=============================================== Broccoli: The Bro Client Communications Library =============================================== This page documents Broccoli, the Bro client communications library. It allows you to create client sensors for the Bro intrusion detection system. Broccoli can speak a good subset of the Bro communication protocol, in particular, it can receive Bro IDs, send and receive Bro events, and send and receive event requests to/from peering Bros. .. contents:: Introduction ############ What is Broccoli? ================= Broccoli is the BRO Client COmmunications LIbrary. It allows you to write applications that speak the communication protocol of the `Bro intrusion detection system `_. Broccoli is free software under terms of the BSD license as given in the COPYING file distributed with its source code. In this document, we assume that you are familiar with the basic concepts of Bro, so please first review the documentation/publications available from the Bro website if necessary. Feedback, patches and bug reports are all welcome, please see http://www.bro.org/community for instructions on how to participate in the Bro community. Why do I care? ============== Having a single IDS on your network is good, but things become a lot more interesting when you can communicate information among multiple vantage points in your network. Bro agents can communicate with other Bro agents, sending and receiving events and other state information. In the Bro context this is particularly interesting because it means that you can build sophisticated policy-controlled distributed event management systems. Broccoli enters the picture when it comes to integrating components that are not Bro agents themselves. Broccoli lets you create applications that can speak the Bro communication protocol. You can compose, send, request, and receive events. You can register your own event handlers. You can talk to other Broccoli applications or Bro agents -- Bro agents cannot tell whether they are talking to another Bro or a Broccoli application. Broccoli allows you to integrate applications of your choosing into a distributed policy-controlled event management system. Broccoli is intended to be portable: it should build on Linux, the BSDs, Solaris, and Windows (in the `MinGW `_ environment). Unlike other distributed IDSs, Bro does not assume a strict sensor-manager hierarchy in the information flow. Instead, Bro agents can request delivery of arbitrary *events* from other instances. When an event is triggered in a Bro agent, it checks whether any connected agents have requested notification of this event, and sends a *copy* of the event, including the *event arguments*. Recall that in Bro, an event handler is essentially a function defined in the Bro language, and an event materializes through invocation of an event handler. Each remote agent can define its own event handlers. Broccoli applications will typically do one or more of the following: - *Configuration/Management Tasks:* the Broccoli application is used to configure remotely running Bros without the need for a restart. - *Interfacing with other Systems:* the Broccoli application is used to convert Bro events to other alert/notice formats, or into syslogd entries. - *Host-based Sensor Feeds into Bro:* the Broccoli application reports events based on host-based activity generated in kernel space or user space applications. Installing Broccoli ################### The installation process will hopefully be painless: Broccoli is installed from source using the usual ``./configure && make && make install`` routine after extraction of the tarball. Some relevant configuration options to pass to configure are: - ``--prefix=``: sets the installation root to DIR. The default is to install below ``/usr/local``. - ``--enable-debug``: enables debugging output. Please refer to the `Configuring Debugging Output`_ section for details on configuring and using debugging output. - ``--with-configfile=``: use FILE as location of configuration file. See the section on `Configuration Files`_ for more on this. - ``--with-openssl=``: use the OpenSSL installation below DIR. After installation, you'll find the library in shared and static versions in ``/lib``, the header file for compilation in ``/include``. Using Broccoli ############## Obtaining information about your build using ``broccoli-config`` ================================================================ Similarly to many other software packages, the Broccoli distribution provides a script that you can use to obtain details about your Broccoli setup. The script currently provides the following flags: - ``--build`` prints the name of the machine the build was made on, when, and whether debugging support was enabled or not. - ``--prefix`` prints the directory in the filesystem below which Broccoli was installed. - ``--version`` prints the version of the distribution you have installed. - ``--libs`` prints the flags to pass to the linker in order to link in the Broccoli library. - ``--cflags`` prints the flags to pass to the compiler in order to properly include Broccoli's header file. - ``--config`` prints the location of the system-wide config file your installation will use. The ``--cflags`` and ``--libs`` flags are the suggested way of obtaining the necessary information for integrating Broccoli into your build environment. It is generally recommended to use ``broccoli-config`` for this purpose, rather than, say, develop new **autoconf** tests. If you use the **autoconf/automake** tools, we recommend something along the following lines for your ``configure`` script:: dnl ################################################## dnl # Check for Broccoli dnl ################################################## AC_ARG_WITH(broccoli-config, AC_HELP_STRING(\[--with-broccoli-config=FILE], \[Use given broccoli-config]), [ brocfg="$withval" ], [ AC_PATH_GENERIC(broccoli,, brocfg="broccoli-config", AC_MSG_ERROR(Cannot find Broccoli: Is broccoli-config in path? Use more fertilizer?)) ]) broccoli_libs=`$brocfg --libs` broccoli_cflags=`$brocfg --cflags` AC_SUBST(broccoli_libs) AC_SUBST(broccoli_cflags)`` You can then use the compiler/linker flags in your Makefile.in/ams by substituting in the values accordingly, which might look as follows:: CFLAGS = -W -Wall -g -DFOOBAR @broccoli_cflags@ LDFLAGS = -L/usr/lib/foobar @broccoli_libs@ Suggestions for instrumenting applications ========================================== Often you will want to make existing applications Bro-aware, that is, *instrument* them