While we support initializing records via coercion from an expression
list, e.g.,
local x: X = [$x1=1, $x2=2];
this can sometimes obscure the code to readers, e.g., when assigning to
value declared and typed elsewhere. The language runtime has a similar
overhead since instead of just constructing a known type it needs to
check at runtime that the coercion from the expression list is valid;
this can be slower than just writing the readible code in the first
place, see #4559.
With this patch we use explicit construction, e.g.,
local x = X($x1=1, $x2=2);
This adds a "policy" hook into the logging framework's streams and
filters to replace the existing log filter predicates. The hook
signature is as follows:
hook(rec: any, id: Log::ID, filter: Log::Filter);
The logging manager invokes hooks on each log record. Hooks can veto
log records via a break, and modify them if necessary. Log filters
inherit the stream-level hook, but can override or remove the hook as
needed.
The distribution's existing log streams now come with pre-defined
hooks that users can add handlers to. Their name is standardized as
"log_policy" by convention, with additional suffixes when a module
provides multiple streams. The following adds a handler to the Conn
module's default log policy hook:
hook Conn::log_policy(rec: Conn::Info, id: Log::ID, filter: Log::Filter)
{
if ( some_veto_reason(rec) )
break;
}
By default, this handler will get invoked for any log filter
associated with the Conn::LOG stream.
The existing predicates are deprecated for removal in 4.1 but continue
to work.
This adds two new functions: `Conn::register_removal_hook()` and
`Conn::unregister_removal_hook()` for registering a hook function to be
called back during `connection_state_remove`. The benefit of using hook
callback approach is better scalability: the overhead of unrelated
protocols having to dispatch no-op `connection_state_remove` handlers is
avoided.
And switch Zeek's base scripts over to using it in place of
"connection_state_remove". The difference between the two is
that "connection_state_remove" is raised for all events while
"successful_connection_remove" excludes TCP connections that were never
established (just SYN packets). There can be performance benefits
to this change for some use-cases.
There's also a new event called ``connection_successful`` and a new
``connection`` record field named "successful" to help indicate this new
property of connections.
* 'master' of https://github.com/spitfire55/bro:
Revert DNS query 255 from ANY to *
Missing commas...
Fix typo in dce-rpc consts
Refactor to use consistent numeric type in dce_rpc. Add missing DNS query type codes
I added back in DNS constants for PTR, EDNS, and ANY to avoid breaking
code for any people that use them.
Also omitted the DNP3 function code 0x83 name change from
"AUTHENTICATE_RESP" to "AUTHENTICATE_RESPONSE", again to avoid
potentially breaking code unnecessarily: "RESP" vs. "RESPONSE" is not
wrong in any sense, just maybe a matter of clarify.
This allows the path for the default filter to be specified explicitly
when creating a stream and reduces the need to rely on the default path
function to magically supply the path.
The default path function is now only used if, when a filter is added to
a stream, it has neither a path nor a path function already.
Adapted the existing Log::create_stream calls to explicitly specify a
path value.
Addresses BIT-1324
Includes a bit more docs/comments cleanup. We should eventually
document the events further but it should suffice for now.
* topic/robin/dnp3-merge-v3:
Tiny bit of cleanup and adapting the new test.
added a test case for dnp3 packets with only link layer
added condition to check DNP3 packet without app layer data
Fixing well-known port.
Pluginizing the DNP3 analyzer, plus a basic script logging requests and replies.