Currently, coverage/bare-mode-errors is one of the slowest tests in the
entire test suite. This is caused by the fact that it has to repeatedly
launch Zeek for every script that we ship. This is done sequentially.
This commit changes this test to use xargs to spawn 20 parallell
processes.
Mostly due to spending too much time wondering why nodes didn't connect
when there was a mismatch between "manager" and "manager-1" in the
cluster layout. Remove manager from test-all-policy-cluster test to
avoid connection attempts in this test.
...at the same time, add some `TEST-REQUIRES: have-zeromq` which
unfortunately means that developers will usually want libzmq
installed on their system.
With this commit, the entire Zeek test suite passes using spicy TLS.
Tests that either use a SSLv2 handshake, or DTLS are skipped, as the
parser currently does not support either.
Similarly, tests that rely on behavior we cannot replicate (baseline,
hooks, exact error messages) are passed. Other than that, all the
TLS-based tests pass with 100% the exact same baseline results.
This necessitated a couple of small tweaks to the spicy file - the
testcases uncovered several small problems.
This commit also enables cirrus tests for Spicy SSL/TLS.
With Cluster::Node$metrics_port being optional, there's not really
a need for the extra script. New rule, if a metrics_port is set, the
node will attempt to listen on it.
Users can still redef Telemetry::metrics_port *after*
base/frameworks/telemetry was loaded to change the port defined
in cluster-layout.zeek.
Justin pointed out that the misc/dump-events test shows added fields to
the connection record. Add a new test that prints the connection record
recursively in bare and default mode to cover that use-case
specifically.
After the introduction of @if ... analyze, a lot of warnings were
triggered due to nested @if and @if .. analyze usage.
Add a test for coverage of all policy scripts in cluster mode
for the usual node types so this does not happen again.
zeek.on('zeek_init', () => {
console.log('Hello, Zeek!');
});
For interaction with external systems and HTTP APIs, JavaScript and the
Node.js ecosystem beat Zeek script. Make it more easily accessible by
including ZeekJS with Zeek directly.
When a recent enough libnode version is found on the build system, ZeekJS is
added as a builtin plugin. This behavior can be disabled via
``--disable-javascript``. Linux distributions providing such a package are
Ubuntu (22.10) and Debian (testing/bookworm) as libnode-dev.
Fedora provides it as nodejs-devel.
This plugin takes over loading of .js or .cjs files. When no such files
are provided to Zeek, Node and the V8 engine are not initialized and
should not get into the way.
This should be considered experimental.
As initial examples, this branch ports the Syslog and Finger analyzers
over. We leave the old analyzers in place for now and activate them
iff we compile without any Spicy.
Needs `zeek-spicy-infra` branches in `spicy/`, `spicy-plugin/`,
`CMake/`, and `zeek/zeek-testing-private`.
Note that the analyzer events remain associated with the Spicy plugin
for now: that's where they will show up with `-NN`, and also inside
the Zeekygen documentation.
We switch CMake over to linking the runtime library into the plugin,
vs. at the top-level through object libraries.
This has come up a few times and the motivation is mainly better "first timer"
experience with Zeek. Concretely, if one wants to run a Zeek cluster with
multiple workers and reasonable load balancing on Linux, AF_PACKET is a decent
start. Without AF_PACKET support being built into Zeek, however, a new user's
next experience is that of setting up a development environment in order
to compile an external plugin (think compiler, kernel headers, zkg, ...).
Only to get what could be termed basic functionality.
This is using the ZEEK_INCLUDE_PLUGINS infrastructure. I've used the all
upper case spelling of AF_PACKET in the help output because it seems everyone
else references/writes it like that. I think we should also write it
like that in the docs.
All changes in this patch were performed automatically with `shfmt` with
configuration flags specified in `.pre-commit-config.yaml`.
In addition to fixing whitespace the roundtrip through shfmt's AST also
transforms command substitutions
`cmd`
# becomes
$(cmd)
and some redirects
>&2 echo "msg"
# becomes
echo >&2 "msg"
Adjustments during merge:
- kept the UNKNOWN Log::ID as placeholder value
- changed the coverage.find-bro-logs test to check for arbitrary $path
field values instead of just string literals
- don't force EnumVal to unsigned integer since the relevant union member
is the signed integer and added the relevant enum values/types to
.bif files for easier access
- compare FILE* versus file name to check for stdout equality (don't
think it matters much, just a bit more efficient)
- minor whitespace/style tweaks
* origin/topic/dev/print-to-log:
Added a non boolean configuration and other changes as suggested by Jon
Allow Print Statements to be redirected to a Log# This is a combination of 3 commits.
Some Zeek script statement descriptions were exceeding the hardcoded
maximum length and also could contain tab characters which were
supposed to be reserved for use as a delimiter in the file format.
For backward compatibility when reading values, we first check
the ZEEK-prefixed value, and if not set, then check the corresponding
BRO-prefixed value.
* origin/topic/robin/gh-239:
Undo a change to btest.cfg from a recent commit
Updating submodule.
Fix zeek-wrapper
Update for renaming BroControl to ZeekControl.
Updating submodule.
GH-239: Rename bro to zeek, bro-config to zeek-config, and bro-path-dev to zeek-path-dev.
This also installs symlinks from "zeek" and "bro-config" to a wrapper
script that prints a deprecation warning.
The btests pass, but this is still WIP. broctl renaming is still
missing.
#239
* All "Broxygen" usages have been replaced in
code, documentation, filenames, etc.
* Sphinx roles/directives like ":bro:see" are now ":zeek:see"
* The "--broxygen" command-line option is now "--zeexygen"