so that they can send and receive Bro events at appropriate moments in the execution flow. This will involve modifying an existing code tree, so care needs to be taken to avoid unwanted side effects. By protecting the instrumented code with ``#ifdef``/``#endif`` statements you can still build the original application, using the instrumented source tree. The ``broccoli-config`` script helps you in doing so because it already adds ``-DBROCCOLI`` to the compiler flags reported when run with the ``--cflags`` option: .. console:: > broccoli-config --cflags -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/local/include -DBROCCOLI So simply surround all inserted code with a preprocessor check for ``BROCCOLI`` and you will be able to build the original application as soon as ``BROCCOLI`` is not defined. The Broccoli API ================ Time for some code. In the code snippets below we will introduce variables whenever context requires them and not necessarily when C requires them. The library does not require calling a global initialization function. In order to make the API known, include ``broccoli.h``: .. code:: c #ifdef BROCCOLI #include #endif .. note:: *Broccoli's memory management philosophy:* Broccoli generally does not release objects you allocate. The approach taken is "you clean up what you allocate." Initialization -------------- Broccoli requires global initialization before most of its other functions can be used. Generally, the way to initialize Broccoli is as follows: .. code:: c bro_init(NULL); The argument to ``bro_init()`` provides optional initialization context, and may be kept ``NULL`` for normal use. If required, you may allocate a ``BroCtx`` structure locally, initialize it using ``bro_ctx_init()``, fill in additional values as required and subsequently pass it to ``bro_init()``: .. code:: c BroCtx ctx; bro_ctx_init(&ctx); /* Make adjustments to the context structure as required...*/ bro_init(&ctx); .. note:: The ``BroCtx`` structure currently contains a set of five different callback function pointers. These are *required* for thread-safe operation of OpenSSL (Broccoli itself is thread-safe). If you intend to use Broccoli in a multithreaded environment, you need to implement functions and register them via the ``BroCtx`` structure. The O'Reilly book "Network Security with OpenSSL" by Viega et al. shows how to implement these callbacks. .. warning:: You *must* call ``bro_init()`` at the start of your application. Undefined behavior may result if you don't. Data types in Broccoli ---------------------- Broccoli declares a number of data types in ``broccoli.h`` that you should know about. The more complex ones are kept opaque, while you do get access to the fields in the simpler ones. The full list is as follows: - Simple signed and unsigned types: int, uint, uint16, uint32, uint64 and uchar. - Connection handles: BroConn, kept opaque. - Bro events: BroEvent, kept opaque. - Buffer objects: BroBuf, kept opaque. See also `Using Dynamic Buffers`_. - Ports: BroPort for network ports, defined as follows: .. code:: c typedef struct bro_port { uint16 port_num; /* port number in host byte order */ int port_proto; /* IPPROTO_xxx */ } BroPort; - Records: BroRecord, kept opaque. See also `Handling Records`_. - Strings (character and binary): BroString, defined as follows: .. code:: c typedef struct bro_string { int str_len; char str_val; } BroString; - BroStrings are mostly kept transparent for convenience; please have a look at the `Broccoli API Reference`_. - Tables: BroTable, kept opaque. See also `Handling Tables`_. - Sets: BroSet, kept opaque. See also `Handling Sets`_. - IP Address: BroAddr, defined as follows: .. code:: c typedef struct bro_addr { uint32 addr[4]; /* IP address in network byte order */ int size; /* Number of 4-byte words occupied in addr */ } BroAddr; Both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are supported, with the former occupying only the first 4 bytes of the ``addr`` array. - Subnets: BroSubnet, defined as follows: .. code:: c typedef struct bro_subnet { BroAddr sn_net; /* IP address in network byte order */ uint32 sn_width; /* Length of prefix to consider. */ } BroSubnet; Managing Connections -------------------- You can use Broccoli to establish a connection to a remote Bro, or to create a Broccoli-enabled server application that other Bros will connect to (this means that in principle, you can also use Broccoli purely as middleware and have multiple Broccoli applications communicate directly). In order to establish a connection to a remote Bro, you first obtain a connection handle. You then use this connection handle to request events, connect to the remote Bro, send events, etc. Connection handles are pointers to ``BroConn`` structures, which are kept opaque. Use ``bro_conn_new()`` or ``bro_conn_new_str()`` to obtain a handle, depending on what parameters are more convenient for you: the former accepts the IP address and port number as separate numerical arguments, the latter uses a single string to encode both, in "hostname:port" format. To write a Broccoli-enabled server, you first need to implement the usual ``socket()`` / ``bind()`` / ``listen()`` / ``accept()`` routine. Once you have obtained a file descriptor for the new connection from ``accept()``, you pass it to the third function that returns a ``BroConn`` handle, ``bro_conn_new_socket()``. The rest of the connection handling then proceeds as in the client scenario. All three calls accept additional flags for fine-tuning connection behaviour. These flags are: - ``BRO_CFLAG_NONE``: no functionality. Use when no flags are desired. - ``BRO_CFLAG_RECONNECT``: When using this option, Broccoli will attempt to reconnect to the peer transparently after losing connectivity. Essentially whenever you try to read from or write to the peer and its connection has broke down, a full reconnect including complete handshaking is attempted. You can check whether the connection to a peer is alive at any time using ``bro_conn_alive()``. - ``BRO_CFLAG_ALWAYS_QUEUE``: When using this option, Broccoli will queue any events you send for later transmission when a connection is currently down. Without using this flag, any events you attempt to send while a connection is down get dropped on the floor. Note that Broccoli maintains a maximum queue size per connection so if you attempt to send lots of events while the connection is down, the oldest events may start to get dropped nonetheless. Again, you can check whether the connection is currently okay by using ``bro_conn_alive()``. - ``BRO_CFLAG_DONTCACHE``: When using this option, Broccoli will ask the peer not to use caching on the objects it sends to us. This is the default, and the flag need not normally be used. It is kept to maintain backward compatibility. - ``BRO_CFLAG_CACHE``: When using this option, Broccoli will ask the peer to use caching on the objects it sends to us. Caching is normally disabled. - ``BRO_CFLAG_YIELD``: When using this option, ``bro_conn_process_input()`` processes at most one event at a time and then returns. By obtaining a connection handle, you do not also establish a connection right away. This is done using ``bro_conn_connect()``. The main reason for this is to allow you to subscribe to events (using ``bro_event_registry_add()``, see `Receiving Events`_) before establishing the connection. Upon returning from ``bro_conn_connect()`` you are guaranteed to receive all instances of the event types you have requested, while later on during the connection some time may elapse between the issuing of a request for events and the processing of that request at the remote end. Connections are established via TCP, optionally using SSL encryption. See "`Configuring Encrypted Communication`_", for more information on setting up encryption. The port numbers Bro agents and Broccoli applications listen on can vary from peer to peer. Finally, ``bro_conn_delete()`` terminates a connection and releases all resources associated with it. You can create as many connections as you like, to one or more peers. You can obtain the file descriptor of a connection using ``bro_conn_get_fd()``: .. code:: c char host_str = "bro.yourorganization.com"; int port = 1234; struct hostent *host; BroConn *bc; if (! (host = gethostbyname(host_str)) || ! (host->h_addr_list[0])) { /* Error handling -- could not resolve host */ } /* In this example, we obtain a connection handle, then register event handlers, and finally connect to the remote Bro. */ /* First obtain a connection handle: */ if (! (bc = bro_conn_new((struct in_addr*) host->h_addr_list[0], htons(port), BRO_CFLAG_NONE))) { /* Error handling - could not get connection handle */ } /* Register event handlers: */ bro_event_registry_add(bc, "foo", bro_foo_handler, NULL); /* ... */ /* Now connect to the peer: */ if (! bro_conn_connect(bc)) { /* Error handling - could not connect to remote Bro. */ } /* Send and receive events ... */ /* Disconnect from Bro and clean up connection */ bro_conn_delete(bc); Or simply use the string-based version: .. code:: c char host_str = "bro.yourcompany.com:1234"; BroConn bc; /* In this example we don't request any events from the peer, but we ask it not to use the serialization cache. */ /* Again, first obtain a connection handle: */ if (! (bc = bro_conn_new_str(host_str, BRO_CFLAG_DONTCACHE))) { /* Error handling - could not get connection handle */ } /* Now connect to the peer: */ if (! bro_conn_connect(bc)) { /* Error handling - could not connect to remote Bro. */ } /* ... */ Connection Classes ------------------ When you want to establish connections from multiple Broccoli applications with different purposes, the peer needs a means to understand what kind of application each connection belongs to. The real meaning of "kind of application" here is "sets of event types to request", because depending on the class of an application, the peer will likely want to receive different types of events. Broccoli lets you set the class of a connection using ``bro_conn_set_class()``. When using this feature, you need to call that function before issuing a ``bro_conn_connect()`` since the class of a connection is determined at connection startup: .. code:: c if (! (bc = bro_conn_new_str(host_str, BRO_CFLAG_DONTCACHE))) { /* Error handling - could not get connection handle */ } /* Set class of this connection: */ bro_conn_set_class(bc, "syslog"); if (! bro_conn_connect(bc)) { /* Error handling - could not connect to remote Bro. */ } If your peer is a Bro node, you need to match the chosen connection class in the remote Bro's ``Communication::nodes`` configuration. See `Configuring event reception in Bro scripts`_, for how to do this. Finally, in order to obtain the class of a connection as indicated by the remote side, use ``bro_conn_get_peer_class()``. Composing and sending events ---------------------------- In order to send an event to the remote Bro agent, you first create an empty event structure with the name of the event, then add parameters to pass to the event handler at the remote agent, and then send off the event. .. note: *Bro peers ignore unrequested events.* You need to make sure that the remote Bro agent is interested in receiving the events you send. This interest is expressed in policy configuration. We'll explain this in more detail in `Configuring event reception in Bro scripts`_, and for now assume that our remote peer is configured to receive the events we send. Let's assume we want to request a report of all connections a remote Bro currently keeps state for that match a given destination port and host name and that have amassed more than a certain number of bytes. The idea is to send an event to the remote Bro that contains the query, identifiable through a request ID, and have the remote Bro answer us with ``remote_conn`` events containing the information we asked for. The definition of our requesting event could look as follows in the Bro policy: .. code:: bro event report_conns(req_id: int, dest_host: string, dest_port: port, min_size: count); First, create a new event: .. code:: c BroEvent *ev; if (! (ev = bro_event_new("report_conns"))) { /* Error handling - could not allocate new event. */ } Now we need to add parameters to the event. The sequence and types must match the event handler declaration -- check the Bro policy to make sure they match. The function to use for adding parameter values is ``bro_event_add_val()``. All values are passed as *pointer arguments* and are copied internally, so the object you're pointing to stays unmodified at all times. You clean up what you allocate. In order to indicate the type of the value passed into the function, you need to pass a numerical type identifier along as well. Table-1_ lists the value types that Broccoli supports along with the type identifier and data structures to point to. .. _Table-1: Types, type tags, and data structures for event parameters in Broccoli ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================== ===================== ==================== Type Type tag Data type pointed to ============================== ===================== ==================== Boolean ``BRO_TYPE_BOOL`` ``int`` Integer value ``BRO_TYPE_INT`` ``uint64`` Counter (nonnegative integers) ``BRO_TYPE_COUNT`` ``uint64`` Enums (enumerated values) ``BRO_TYPE_ENUM`` ``uint64`` (see also description of ``bro_event_add_val()``'s ``type_name`` argument) Floating-point number ``BRO_TYPE_DOUBLE`` ``double`` Timestamp ``BRO_TYPE_TIME`` ``double`` (see also ``bro_util_timeval_to_double()`` and ``bro_util_current_time()``) Time interval ``BRO_TYPE_INTERVAL`` ``double`` Strings (text and binary) ``BRO_TYPE_STRING`` ``BroString`` (see also family of ``bro_string_xxx()`` functions) Network ports ``BRO_TYPE_PORT`` ``BroPort``, with the port number in host byte order IPv4/IPv6 address ``BRO_TYPE_IPADDR`` ``BroAddr``, with the ``addr`` member in network byte order and ``size`` member indicating the address family and number of 4-byte words of ``addr`` that are occupied (1 for IPv4 and 4 for IPv6) IPv4/IPv6 subnet ``BRO_TYPE_SUBNET`` ``BroSubnet``, with the ``sn_net`` member in network byte order Record ``BRO_TYPE_RECORD`` ``BroRecord`` (see also the family of ``bro_record_xxx()`` functions and their explanation below) Table ``BRO_TYPE_TABLE`` ``BroTable`` (see also the family of ``bro_table_xxx()`` functions and their explanation below) Set ``BRO_TYPE_SET`` ``BroSet`` (see also the family of ``bro_set_xxx()`` functions and their explanation below) ============================== ===================== ==================== Knowing these, we can now compose a ``request_connections`` event: .. code:: c BroString dest_host; BroPort dest_port; uint32 min_size; int req_id = 0; bro_event_add_val(ev, BRO_TYPE_INT, NULL, &req_id); req_id++; bro_string_set(&dest_host, "desthost.destdomain.com"); bro_event_add_val(ev, BRO_TYPE_STRING, NULL, &dest_host); bro_string_cleanup(&dest_host); dest_port.dst_port = 80; dest_port.dst_proto = IPPROTO_TCP; bro_event_add_val(ev, BRO_TYPE_PORT, NULL, &dest_port); min_size = 1000; bro_event_add_val(ev, BRO_TYPE_COUNT, NULL, &min_size); The third argument to ``bro_event_add_val()`` lets you specify a specialization of the types listed in Table-1_. This is generally not necessary except for one situation: when using ``BRO_TYPE_ENUM``. You currently cannot define a Bro-level enum type in Broccoli, and thus when sending an enum value, you have to specify the type of the enum along with the value. For example, in order to add an instance of enum ``transport_type`` defined in Bro's ``bro.init``, you would use: .. code:: c int transport_proto = 2; /* ... */ bro_event_add_val(ev, BRO_TYPE_ENUM, "transport_proto", &transport_proto); to get the equivalent of "udp" on the remote side. The same system is used to point out type names when calling ``bro_event_set_val()``, ``bro_record_add_val()``, ``bro_record_set_nth_val()``, and ``bro_record_set_named_val()``. All that's left to do now is to send off the event. For this, use ``bro_event_send()`` and pass it the connection handle and the event. The function returns ``TRUE`` when the event could be sent right away or if it was queued for later delivery. ``FALSE`` is returned on error. If the event gets queued, this does not indicate an error -- likely the connection was just not ready to send the event at this point. Whenever you call ``bro_event_send()``, Broccoli attempts to send as much of an existing event queue as possible. Again, the event is copied internally to make it easier for you to send the same event repeatedly. You clean up what you allocate: .. code:: c bro_event_send(bc, ev); bro_event_free(ev); Two other functions may be useful to you: ``bro_event_queue_length()`` tells you how many events are currently queued, and ``bro_event_queue_flush()`` attempts to flush the current event queue and returns the number of events that do remain in the queue after the flush. .. note:: you do not normally need to call this function, queue flushing is attempted every time you send an event. Receiving Events ---------------- Receiving events is a little more work because you need to 1. tell Broccoli what to do when requested events arrive, #. let the remote Bro agent know that you would like to receive those events, #. find a spot in the code path suitable for extracting and processing arriving events. Each of these steps is explained in the following sections. Implementing event callbacks ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When Broccoli receives an event, it tries to dispatch the event to callbacks registered for that event type. The place where callbacks get registered is called the callback registry. Any callbacks registered for the arriving event's name are invoked with the parameters shipped with the event. There are two styles of argument passing to the event callbacks. Which one is better suited depends on your application. Expanded Argument Passing ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Each event argument is passed via a pointer to the callback. This makes best sense when you know the type of the event and of its arguments, because it provides you immediate access to arguments as when using a normal C function. In order to register a callback with expanded argument passing, use ``bro_event_registry_add()`` and pass it the connection handle, the name of the event for which you register the callback, the callback itself that matches the signature of the ``BroEventFunc`` type, and any user data (or ``NULL``) you want to see passed to the callback on each invocation. The callback's type is defined rather generically as follows: .. code:: c typedef void (*BroEventFunc) (BroConn *bc, void *user_data, ...); It requires a connection handle as its first argument and a pointer to user-provided callback data as the second argument. Broccoli will pass the connection handle of the connection on which the event arrived through to the callback. ``BroEventFunc``'s are variadic, because each callback you provide is directly invoked with pointers to the parameters of the event, in a format directly usable in C. All you need to know is what type to point to in order to receive the parameters in the right layout. Refer to Table-1_ again for a summary of those types. Record types are more involved and are addressed in more detail in `Handling Records`_. .. note:: Note that *all* parameters are passed to the callback as pointers, even elementary types such as ``int`` that would normally be passed directly. Also note that Broccoli manages the lifecycle of event parameters and therefore you do *not* have to clean them up inside the event handler. Continuing our