its a collection of plugin extensions you can install,upgrade,remove with a single click to enhance the capabilites of Trisul.
Secure Shell (SSH) is a ubiquitous protocol used everywhere for logins, file transfers, and to execute remote commands.
SSH is an incredibly powerful protocol whose footprint needs to be monitored closely in enterprises. The most common use of SSH is for totally legitimate purposes like terminal (ssh) or for file transfer (scp,sftp).