What’s New in Wallarm Node 2.10

We have recently released a new version of Wallarm Node.

After your next update window, you will see some new features your DevOps team is certain to like.

Firstly, your monitoring and reporting got a lot livelier. Starting with this version in addition to JSON format metrics can be exported in Prometheus compatible format. As before with Collectd, information on the number of requests, number of attacks, number of blocked attacks and a variety of error conditions is available.

Wallarm Node data monitored via Prometheus

The second big thing is a new and improved parser for HTML and JavaScript-encoded requests. Since Wallarm does not rely on regular expressions, in-depth parsing of application requests and responses regardless of the format is critical to building our application logic model and correctly detecting false positives and false negatives. The new parser will allow us to find potentially dangerous payloads (such as RCE or path traversal) even if they are entirely encoded within js or HTML elements.

By popular request, a few months ago we have added an ability to define custom detection rules manually in addition to AI-generated rules we have already had. 2.10 release makes this mechanism easier to use.

First, we have made the rules update independently from the configuration file. This means that once the rules definition is modified in the web console, it is loaded into the node within the next 15 minutes (with the next LOM update) and does not require the node reload.

Secondly, the rule definition interface is extended to accept negative rules definition (absence of the value) in addition to previously supported positive rules as well as allowing additional request parameters.

With this release, we have also introduced an option for installing Wallarm Node as a Kubernetes ingress controller. More about this in a separate blog.

Check out the release notes for the full description, configuration instructions, deprecated features and more. A new version of Wallarm Node 3.6 has been released.

Recent Posts

Introducing the Wallarm AI Control Platform: One closed loop for AI security and API security.

TL;DR- AI deployment has outpaced AI governance. Most enterprises running AI on AWS cannot answer…

5 days ago

What Your Board Gets Wrong About AI Security

Editor's note: This article was originally published by Craig Riddell on LinkedIn. It has been…

3 weeks ago

Extending Security to MCP Servers: Closing a Critical Gap

The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is a de facto standard for providing structured access to…

4 weeks ago

Introducing Wallarm Middle East Cloud: Built for Data Residency Compliance

As API and AI adoption grows across the Middle East, so do the expectations around…

1 month ago

6 Lessons Security Leaders Must Learn About AI and APIs

Most organizations treating AI security as a model problem are defending the wrong layer. Security…

1 month ago

The Governance Gap: How the EU AI Act Makes API Security a Compliance Imperative

Your legal team just handed you a 400-page document and said "figure out compliance." The…

2 months ago