example, we will want to process the connection reports that contain the responses to our ``report_conns`` event. Let's assume those look as follows: .. code:: bro event remote_conn(req_id: int, conn: connection); The reply events contain the request ID so we can associate requests with replies, and a connection record (defined in ``bro.init`` in Bro). (It'd be nicer to report all replies in a single event but we'll ignore that for now.) For this event, our callback would look like this: .. code:: c void remote_conn_cb(BroConn *bc, void *user_data, int *req_id, BroRecord *conn); Once more, you clean up what you allocate, and since you never allocated the space these arguments point to, you also don't clean them up. Finally, we register the callback using ``bro_event_registry_add()``: .. code:: c bro_event_registry_add(bc, "remote_conn", remote_conn_cb, NULL); In this case we have no additional data to be passed into the callback, so we use ``NULL`` for the last argument. If you have multiple events you are interested in, register each one in this fashion. Compact Argument Passing ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ This is designed for situations when you have to determine how to handle different types of events at runtime, for example when writing language bindings or when implementing generic event handlers for multiple event types. The callback is passed a connection handle and the user data as above but is only passed one additional pointer, to a BroEvMeta structure. This structure contains all metadata about the event, including its name, timestamp (in UTC) of creation, number of arguments, the arguments' types (via type tags as listed in Table-1_), and the arguments themselves. In order to register a callback with compact argument passing, use ``bro_event_registry_add_compact()`` and pass it similar arguments as you'd use with ``bro_event_registry_add()``. The callback's type is defined as follows: .. code:: c typedef void (*BroCompactEventFunc) (BroConn *bc, void *user_data, BroEvMeta *meta); .. note:: As before, Broccoli manages the lifecycle of event parameters. You do not have to clean up the BroEvMeta structure or any of its contents. Below is sample code for extracting the arguments from the BroEvMeta structure, using our running example. This is still written with the assumption that we know the types of the arguments, but note that this is not a requirement for this style of callback: .. code:: c void remote_conn_cb(BroConn *bc, void *user_data, BroEvMeta *meta) { int *req_id; BroRecord *rec; /* For demonstration, print out the event's name: */ printf("Handling a %s event.\n", meta->ev_name); /* Sanity-check the number of arguments: */ if (meta->ev_numargs != 2) { /* error */ } /* Sanity-check the argument types: */ if (meta->ev_args[0].arg_type != BRO_TYPE_INT) { /* error */ } if (meta->ev_args[1].arg_type != BRO_TYPE_RECORD) { /* error */ } req_id = (int *) meta->ev_args[0].arg_data; rec = (BroRecord *) meta->ev_args[1].arg_data; /* ... */ } Finally, register the callback using ``bro_event_registry_add_compact()``: .. code:: c bro_event_registry_add_compact(bc, "remote_conn", remote_conn_cb, NULL); Requesting event delivery ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ At this point, Broccoli knows what to do with the requested events upon arrival. What's left to do is to let the remote Bro know that you would like to receive the events for which you registered. If you haven't yet called ``bro_conn_connect()``, then there is nothing to do, since that function will request the registered events anyway. Once connected, you can still request events. To do so, call ``bro_event_registry_request()``: .. code:: c bro_event_registry_request(bc); This mechanism also implies that no unrequested events will be delivered to us (and if that happened for whatever reason, the event would simply be dropped on the floor). .. note:: At the moment you cannot unrequest events, nor can you request events based on predicates on the values of the events' arguments. Reading events from the connection handle ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ At this point the remote Bro will start sending you the requested events once they are triggered. What is left to do is to read the arriving events from the connection and trigger dispatching them to the registered callbacks. If you are writing a new Bro-enabled application, this is easy, and you can choose among two approaches: polling explicitly via Broccoli's API, or using ``select()`` on the file handle associated with a BroConn. The former case is particularly straightforward; all you need to do is call ``bro_conn_process_input()``, which will go off and check if any events have arrived and if so, dispatch them accordingly. This function does not block -- if no events have arrived, then the call will return immediately. For more fine-grained control over your I/O handling, you will probably want to use ``bro_conn_get_fd()`` to obtain the file descriptor of your connection and then incorporate that in your standard ``FD_SET``/``select()`` code. Once you have determined that data in fact are ready to be read from the obtained file descriptor, you can then try another ``bro_conn_process_input()`` this time knowing that it'll find something to dispatch. As a side note, if you don't process arriving events frequently enough, then TCP's flow control will start to slow down the sender until eventually events will queue up and be dropped at the sending end. Handling Records ---------------- Broccoli supports record structures, i.e., types that pack a set of values together, placing each value into its own field. In Broccoli, the way you handle records is somewhat similar to events: after creating an empty record (of opaque type ``BroRecord``), you can iteratively add fields and values to it. The main difference is that you must specify a field name with the value; each value in a record can be identified both by position (a numerical index starting from zero), and by field name. You can retrieve vals in a record by field index or field name. You can also reassign values. There is no explicit, IDL-style definition of record types. You define the type of a record implicitly by the sequence of field names and the sequence of the types of the values you put into the record. Note that all fields in a record must be assigned before it can be shipped. The API for record composition consists of ``bro_record_new()``, ``bro_record_free()``, ``bro_record_add_val()``, ``bro_record_set_nth_val()``, and ``bro_record_set_named_val()``. On records that use field names, the names of individual fields can be extracted using ``bro_record_get_nth_name()``. Extracting values from a record is done using ``bro_record_get_nth_val()`` and ``bro_record_get_named_val()``. The former allows numerical indexing of the fields in the record, the latter provides name-based lookups. Both need to be passed the record you want to extract a value from, the index or name of the field, and either a pointer to an int holding a BRO_TYPE_xxx value (see again Table-1_ for a summary of those types) or ``NULL``. The pointer, if not ``NULL``, serves two purposes: type checking and type retrieval. Type checking is performed if the value of the int upon calling the functions is not BRO_TYPE_UNKNOWN. The type tag of the requested record field then has to match the type tag stored in the int, otherwise ``NULL`` is returned. If the int stores BRO_TYPE_UNKNOWN upon calling, no type-checking is performed. In *both* cases, the *actual* type of the requested record field is returned in the int pointed to upon return from the function. Since you have no guarantees of the type of the value upon return if you pass ``NULL`` as the int pointer, this is a bad idea and either BRO_TYPE_UNKNOWN or another type value should always be used. For example, you could extract the value of the record field "label", which we assume should be a string, in the following ways: .. code:: c BroRecord *rec = /* obtained somehow */ BroString *string; int type; /* --- Example 1 --- */ type = BRO_TYPE_STRING; /* Use type-checking, will not accept other types */ if (! (string = bro_record_get_named_val(rec, "label", &type))) { /* Error handling, either there's no field of that value or the value is not of BRO_TYPE_STRING. The actual type is now stored in "type". */ } /* --- Example 2 --- */ type = BRO_TYPE_UNKNOWN; /* No type checking, just report the existent type */ if (! (string = bro_record_get_named_val(rec, "label", &type))) { /* Error handling, no field of that name exists. */ } printf("The type of the value in field 'label' is %i\n", type); /* --- Example 3 --- */ if (! (string = bro_record_get_named_val(rec, "label", NULL))) { /* Error handling, no field of that name exists. */ } /* We now have a value, but we can't really be sure of its type */ Record fields can be records, for example in the case of Bro's standard connection record type. In this case, in order to get to a nested record, you use ``BRO_TYPE_RECORD``: .. code:: c void remote_conn_cb(BroConn *bc, int *req_id, BroRecord *conn) { BroRecord *conn_id; int type = BRO_TYPE_RECORD; if ( ! (conn_id = bro_record_get_named_val(conn, "id", &type))) { /* Error handling */ } } Handling Tables --------------- Broccoli supports Bro-style tables, i.e., associative containers that map instances of a key type to an instance of a value type. A given key can only ever point to a single value. The key type can be *composite*, i.e., it may consist of an ordered sequence of different types, or it can be *direct*, i.e., consisting of a single type (such as an integer, a string, or a record). The API for table manipulation consists of ``bro_table_new()`` ``bro_table_free()``, ``bro_table_insert()``, ``bro_table_find()``, ``bro_table_get_size()``, ``bro_table_get_types()``, and ``bro_table_foreach()``. Tables are handled similarly to records in that typing is determined dynamically by the initial key/value pair inserted. The resulting types can be obtained via ``bro_table_get_types()``. Should the types not have been determined yet, ``BRO_TYPE_UNKNOWN`` will result. Also, as with records, values inserted into the table are copied internally, and the ones passed to the insertion functions remain unaffected. In contrast to records, table entries can be iterated. By passing a function of signature ``BroTableCallback()`` and a pointer to data of your choosing, ``bro_table_foreach()`` will invoke the given function for each key/value pair stored in the table. Return ``TRUE`` to keep the iteration going, or ``FALSE`` to stop it. .. note:: The main thing to know about Broccoli's tables is how to use composite key types. To avoid additional API calls, you may treat composite key types exactly as records, though you do not need to use field names when assigning elements to individual fields. So in order to insert a key/value pair, you create a record with the needed items assigned to its slots, and use this record as the key object. In order to differentiate composite index types from direct ones consisting of a single record, use ``BRO_TYPE_LIST`` as the type of the record, as opposed to ``BRO_TYPE_RECORD``. Broccoli will then know to interpret the record as an ordered sequence of items making up a composite element, not a regular record. ``brotable.c`` in the ``test/`` subdirectory of the Broccoli tree contains an extensive example of using tables with composite as well as direct indexing types. Handling Sets ------------- Sets are essentially tables with void value types. The API for set manipulation consists of ``bro_set_new()``, ``bro_set_free()``, ``bro_set_insert()``, ``bro_set_find()``, ``bro_set_get_size()``, ``bro_set_get_type()``, and ``bro_set_foreach()``. Associating data with connections --------------------------------- You will often find that you would like to connect data with a ``BroConn``. Broccoli provides an API that lets you associate data items with a connection handle through a string-based key-value registry. The functions of interest are ``bro_conn_data_set()``, ``bro_conn_data_get()``, and ``bro_conn_data_del()``. You need to provide a string identifier for a data item and can then use that string to register, look up, and remove the associated data item. Note that there is currently no mechanism to trigger a destructor function for registered data items when the Bro connection is terminated. You therefore need to make sure that all data items that you do not have pointers to via some other means are properly released before calling ``bro_disconnect()``. Configuration Files ------------------- Imagine you have instrumented the mother of all server applications. Building it takes forever, and every now and then you need to change some of the parameters that your Broccoli code uses, such as the host names of the Bro agents to talk to. To allow you to do this quickly, Broccoli comes with support for configuration files. All you need to do is change the settings in the file and restart the application (we're considering adding support for volatile configuration items that are read