CompTIA CySA+ CS0-003 Study Guide: Incident Response and Management
Coverage: CySA+ domain 3.0 Incident Response and Management Purpose: Original study material built from the supplied CySA+ courseware and exam-objective coverage. This is not copied exam content.
How To Use This Guide
- Read the high-yield anchors first.
- Study each topic until you can explain the analyst action without looking.
- Run a practice test and review every missed item.
- Return to the section named in the missed-question remediation.
- For lab-style readiness, practice with logs, PCAPs, scanners, command output, and short written findings.
Exam Context
- Exam code: CS0-003.
- Official-style format: up to 85 questions, 165 minutes, multiple-choice and performance-based questions.
- Local readiness target: 85% practice pass, 90% comfort target, 95% strong signal.
High-Yield Memory Anchors
- Analysts turn evidence into decisions.
- Prioritize by risk, exploitability, exposure, asset value, and business impact.
- A single indicator rarely proves the whole story; correlate host, network, identity, and timing.
- Reports should tell the right audience what happened, why it matters, what to do, and how to verify.
- When the exam asks for the best next step, choose the action that preserves evidence, reduces risk, and follows process.
Domain Map
- Incident response plan: Define roles, escalation paths, communication channels, and response procedures before incidents occur.
- Preparation: Build tools, access, playbooks, logging, contacts, and training before an event.
- Detection and analysis: Validate alerts, identify affected assets, scope activity, and determine likely cause.
- Containment: Limit spread while preserving critical evidence and business function.
- Eradication: Remove attacker access, malware, persistence, and exploited weaknesses.
- Recovery: Restore systems safely and monitor for recurrence.
- Lessons learned: Review what happened and improve controls, playbooks, training, and detections.
- Digital forensics: Collect, preserve, analyze, and report evidence using repeatable methods.
- Chain of custody: Document who handled evidence, when, why, and how it was stored.
- Legal considerations: Understand privacy, notification, law enforcement, retention, and counsel involvement.
- Malware indicators: Identify suspicious files, processes, persistence, registry changes, and network callbacks.
- Network attack indicators: Recognize scanning, beaconing, brute force, exfiltration, DNS tunneling, and ARP poisoning clues.
- Host attack indicators: Identify suspicious services, accounts, scheduled tasks, logs, and privilege escalation signs.
Visual Model
Study Notes
Incident response plan
Big Picture
Define roles, escalation paths, communication channels, and response procedures before incidents occur.
Analyst Actions
- Follow the plan and escalate when severity or scope changes.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
IR plan, call tree, playbooks, severity matrix, and tabletop records.
Exam Traps
- Invent roles during the incident.
- Keep the plan secret from responders.
- Skip escalation criteria.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Preparation
Big Picture
Build tools, access, playbooks, logging, contacts, and training before an event.
Analyst Actions
- Verify readiness before the incident starts.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Jump kits, playbooks, access validation, contact lists, and tabletop outcomes.
Exam Traps
- Wait to request access during containment.
- Disable logging until an incident.
- Store all tools on the compromised host.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Detection and analysis
Big Picture
Validate alerts, identify affected assets, scope activity, and determine likely cause.
Analyst Actions
- Correlate data sources before declaring scope.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
SIEM events, EDR alerts, firewall logs, DNS logs, and user reports.
Exam Traps
- Contain before understanding any scope.
- Trust a single alert blindly.
- Ignore timestamps.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Containment
Big Picture
Limit spread while preserving critical evidence and business function.
Analyst Actions
- Choose short-term and long-term containment based on severity and impact.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Network isolation, account disablement, firewall blocks, and containment notes.
Exam Traps
- Wipe every system first.
- Announce attacker details publicly.
- Leave compromised credentials active.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Eradication
Big Picture
Remove attacker access, malware, persistence, and exploited weaknesses.
Analyst Actions
- Eliminate root cause after containment.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Removed persistence, patched weakness, credential reset, and malware cleanup evidence.
Exam Traps
- Restore before removing persistence.
- Leave exploited service exposed.
- Only delete visible files.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Recovery
Big Picture
Restore systems safely and monitor for recurrence.
Analyst Actions
- Validate clean state before returning assets to production.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Restore records, validation scans, monitoring windows, and owner sign-off.
Exam Traps
- Return systems without testing.
- Disable monitoring after restore.
- Recover from untrusted backups.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Lessons learned
Big Picture
Review what happened and improve controls, playbooks, training, and detections.
Analyst Actions
- Hold a blameless review and assign corrective actions.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
After-action report, timeline, root cause, and improvement backlog.
Exam Traps
- Skip review if service is restored.
- Use the meeting to assign blame only.
- Hide control failures.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Digital forensics
Big Picture
Collect, preserve, analyze, and report evidence using repeatable methods.
Analyst Actions
- Preserve integrity and document actions.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Disk images, memory captures, hashes, timestamps, and examiner notes.
