Chaitanya Vilas Garware

2papers

2 Papers

49.4CRMay 8
When the Ruler is Broken: Parsing-Induced Suppression in LLM-Based Security Log Evaluation

Chaitanya Vilas Garware, Sharif Noor Zisad

LLM-based SOC log classifiers are commonly evaluated using regular-expression pipelines that extract structured fields from free-form model output. We demonstrate that this practice introduces a class of silent, systematic evaluation errors, which we term parsing-induced suppression that can cause a fully functional model to appear completely non-functional. Using OpenSOC-AI, a LoRA fine-tuned TinyLlama-1.1B system for security log threat classification, as a reproducible case study, we show that a strict regex parser reported 0% threat accuracy while a corrected fuzzy parser recovered 76% threat accuracy on the same model outputs and the same evaluation set. A gap of 76 percentage points attributable entirely to evaluation methodology. Severity accuracy remained constant at 58% under both parsers, providing a built-in control that isolates field name format mismatch as the causal mechanism rather than model degradation. For external reference, Claude Sonnet evaluated zero-shot on the same 50 example set achieved 88% threat accuracy and 58% severity accuracy under the same fuzzy protocol. Residual errors under fuzzy evaluation concentrate in three categories including reconnaissance, brute force, and credential stuffing, each contributing all 4 misclassifications, a pattern that reflects class-boundary difficulty among behaviorally adjacent log types rather than global model failure. We propose SOC-Bench v0, a benchmark framework comprising a standardized 13 category threat taxonomy, minimum statistical power requirements, fuzzy field extraction specification, and a public scoring script intended to prevent parser specific accuracy distortion in future SOC LLM research.

33.0CRApr 29
OpenSOC-AI: Democratizing Security Operations with Parameter Efficient LLM Log Analysis

Chaitanya Vilas Garware, Sharif Noor Zisad

Small and medium sized businesses (SMBs) face an escalating cybersecurity threat landscape, yet most lack the resources to staff full Security Operations Centers (SOCs) or deploy enterprise grade detection platforms. This paper presents OpenSOC-AI, a lightweight log analysis framework that uses parameter efficient fine tuning of a 1.1-billion parameter language model (TinyLlama-1.1B) to perform automated threat classification, MITRE ATT&CK technique mapping, and severity assessment on raw security log entries. Using Low-Rank Adaptation (LoRA) with only 12.6 million trainable parameters (roughly 1.13% of the base model), we fine tuned on 450 domain specific SOC examples in under five minutes on a single NVIDIA T4 GPU. Testing on a heldout set of 50 examples showed a 68% point gain in threat classification accuracy (from 0% to 68%), a 30% point gain in severity accuracy (from 28% to 58%), and an F1 score of 0.68 compared to the untuned baseline. Full codebase, adapter weights, and datasets are publicly released to support reproducibility and community extension.