Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Arne Welzel
654fd9c7da Remove @load base/frameworks/dpd from tests
Now that it's loaded in bare mode, no need to load it explicitly.

The main thing that tests were relying on seems to be tracking of
c$service for conn.log baselines. Very few were actually checking
for dpd.log
2022-08-31 17:00:55 +02:00
Seth Hall
7f4914c219 Fix config reader regular expression for MUSL.
It was not dealing with multiple spaces between the key and the value
with MUSL correctly. This change ensures that if a value exists, that it
begins and ends with a non-blank character.
2020-08-04 12:35:20 -04:00
Johanna Amann
66effde97d Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/topic/seth/624'
* origin/topic/seth/624:
  Support whitespace at end of line for config reader.

This merge fixes a failing test; it also sprinkles a few more spaces
into another test file.

The main change is that this now also works with configuration lines
that don't have a value.
2019-10-14 21:47:59 -07:00
Jon Siwek
fd66e7b9f6 GH-591: fix reading set[enum] values from input files 2019-10-02 22:09:16 -07:00
Robin Sommer
789cb376fd 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
2019-05-01 21:43:45 +00:00
Jon Siwek
a994be9eeb Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/topic/seth/zeek_init'
* origin/topic/seth/zeek_init:
  Some more testing fixes.
  Update docs and tests for bro_(init|done) -> zeek_(init|done)
  Implement the zeek_init handler.
2019-04-19 11:24:29 -07:00
Jon Siwek
1e57e3f026 Use .zeek file suffix in unit tests 2019-04-16 16:08:57 -07:00
Seth Hall
9d676d368b Some more testing fixes. 2019-04-14 09:58:30 -04:00
Seth Hall
5db766bd88 Update docs and tests for bro_(init|done) -> zeek_(init|done) 2019-04-14 08:49:12 -04:00
Johanna Amann
cb47b37215 Be more liberal with whitespaces for ip-addresses, subnets, etc.
This change ignores leading/trailing whitespaces for a couple of
data-types (bool, port, subnet, addr) and just parses them as if the
whitespace was not present.
2019-02-19 15:06:06 -08:00
Johanna Amann
db6f028003 Add config framework.
The configuration framework consists of three mostly distinct parts:

* option variables
* the config reader
* the script level framework

I will describe the three elements in the following.

Internally, this commit also performs a range of changes to the Input
manager; it marks a lot of functions as const and introduces a new
ValueToVal method (which could in theory replace the already existing
one - it is a bit more powerful).

This also changes SerialTypes to have a subtype for Values, just as
Fields already have it; I think it was mostly an oversight that this was
not introduced from the beginning. This should not necessitate any code
changes for people already using SerialTypes.

option variable
===============

The option keyword allows variables to be specified as run-tine options.
Such variables cannot be changed using normal assignments. Instead, they
can be changed using Option::set. It is possible to "subscribe" to
options and be notified when an option value changes.

Change handlers can also change values before they are applied; this
gives them the opportunity to reject changes. Priorities can be
specified if there are several handlers for one option.

Example script:

option testbool: bool = T;

function option_changed(ID: string, new_value: bool): bool
  {
  print fmt("Value of %s changed from %s to %s", ID, testbool, new_value);
  return new_value;
  }

event bro_init()
  {
  print "Old value", testbool;
  Option::set_change_handler("testbool", option_changed);
  Option::set("testbool", F);
  print "New value", testbool;
  }

config reader
=============

The config reader provides a way to read configuration files back into
Bro. Most importantly it automatically converts values to the correct
types. This is important because it is at least inconvenient (and
sometimes near impossible) to perform the necessary type conversions in
Bro scripts themselves. This is especially true for sets/vectors.

Configuration generally look like this:

[option name][tab/spaces][new variable value]

so, for example:

testaddr 2607:f8b0:4005:801::200e
testinterval 60
testtime 1507321987
test_set a	b	c	d	erdbeerschnitzel

The reader uses the option name to look up the type that variable has in
the Bro core and automatically converts the value to the correct type.

Example script use:

type Idx: record {
  option_name: string;
};

type Val: record {
  option_val: string;
};

global currconfig: table[string] of string = table();

event InputConfig::new_value(name: string, source: string, id: string, value: any)
  {
  print id, value;
  }

event bro_init()
  {
  Input::add_table([$reader=Input::READER_CONFIG, $source="../configfile", $name="configuration", $idx=Idx, $val=Val, $destination=currconfig, $want_record=F]);
  }

Script-level config framework
=============================

The script-level framework ties these two features together and makes
them a bit more convenient to use. Configuration files can simply be
specified by placing them into Config::config_files. The framework also
creates a config.log that shows all value changes that took place.

Usage example:

redef Config::config_files += {configfile};

export {
  option testbool : bool = F;
}

The file is now monitored for changes; when a change occurs the
respective option values are automatically updated and the value change
is written to config.log.
2017-11-29 13:46:59 -08:00