This instantiates the SSL analyzer when the client requests SSL
so that Zeek now has a bit more visibility into encrypted MySQL
connections.
The pattern used is the same as in the IMAP, POP or XMPP analyzer.
Not sure this adds much more coverage then there was, but minimally
more recent software versions.
The instances/passwords were ephemeral, so hostname and password hashes
etc aren't useful to anyone.
We were parsing MySQL using bigendian even though the protocol is
specified as with "least significant byte first" [1]. This is most
problematic when parsing length encoded strings with 2 byte length
fields...
Further, I think, the EOF_Packet parsing was borked, either due to
testing the CLIENT_DEPRECATE_EOF with the wrong endianness, or due to
the workaround in Resultset processing raising mysql_ok(). Introduce a
new mysql_eof() that triggers for EOF_Packet's and remove the fake
mysql_ok() Resultset invocation to fix. Adapt the mysql script and tests
to account for the new event.
This is a quite backwards incompatible change on the event level, but
due to being quite buggy in general, doubt this matters to many.
I think there is more buried, but this fixes the violation of the simple
"SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS" and the existing tests continue to
succeed...
[1] https://dev.mysql.com/doc/dev/mysql-server/latest/page_protocol_basic_dt_integers.html
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
* MySQL: the parser for this was generally broken (not following
the specification well) and needed many changes. One addition is a
new "mysql_result_row" event that provides access to the results of
queries.
* SMB: the spec seems to explitly call out the omission of the
PrimaryDomain field on SMB_COM_SESSION_SETUP_ANDX responses (and I
don't see that field in pcaps either), so this may have just been a
typo that used to work fine in the past only due to faulty array
parsing behavior in binpac.