Commit graph

5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Johanna Amann
42ba2fcca0 Settle on analyzer.log for the dpd.log replacement
This commit renames analyzer-failed.log to analyzer.log, and updates the
respective news entry.
2025-06-03 17:33:36 +01:00
Johanna Amann
af77a7a83b Analyzer failure logging: tweaks and test fixes
The main part of this commit are changes in tests. A lot of the tests
that previously relied on analyzer.log or dpd.log now use the new
analyzer-failed.log.

I verified all the changes and, as far as I can tell, everything
behaves as it should. This includes the external test baselines.

This change also enables logging of file and packet analyzer to
analyzer_failed.log and fixes some small behavior issues.

The analyzer_failed event is no longer raised when the removal of an
analyzer is vetoed.

If an analyzer is no longer active when an analyzer violation is raised,
currently the analyzer_failed event is raised. This can, e.g., happen
when an analyzer error happens at the very end of the connection. This
makes the behavior more similar to what happened in the past, and also
intuitively seems to make sense.

A bug introduced in the failed service logging was fixed.
2025-06-03 15:56:42 +01:00
Arne Welzel
62928ddb61 btest/spicy: Remove most port usages 2024-03-15 17:36:11 +01:00
Benjamin Bannier
8049d3a002 Speed up Spicy-related tests.
This patch changes invocations of `spicyz` and similar Spicy tools in
tests which perform compilation to use debug mode via passing `-d`. This
in turn leads to Spicy compiling generated C++ code in debug as opposed
to release mode which typically seems to require less CPU time and RAM.
For a local test running with `btest -j 16` and no caching via
`HILTI_CXX_COMPILER_LAUNCER` this sped up running of BTests under
`spicy/` by about 40s on my machine (120s vs 160s).
2023-05-25 14:59:10 +02:00
Robin Sommer
0040111955
Integrate the Spicy plugin into Zeek proper.
This reflects the `spicy-plugin` code as of `d8c296b81cc2a11`.

In addition to moving the code into Zeek's source tree, this comes
with a couple small functional changes:

- `spicyz` no longer tries to infer if it's running from the build
  directory. Instead `ZEEK_SPICY_LIBRARY` can be set to a custom
  location. `zeek-set-path.sh` does that now.

- ZEEK_CONFIG can be set to change what `spicyz -z` print out. This is
  primarily for backwards compatibility.

Some further notes on specifics:

- We raise the minimum Spicy version to 1.8 (i.e., current `main`
  branch).

- Renamed the `compiler/` subdirectory to `spicyz` to avoid
  include-path conflicts with the Spicy headers.

- In `cmake/`, the corresponding PR brings a new/extended version of
  `FindZeek`, which Spicy analyzer packages need. We also now install
  some of the files that the Spicy plugin used to bring for testing,
  so that existing packages keep working.

- For now, this all remains backwards compatible with the current
  `zkg` analyzer templates so that they work with both external and
  integrated Spicy support. Later, once we don't need to support any
  external Spicy plugin versions anymore, we can clean up the
  templates as well.

- All the plugin's tests have moved into the standard test suite. They
  are skipped if configure with `--disable-spicy`.

This holds off on adapting the new code further to Zeek's coding
conventions, so that it remains easier to maintain it in parallel to
the (now legacy) external plugin. We'll make a pass over the
formatting for (presumable) Zeek 6.1.
2023-05-16 10:17:45 +02:00