Exam Traps
- Analyze originals without imaging.
- Change file timestamps casually.
- Skip hashing evidence.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Chain of custody
Big Picture
Document who handled evidence, when, why, and how it was stored.
Analyst Actions
- Maintain evidence admissibility and integrity.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Custody forms, hash values, transfer records, and secure storage logs.
Exam Traps
- Email evidence without tracking.
- Let unknown staff handle drives.
- Record only the final owner.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Legal considerations
Big Picture
Understand privacy, notification, law enforcement, retention, and counsel involvement.
Analyst Actions
- Escalate legal-sensitive issues through approved channels.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Legal hold, breach notification timeline, counsel guidance, and retention rules.
Exam Traps
- Publish details before counsel review.
- Ignore regulated data.
- Delete evidence to reduce exposure.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Malware indicators
Big Picture
Identify suspicious files, processes, persistence, registry changes, and network callbacks.
Analyst Actions
- Correlate host and network evidence.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Process trees, autoruns, hashes, C2 traffic, and file paths.
Exam Traps
- Assume high CPU always proves malware.
- Ignore persistence.
- Trust file names alone.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Network attack indicators
Big Picture
Recognize scanning, beaconing, brute force, exfiltration, DNS tunneling, and ARP poisoning clues.
Analyst Actions
- Use network telemetry to scope malicious behavior.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Flow logs, packet captures, DNS logs, failed authentication, and unusual volume.
Exam Traps
- Ignore east-west traffic.
- Treat all DNS as benign.
- Analyze only one packet.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Host attack indicators
Big Picture
Identify suspicious services, accounts, scheduled tasks, logs, and privilege escalation signs.
Analyst Actions
- Compare host state against baseline.
- Identify the affected asset, owner, data sensitivity, exposure, and operational impact.
- Preserve enough evidence to support the decision and enable review.
- Document what was checked, what was found, and what should happen next.
Evidence To Look For
Event logs, shell history, running services, cron/scheduled tasks, and account changes.
Exam Traps
- Ignore new admin accounts.
- Assume logs are complete.
- Delete suspicious tasks before recording them.
Hands-On Practice
- Write one SIEM, shell, scanner, or ticket query that would produce evidence for this topic.
- Decide what would make the finding higher priority.
- Decide what would make the finding a false positive or accepted risk.
Deep Review Table
| Topic | Best Evidence | Best Action |
|---|---|---|
| Incident response plan | IR plan, call tree, playbooks, severity matrix, and tabletop records | Follow the plan and escalate when severity or scope changes. |
| Preparation | Jump kits, playbooks, access validation, contact lists, and tabletop outcomes | Verify readiness before the incident starts. |
| Detection and analysis | SIEM events, EDR alerts, firewall logs, DNS logs, and user reports | Correlate data sources before declaring scope. |
| Containment | Network isolation, account disablement, firewall blocks, and containment notes | Choose short-term and long-term containment based on severity and impact. |
| Eradication | Removed persistence, patched weakness, credential reset, and malware cleanup evidence | Eliminate root cause after containment. |
| Recovery | Restore records, validation scans, monitoring windows, and owner sign-off | Validate clean state before returning assets to production. |
| Lessons learned | After-action report, timeline, root cause, and improvement backlog | Hold a blameless review and assign corrective actions. |
| Digital forensics | Disk images, memory captures, hashes, timestamps, and examiner notes | Preserve integrity and document actions. |
| Chain of custody | Custody forms, hash values, transfer records, and secure storage logs | Maintain evidence admissibility and integrity. |
| Legal considerations | Legal hold, breach notification timeline, counsel guidance, and retention rules | Escalate legal-sensitive issues through approved channels. |
| Malware indicators | Process trees, autoruns, hashes, C2 traffic, and file paths | Correlate host and network evidence. |
| Network attack indicators | Flow logs, packet captures, DNS logs, failed authentication, and unusual volume | Use network telemetry to scope malicious behavior. |
| Host attack indicators | Event logs, shell history, running services, cron/scheduled tasks, and account changes | Compare host state against baseline. |
Scenario Drill
For each scenario below, write the evidence you would collect, the most likely risk, the next action, and the communication target.
- A critical internet-facing server has a remotely exploitable vulnerability, but the application owner says the next maintenance window is three weeks away.
- A SIEM alert shows a user authenticating from two countries within ten minutes.
- DNS logs show repeated long random-looking subdomains from one workstation.
- A vulnerability scanner reports a critical finding on an OT device that cannot be rebooted during business hours.
- Leadership asks whether a recent incident is contained, but analysis is still underway.
Final Review Checklist
- I can explain incident response plan and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain preparation and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain detection and analysis and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain containment and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain eradication and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain recovery and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain lessons learned and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain digital forensics and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain chain of custody and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain legal considerations and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain malware indicators and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain network attack indicators and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.
- I can explain host attack indicators and choose the best analyst action in a scenario.