Depends what you are wanting, a step, or just a filter. The most robust
method would be to simply use the Utility "Is IP in CIDR". You can pass
it a single IP, or an array of IPs, and then define the subnet you want
it to match. The nice advantage of<!-- --><!-- --><!-- --><!-- --><!-- -->...
Off the top of my head it would be:{<!-- -->{ variableName | str }}But you'll
probably need to strip out some of the syntax from what makes it a
dictionary. Alternatively, access the value you need from the dictionary
directly using the key. As long as the v<!-- -->...
Support should be obtained by contacting Fortinet TAC. That said, it's
telling you the issue. You've got a dictionary object that you are
trying to perform a concatenation on (joining two or more pieces
together). You can only perform concatenation o...
The best method would probably be to use the playbook reference method,
as detailed by Dylan further down. The workflow would probably be
something along the lines of: Alarm fires on device and is sent via some
method to the FortiSOAR (SIEM alert, et...
I think you need to expand on the use case. i.e. What's the use case for
the playbooks? Why do you need to pass that data stored in the variable
into another playbook? To my knowledge, the only way that you could use
that variable's value in another ...