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Security operations tools for SIEM, SOAR, threat hunting, incident response, and security operations center (SOC) management.
Browse 1,895 security operations tools
Open-source security automation platform for automating security alerts and building AI-assisted workflows.
A Windows Registry hive extraction library that provides C API access for reading and writing registry binary files with XML export capabilities.
A library to access and parse Windows Shortcut File (LNK) format.
HoneyDB is a honeypot-based threat intelligence platform that provides real-time insights into attacker behavior and malicious activity on networks.
A cross-platform registry hive editor for forensic analysis with advanced features like hex viewer and reporting engine.
A command-line tool that extracts detailed technical information, metadata, and checksums from JPEG image files with support for multiple output formats.
24/7 MDR service with threat detection, hunting, and guided remediation
SOARCA is an open-source SOAR platform that automates security incident response workflows using standardized CACAOv2 playbooks and multiple integration interfaces.
A free, open-source file data recovery software that can recover lost files from hard disks, CD-ROMs, and digital camera memory.
A tool collection for filtering and visualizing logon events, designed for experienced DFIR specialists in threat hunting and incident response.
A Bluetooth 5 and 4.x sniffer using TI CC1352/CC26x2 hardware with advanced features and Python-based host-side software.
A software that collects forensic artifacts on systems for forensic investigations.
A command that builds and executes command lines from standard input, allowing for the execution of commands with multiple arguments.
Autopsy is a GUI-based digital forensics platform for analyzing hard drives and smart phones, with a plug-in architecture for custom modules.
A library for working with Windows NT data types, providing access and manipulation functions.
Request Tracker for Incident Response (RTIR) is a tool for incident response teams to manage incident reports, correlate data, and facilitate communication.
A static analysis tool for PE files that identifies potential malicious indicators through compiler detection, packing analysis, signature matching, and suspicious string identification.
A tool that collects and displays user activity and system events on a Windows system.
A dynamic GUI for advanced log analysis, allowing users to execute SQL queries on structured log data.
A library for accessing and parsing OLE 2 Compound File (OLECF) format files, including Microsoft Office documents and thumbs.db files.
Search engine for Windows executable files and hashes, providing insights into file prevalence, behavior, and security information.
A collection of Python scripts for password spraying attacks against Lync/S4B & OWA, featuring Atomizer, Vaporizer, Aerosol, and Spindrift tools.
An open source format for storing digital evidence and data, with a C/C++ library for creating, reading, and manipulating AFF4 images.
A library to access FileVault Drive Encryption (FVDE) encrypted volumes on Mac OS X systems.
1895 tools across 9 specializations · 1138 free, 757 commercial
Cyber Range Training
Cyber Range Training platforms and simulation environments for hands-on cybersecurity training and incident response exercises.
Digital Forensics and Incident Response
Digital Forensics and Incident Response (DFIR) tools for digital forensic analysis, evidence collection, malware analysis, and cyber incident investigation.
Extended Detection and Response
Extended Detection and Response (XDR) platforms that integrate multiple security products for unified threat detection and response across endpoints, networks, and cloud.
Common questions about Security Operations tools, selection guides, pricing, and comparisons.
SIEM (Security Information and Event Management) collects, correlates, and analyzes security logs from across your environment to detect threats. SOAR (Security Orchestration, Automation and Response) automates incident response workflows and playbooks. XDR (Extended Detection and Response) integrates detection across endpoints, network, cloud, and email in a unified platform. Many organizations use SIEM for compliance and broad visibility, XDR for detection, and SOAR for response automation.
It depends on your requirements. XDR provides superior detection by correlating telemetry across multiple security layers. However, SIEM is still needed if you have compliance requirements for long-term log retention, need to ingest logs from non-security sources (applications, databases), or want custom correlation rules. Many organizations are consolidating from SIEM to XDR for detection while keeping SIEM for compliance and log management.
MDR (Managed Detection and Response) provides 24/7 threat monitoring, detection, and response delivered as a managed service. Choose MDR if: your team is too small to staff a 24/7 SOC (typically requires 8-12 analysts), you lack threat hunting expertise, or you need rapid security operations maturity. Build in-house when you need full control over detection logic, have unique threat models, or have the budget for a dedicated security operations team.
DFIR (Digital Forensics and Incident Response) tools help investigate security incidents by collecting and analyzing evidence: disk images, memory dumps, network captures, and log artifacts. You need DFIR capabilities when responding to confirmed breaches, conducting malware analysis, supporting legal proceedings, or performing proactive threat hunting. Many organizations outsource DFIR to specialized incident response firms.
Yes. Out of 24 security operations tools listed on CybersecTools, 23 are free and 1 are commercial. Free tools work well for small teams, testing, and budget-conscious organizations. Commercial tools typically add enterprise features, dedicated support, and SLA guarantees.