Commit graph

6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Benjamin Bannier
d5fd29edcd Prefer explicit construction to coercion in record initialization
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);
2025-07-11 16:28:37 -07:00
Tim Wojtulewicz
c1a8f8b763 Fix errors from rst linting on the generated docs 2025-01-24 11:41:36 -07:00
Robin Sommer
0d3296590d
Spicy: Register well-known ports through an event handler.
This avoids the earlier problem of not tracking ports correctly in
scriptland, while still supporting `port` in EVT files and `%port` in
Spicy files.

As it turns out we are already following the same approach for file
analyzers' MIME types, so I'm applying the same pattern: it's one
event per port, without further customization points. That leaves the
patch pretty small after all while fixing the original issue.
2024-08-22 10:24:55 +02:00
Arne Welzel
54a08a74da base/frameworks/spicy: Do not load base/misc/version
Unsure what it's used for today and also results in the situation that on
some platforms we generate a reporter.log in bare mode, while on others
where spicy is disabled, we do not.

If we want base/frameworks/version loaded by default, should put it into
init-bare.zeek and possibly remove the loading of the reporter framework
from it - Reporter::error() would still work and be visible on stderr,
just not create a reporter.log.
2023-10-24 13:15:21 +02:00
Robin Sommer
ecf00295c2
Move spicy/misc scripts to policy and clarify purpose. 2023-05-16 10:21:21 +02:00
Robin Sommer
0040111955
Integrate the Spicy plugin into Zeek proper.
This reflects the `spicy-plugin` code as of `d8c296b81cc2a11`.

In addition to moving the code into Zeek's source tree, this comes
with a couple small functional changes:

- `spicyz` no longer tries to infer if it's running from the build
  directory. Instead `ZEEK_SPICY_LIBRARY` can be set to a custom
  location. `zeek-set-path.sh` does that now.

- ZEEK_CONFIG can be set to change what `spicyz -z` print out. This is
  primarily for backwards compatibility.

Some further notes on specifics:

- We raise the minimum Spicy version to 1.8 (i.e., current `main`
  branch).

- Renamed the `compiler/` subdirectory to `spicyz` to avoid
  include-path conflicts with the Spicy headers.

- In `cmake/`, the corresponding PR brings a new/extended version of
  `FindZeek`, which Spicy analyzer packages need. We also now install
  some of the files that the Spicy plugin used to bring for testing,
  so that existing packages keep working.

- For now, this all remains backwards compatible with the current
  `zkg` analyzer templates so that they work with both external and
  integrated Spicy support. Later, once we don't need to support any
  external Spicy plugin versions anymore, we can clean up the
  templates as well.

- All the plugin's tests have moved into the standard test suite. They
  are skipped if configure with `--disable-spicy`.

This holds off on adapting the new code further to Zeek's coding
conventions, so that it remains easier to maintain it in parallel to
the (now legacy) external plugin. We'll make a pass over the
formatting for (presumable) Zeek 6.1.
2023-05-16 10:17:45 +02:00