Learn how to deploy your own Virtual Network Sensor with Microsoft Hyper-V.
Virtual Network Sensor is a lightweight network sensor that scans your network
activity and feeds network activity data to TrendAI Vision One™ and allows you
to discover unmanaged assets and gain a holistic view of your attack surface. Before
using the features of Network Security, you
need to set up your Virtual Network Sensor and connect your sensor to TrendAI Vision One™.
ImportantBefore deploying the Virtual Network Sensor, make sure you complete the following:
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Procedure
- In the TrendAI Vision One™ console, go to .
- Click Deploy Virtual Network Sensor.The Virtual Network Sensor Deployment panel appears.
- Select Microsoft Hyper-V for the platform.
- Select the Connection method.
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Direct connection: the Virtual Network Sensor connects to TrendAI Vision One™ directly. Make sure the Virtual Network Sensor is able to connect to the internet when using this configuration.
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Connect using a custom proxy: the Virtual Network Sensor connects to TrendAI Vision One™ through a third-party proxy. After choosing this method, configure the following fields:
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Proxy address: Specify the IP address of the proxy.
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Proxy port: Specify the connecting port of the proxy.
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Proxy server requires authentication: (Optional) Select if the proxy requires authentication credentials.
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User name: Specify the user name for the proxy credentials.
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Password: Specify the password for the proxy credentials.
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Connect using a Service Gateway as proxy: the Virtual Network Sensor connects to TrendAI Vision One™ through a Service Gateway. Select a Service Gateway to use for this method.

Important
The Virtual Network Sensor must be able to connect to a Service Gateway with the Forward Proxy Service configured and enabled. For more information, see Manage services in Service Gateway.
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- Click Download Disk Image.
- Extract the installation package zip file.
- Run the PowerShell CLI.
- Type the command
[path]\VirtualNetworkSensor_hyperv_image.[version]\.Replace
[path]with the filepath location and[version]with the sensor version.For example, if you extracted version 1.0.12 to your desktop, type the command:C:\Users\[user]\Desktop\VirtualNetworkSensor_hyperv_image.1.0.12\ - Type the command .\vns_deploy.ps1 to run the Virtual
Network Sensor setup wizard.The Virtual Network Sensor setup wizard appears.
- On the Deployment Overview screen, review the steps and click OK to begin configuring the deployment.
- Select a preset deployment configuration you want to use based on your expected throughput requirements, then click OK.
- Specify the location to store the Virtual Network Sensor on the host machine, then click OK.
- Select a virtual switch for the management port and click OK.
- Select a virtual switch for the data port and click OK.
- Set the administrator password.The password must contain:
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12 to 32 characters
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At least one uppercase letter (A-Z)
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At least one lowercase letter (a-z)
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At least one number (0-9)
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At least one special character: ~!`@#$%^&*()/_+=[]{}-\|<>',.?:;"
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- Click OK.
- Review the configuration, and click OK to create the
instance.The script creates the instance automatically. The process might take a few minutes to complete. When finished, PowerShell displays
MAIN: All tasks completed! - After creation finishes, go to the Hyper-V Manager.
- Power on the Virtual Network Sensor.Your Virtual Network Sensor finishes setting up and automatically connects to Network Inventory.
- To confirm that your Virtual Network Sensor has successfully deployed, access
the TrendAI Vision One™ and go
to to view information about your deployed Virtual Network
Sensor.If the Virtual Network Sensor does not appear in Network Inventory after deployment, verify the following settings:
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Network settings (NIC/vNIC setting and order)
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Firewall settings
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Proxy settings if using a proxy
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Review the Virtual Network Sensor FAQ to verify and test the connection

Tip
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For information about troubleshooting Virtual Network Sensor, see Virtual Network Sensor CLI commands.
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The Virtual Network Sensor default IP allocation is DHCP. For more information about changing the IP settings and registering manually, go to Virtual Network Sensor FAQ.
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