Windows Devtunnels Execution
Detects the execution of Microsoft devtunnels.exe. Microsoft Devtunnels is a feature within Visual Studio that allows developers to expose their local development environment to the internet via secure, temporary tunnels, enabling external access for testing webhooks, APIs, and other services. While designed for legitimate development purposes, an attacker could exploit this feature to expose a compromised system or service to the internet, creating a covert communication channel that bypasses network security measures. By using Dev Tunnels, the attacker can establish a remote connection to the compromised environment, facilitate data exfiltration, or maintain command-and-control communications while avoiding detection by blending their activities with legitimate development traffic.
Detection Query
| tstats `security_content_summariesonly`
count min(_time) as firstTime
max(_time) as lastTime
from datamodel=Endpoint.Processes where
Processes.original_file_name="devtunnel.dll"
OR
Processes.process_name="devtunnel.exe"
by Processes.process Processes.vendor_product Processes.user_id Processes.process_hash
Processes.parent_process_name Processes.parent_process_exec Processes.action
Processes.dest Processes.process_current_directory Processes.process_path
Processes.process_integrity_level Processes.original_file_name Processes.parent_process
Processes.parent_process_path Processes.parent_process_guid Processes.parent_process_id
Processes.process_guid Processes.process_id Processes.user Processes.process_name
| `drop_dm_object_name(Processes)`
| `security_content_ctime(firstTime)`
| `security_content_ctime(lastTime)`
| `windows_devtunnels_execution_filter`Author
Raven Tait, Splunk
Data Sources
Raw Content
name: Windows Devtunnels Execution
id: b2630bb6-97df-405a-88b5-de6bb2c12cc3
version: 2
creation_date: '2026-05-05'
modification_date: '2026-05-13'
author: Raven Tait, Splunk
status: production
type: Anomaly
description: |-
Detects the execution of Microsoft devtunnels.exe.
Microsoft Devtunnels is a feature within Visual Studio that allows developers to expose their local development environment to the internet via secure, temporary tunnels, enabling external access for testing webhooks, APIs, and other services.
While designed for legitimate development purposes, an attacker could exploit this feature to expose a compromised system or service to the internet, creating a covert communication channel that bypasses network security measures.
By using Dev Tunnels, the attacker can establish a remote connection to the compromised environment, facilitate data exfiltration, or maintain command-and-control communications while avoiding detection by blending their activities with legitimate development traffic.
data_source:
- Sysmon EventID 1
- Windows Event Log Security 4688
- CrowdStrike ProcessRollup2
search: |-
| tstats `security_content_summariesonly`
count min(_time) as firstTime
max(_time) as lastTime
from datamodel=Endpoint.Processes where
Processes.original_file_name="devtunnel.dll"
OR
Processes.process_name="devtunnel.exe"
by Processes.process Processes.vendor_product Processes.user_id Processes.process_hash
Processes.parent_process_name Processes.parent_process_exec Processes.action
Processes.dest Processes.process_current_directory Processes.process_path
Processes.process_integrity_level Processes.original_file_name Processes.parent_process
Processes.parent_process_path Processes.parent_process_guid Processes.parent_process_id
Processes.process_guid Processes.process_id Processes.user Processes.process_name
| `drop_dm_object_name(Processes)`
| `security_content_ctime(firstTime)`
| `security_content_ctime(lastTime)`
| `windows_devtunnels_execution_filter`
how_to_implement: The detection is based on data that originates from Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR) agents. These agents are designed to provide security-related telemetry from the endpoints where the agent is installed. To implement this search, you must ingest logs that contain the process GUID, process name, and parent process. Additionally, you must ingest complete command-line executions. These logs must be processed using the appropriate Splunk Technology Add-ons that are specific to the EDR product. The logs must also be mapped to the `Processes` node of the `Endpoint` data model. Use the Splunk Common Information Model (CIM) to normalize the field names and speed up the data modeling process.
known_false_positives: Some legitimate developers may use Microsoft Devtunnels for testing and debugging their applications. Filter alerts for approved development environments and users.
references:
- https://blueteamops.medium.com/detecting-dev-tunnels-16f0994dc3e2
drilldown_searches:
- earliest_offset: $info_min_time$
latest_offset: $info_max_time$
name: View the detection results for - "$user$" and "$dest$"
search: '%original_detection_search% | search user = "$user$" dest = "$dest$"'
- name: View risk events for the last 7 days for - "$user$" and "$dest$"
search: '| from datamodel Risk.All_Risk | search normalized_risk_object IN ("$user$", "$dest$") | stats count min(_time) as firstTime max(_time) as lastTime values(search_name) as "Search Name" values(risk_message) as "Risk Message" values(analyticstories) as "Analytic Stories" values(annotations._all) as "Annotations" values(annotations.mitre_attack.mitre_tactic) as "ATT&CK Tactics" by normalized_risk_object | `security_content_ctime(firstTime)` | `security_content_ctime(lastTime)`'
earliest_offset: 7d
latest_offset: "0"
intermediate_findings:
entities:
- field: dest
type: system
score: 20
message: Potential Devtunnels execution observed on $dest$ via $process$.
threat_objects:
- field: parent_process_name
type: parent_process_name
analytic_story:
- Reverse Network Proxy
asset_type: Endpoint
mitre_attack_id:
- T1090
product:
- Splunk Enterprise
- Splunk Enterprise Security
- Splunk Cloud
category: endpoint
security_domain: endpoint
tests:
- name: True Positive Test
attack_data:
- data: https://media.githubusercontent.com/media/splunk/attack_data/master/datasets/attack_techniques/T1090/snapattack/snapattack.log
source: XmlWinEventLog:Security
sourcetype: XmlWinEventLog
test_type: unit