from the file every time they are requested). A configuration is read from a single configuration file. This file can be read from different locations. Broccoli searches in this order for the config file: - The location specified by the ``BROCCOLI_CONFIG_FILE`` environment variable. - A per-user configuration file stored in ``~/.broccoli.conf``. - The system-wide configuration file. You can obtain the location of this config file by running ``broccoli-config --config``. .. note:: ``BROCCOLI_CONFIG_FILE`` or ``~/.broccoli.conf`` will only be used if it is a regular file, not executable, and neither group nor others have any permissions on the file. That is, the file's permissions must look like ``-rw-------`` *or* ``-r--------``. In the configuration file, a ``#`` anywhere starts a comment that runs to the end of the line. Configuration items are specified as key-value pairs:: # This is the Broccoli system-wide configuration file. # # Entries are of the form , where the # identifier is a sequence of letters, and value can be a string # (including whitespace), and floating point or integer numbers. # Comments start with a "#" and go to the end of the line. For # boolean values, you may also use "yes", "on", "true", "no", # "off", or "false". Strings may contain whitespace, but need # to be surrounded by double quotes '"'. # # Examples: # Foo/PeerName mybro.securesite.com Foo/PortNum 123 Bar/SomeFloat 1.23443543 Bar/SomeLongStr "Hello World" You can also have multiple sections in your configuration. Your application can select a section as the current one, and queries for configuration settings will then only be answered with values specified in that section. A section is started by putting its name (no whitespace please) between square brackets. Configuration items positioned before the first section title are in the default domain and will be used by default:: # This section contains all settings for myapp. [ myapp ] You can name identifiers any way you like, but to keep things organized it is recommended to keep a namespace hierarchy similar to the file system. In the code, you can query configuration items using ``bro_conf_get_str()``, ``bro_conf_get_int()``, and ``bro_conf_get_dbl()``. You can switch between sections using ``bro_conf_set_domain()``. Using Dynamic Buffers --------------------- Broccoli provides an API for dynamically allocatable, growable, shrinkable, and consumable buffers with ``BroBuf``. You may or may not find this useful -- Broccoli mainly provides this feature in ``broccoli.h`` because these buffers are used internally anyway and because they are a typical case of something that people implement themselves over and over again, for example to collect a set of data before sending it through a file descriptor, etc. The buffers work as follows. The structure implementing a buffer is called ``BroBuf``, and is initialized to a default size when created via ``bro_buf_new()`` and released using ``bro_buf_free()``. Each ``BroBuf`` has a content pointer that points to an arbitrary location between the start of the buffer and the first byte after the last byte currently used in the buffer (see ``buf_off`` in the illustration below). The content pointer can seek to arbitrary locations, and data can be copied from and into the buffer, adjusting the content pointer accordingly. You can repeatedly append data to the end of the buffer's used contents using ``bro_buf_append()``. :: <---------------- allocated buffer space ------------> <======== used buffer space ========> ^ ^ ^ ^ | | | | | buf buf_ptr buf_off buf_len Have a look at the following functions for the details: ``bro_buf_new()``, ``bro_buf_free()``, ``bro_buf_append()``, ``bro_buf_consume()``, ``bro_buf_reset()``, ``bro_buf_get()``, ``bro_buf_get_end()``, ``bro_buf_get_size()``, ``bro_buf_get_used_size()``, ``bro_buf_ptr_get()``, ``bro_buf_ptr_tell()``, ``bro_buf_ptr_seek()``, ``bro_buf_ptr_check()``, and ``bro_buf_ptr_read()``. Configuring Encrypted Communication =================================== Encrypted communication between Bro peers takes place over an SSL connection in which both endpoints of the connection are authenticated. This requires at least some PKI in the form of a certificate authority (CA) which you use to issue and sign certificates for your Bro peers. To facilitate the SSL setup, each peer requires three documents: a certificate signed by the CA and containing the public key, the corresponding private key, and a copy of the CA's certificate. The OpenSSL command line tool ``openssl`` can be used to create all files necessary, but its unstructured arguments and poor documentation make it a pain to use and waste lots of people a lot of time [#]_. For an alternative tool to create SSL certificates for secure Bro/Broccoli communication, see the ``create-cert`` tool available at ftp://ee.lbl.gov/create-cert.tar.gz. In order to enable encrypted communication for your Broccoli application, you need to put the CA certificate and the peer certificate in the ``/broccoli/ca_cert`` and ``/broccoli/host_cert`` keys, respectively, in the configuration file. Optionally, you can store the private key in a separate file specified by ``/broccoli/host_key``. To quickly enable/disable a certificate configuration, the ``/broccoli/use_ssl`` key can be used. .. note:: *This is where you configure whether to use encrypted or unencrypted connections.* If the ``/broccoli/use_ssl`` key is present and set to one of "yes", "true", "on", or 1, then SSL will be used and an incorrect or missing certificate configuration will cause connection attempts to fail. If the key's value is one of "no", "false", "off", or 0, then in no case will SSL be used and connections will always be cleartext. If the ``/broccoli/use_ssl`` key is *not* present, then SSL will be used if a certificate configuration is found, and invalid certificates will cause the connection to fail. If no certificates are configured, cleartext connections will be used. In no case does an SSL-enabled setup ever fall back to a cleartext one. :: /broccoli/use_ssl yes /broccoli/ca_cert /ca_cert.pem /broccoli/host_cert /bro_cert.pem /broccoli/host_key /bro_cert.key In a Bro policy, you need to load the ``frameworks/communication/listen.bro`` script and redef ``Communication::listen_ssl=T``, ``ssl_ca_certificate``, and ``ssl_private_key``, defined in ``bro.init``: .. code:: bro @load frameworks/communication/listen redef Communication::listen_ssl=T; redef ssl_ca_certificate = "/ca_cert.pem"; redef ssl_private_key = "/bro.pem"; By default, you will be prompted for the passphrase for the private key matching the public key in your agent's certificate. Depending on your application's user interface and deployment, this may be inappropriate. You can store the passphrase in the config file as well, using the following identifier:: /broccoli/host_pass foobar .. warning:: *Make sure that access to your configuration is restricted.