Commit graph

12 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Arne Welzel
b014e8e56e Management framework: add TLS options for controller's websocket server 2025-08-29 12:44:07 -07:00
Tim Wojtulewicz
535df5e263 Remove deprecated Controller::auto_assign_ports and Controller::auto_assign_start_port 2024-08-07 11:58:21 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
742f7fe340 Management framework: add auto-enumeration of metrics ports
This is quite redundant with the enumeration for Broker ports,
unfortunately. But the logic is subtly different: all nodes obtain a telemetry
port, while not all nodes require a Broker port, for example, and in the metrics
port assignment we also cross-check selected Broker ports. I found more unified
code actually harder to read in the end.

The logic for the two sets remains the same: from a start point, ports get
enumerated sequentially that aren't otherwise taken. These ports are assumed
available; there's nothing that checks their availability -- for now.

The default start port is 9000. I considered 9090, to align with the Prometheus
default, but counting upward from there is likely to hit trouble with the Broker
default ports (9999/9997), used by the Supervisor. Counting downward is a bit
unnatural, and shifting the Broker default ports brings subtle ordering issues.

This also changes the node ordering logic slightly since it seems more intuitive
to keep sequential ports on a given instance, instead of striping across them.
2024-07-08 23:05:24 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
147283c8f5 Management framework: add websocket support to controller
The controller now listens on an additional port, defaulting to 2149, for Broker
connections via websockets. Configuration works as for the existing traditional
Broker port (2150), via ZEEK_CONTROLLER_WEBSOCKET_ADDR and
ZEEK_CONTROLLER_WEBSOCKET_PORT environment variables, as well as corresponding
redef'able constants.

To disable the websockets feature, leave ZEEK_CONTROLLER_WEBSOCKET_PORT unset
and redefine Management::Controller::default_port_websocket to 0/unknown.
2022-10-24 15:59:26 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
46db4a0e71 Management framework: introduce state machine for configs and persist them
The controller now knows three states that a cluster configuration can be in:

- STAGED: as uploaded by the client
- READY: with needed tweaks applied, e.g. to fill in ports
- DEPLOYED: as sent off to agents for deployment

These states aren't exclusive, they represent checkpoints that a config goes
through from upload through deployment. A deployed configuration will also exist
in its STAGED and READY versions, unless a client has uploaded a new
configuration, which will overwrite the STAGED and READY ones.

The controller saves all of these in a table, which lets us use Broker to
persist all states to disk. We use &broker_allow_complex_type, since we only
ever store entire configurations.
2022-06-21 17:22:45 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
64741b571e Management framework: switch default network visibilities
Up to now, agents and controllers listened locally only, and the Supervisor
(which listens when we run an agent) listened globally. It's now the other way
around: controllers and agents listen globally and the Supervisor, when
listening, does so locally.
2022-06-08 15:00:19 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
7a471df1a1 Management framework: support auto-assignment of ports in cluster nodes
This enables the controller to assign listening ports to managers, loggers, and
proxies. (We don't currently make the workers listen.) The feature is controlled
by the Management::Controller::auto_assign_ports flag. When enabled (the
default), enumeration starts from Management::Controller::auto_assign_start_port,
beginning with the manager, then the logger(s), then proxy(s). When the feature
is disabled and nodes that require a port lack it, the controller rejects the
configuration.
2022-06-07 13:38:04 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
d1cd409e59 Management framework: set defaults for log rotation and persistent state
This adds management/persistence.zeek to establish common configuration for log
rotation and persistent variable state. Log-writing Zeek processes initially
write locally in their working directory, and rotate into subdirectory
"log-queue" of the spool. Since agent and controller have no logger,
persistence.zeek puts in place compatible configurations for them.

Storage folders for Broker-backed tables and clusterized stores default to
subdirectories of the new Zeek-level state folder.

When setting the ZEEK_MANAGEMENT_TESTING environment variable, persistent state
is kept in the local directory, and log rotation remains disabled.

This also tweaks @loads a bit in favor of simply loading frameworks/management,
which is easier to keep track of.
2022-05-26 12:55:10 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
d40bb6e85f Management framework: simplify agent and controller stdout/stderr files
Moving to a model in which every Zeek process runs out of its own working
directory simplifies the handling of those files.
2022-05-25 13:56:23 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
bd6c1683a2 Management framework: comment and layouting tweaks, no functional change
Also remove additional instances of the term "data cluster".
2022-05-25 13:56:23 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
d2903bb645 Management framework: increase robustness of agent/controller naming
The fallback mechanism when no explicit agent/controller names are configured
didn't work properly, because many places in the code relied on accessing the
name via the variables meant for explicit configuration, such as
Management::Agent::name. Agent and controller now offer functions for computing
the correct effective name, and we use that throughout.
2022-05-25 13:56:23 -07:00
Christian Kreibich
54aaf3a623 Reorg of the cluster controller to new "Management framework" layout
- This gives the cluster controller and agent the common name "Management
framework" and changes the start directory of the sources from
"policy/frameworks/cluster" to "policy/frameworks/management". This avoids
ambiguity with the existing cluster framework.

- It renames the "ClusterController" and "ClusterAgent" script modules to
"Management::Controller" and "Management::Agent", respectively. This allows us
to anchor tooling common to both controller and agent at the "Management"
module.

- It moves common configuration settings, logging, requests, types, and
utilities to the common "Management" module.

- It removes the explicit "::Types" submodule (so a request/response result is
now a Management::Result, not a Management::Types::Result), which makes
typenames more readable.

- It updates tests that depend on module naming and full set of scripts.
2022-02-09 18:09:42 -08:00