* If you provide the passphrase this way, it is obviously essential to have restrictive permissions on the configuration file. Broccoli partially enforces this. Please refer to the section on `Configuration Files`_ for details. Configuring event reception in Bro scripts ========================================== Before a remote Bro will accept your connection and your events, it needs to have its policy configured accordingly: 1. Load ``frameworks/communication/listen``, and redef the boolean variable ``Communication::listen_ssl`` depending on whether you want to have encrypted or cleartext communication. Obviously, encrypting the event exchange is recommended and cleartext should only be used for early experimental setups. See below for details on how to set up encrypted communication via SSL. #. You need to find a port to use for the Bros and Broccoli applications that will listen for connections. Every such agent can use a different port, though default ports are provided in the Bro policies. To change the port the Bro agent will be listening on from its default, redefine the ``Communication::listen_port``. Have a look at these policies as well as ``base/frameworks/communication/main.bro`` for the default values. Here is the policy for the unencrypted case: .. code:: bro @load frameworks/communication/listen redef Communication::listen_port = 12345/tcp; .. Including the settings for the cryptographic files introduced in the previous section, here is the encrypted one: .. code:: bro @load frameworks/communication/listen redef Communication::listen_ssl = T; redef Communication::listen_port = 12345/tcp; redef ssl_ca_certificate = "/ca_cert.pem"; redef ssl_private_key = "/bro.pem"; .. #. The policy controlling which peers a Bro agent will communicate with and how this communication will happen are defined in the ``Communication::nodes`` table defined in ``base/frameworks/communication/main.bro``. This table contains entries of type ``Node``, whose members mostly provide default values so you do not need to define everything. You need to come up with a tag for the connection under which it can be found in the table (a creative one would be "broccoli"), the IP address of the peer, the pattern of names of the events the Bro will accept from you, whether you want Bro to connect to your machine on startup or not, if so, a port to connect to (default is ``Communication::default_port`` also defined in ``base/frameworks/communication/main.bro``), a retry timeout, whether to use SSL, and the class of a connection as set on the Broccoli side via ``bro_conn_set_class()``. An example could look as follows: .. code:: bro redef Communication::nodes += { ["broping"] = [$host = 127.0.0.1, $class="broping", $events = /ping/, $connect=F, $ssl=F] }; .. This example is taken from ``broping.bro``, the policy the remote Bro must run when you want to use the ``broping`` tool explained in the section on `test programs`_ below. It will allow an agent on the local host to connect and send "ping" events. Our Bro will not attempt to connect, and incoming connections will be expected in cleartext. Configuring Debugging Output ============================ If your Broccoli installation was configured with ``--enable-debug``, Broccoli will report two kinds of debugging information: 1. function call traces and #. individual debugging messages. Both are enabled by default, but can be adjusted in two ways. - In the configuration file: in the appropriate section of the configuration file, you can set the keys ``/broccoli/debug_messages`` and ``/broccoli/debug_calltrace`` to ``on``/``off`` to enable/disable the corresponding output. - In code: you can set the variables ``bro_debug_calltrace`` and ``bro_debug_messages`` to 1/0 at any time to enable/disable the corresponding output. By default, debugging output is inactive (even with debug support compiled in). You need to enable it explicitly either in your code by assigning 1 to ``bro_debug_calltrace`` and ``bro_debug_messages`` or by enabling it in the configuration file. Test programs ============= The Broccoli distribution comes with a few small test programs, located in the ``test/`` directory of the tree. The most notable one is ``broping`` [#]_, a mini-version of ping. It sends "ping" events to a remote Bro agent, expecting "pong" events in return. It operates in two flavours: one uses atomic types for sending information across, and the other one uses records. The Bro agent you want to ping needs to run either the ``broping.bro`` or ``broping-record.bro`` policies. You can find these in the ``test/`` directory of the source tree, and in ``/share/broccoli`` in the installed version. ``broping.bro`` is shown below. By default, pinging a Bro on the same machine is configured. If you want your Bro to be pinged from another machine, you need to update the ``Communication::nodes`` variable accordingly: .. code:: bro @load frameworks/communication/listen; global ping_log = open_log_file("ping"); redef Communication::nodes += { ["broping"] = [$host = 127.0.0.1, $events = /ping/, $connect=F, $retry = 60 secs, $ssl=F] }; event ping(src_time: time, seq: count) { event pong(src_time, current_time(), seq); } event pong(src_time: time, dst_time: time, seq: count) { print ping_log, fmt("ping received, seq %d, %f at src, %f at dest, one-way: %f", seq, src_time, dst_time, dst_time-src_time); } ``broping`` sends ping events to Bro. Bro accepts those because they are configured accordingly in the nodes table. As shown in the policy, ping events trigger pong events, and ``broccoli`` requests delivery of all pong events back to it. When running ``broping``, you'll see something like this: .. console:: > ./test/broping pong event from 127.0.0.1: seq=1, time=0.004700/1.010303 s pong event from 127.0.0.1: seq=2, time=0.053777/1.010266 s pong event from 127.0.0.1: seq=3, time=0.006435/1.010284 s pong event from 127.0.0.1: seq=4, time=0.020278/1.010319 s pong event from 127.0.0.1: seq=5, time=0.004563/1.010187 s pong event from 127.0.0.1: seq=6, time=0.005685/1.010393 s Notes ===== .. [#] In other documents and books on OpenSSL you will find this expressed more politely, using terms such as "daunting to the uninitiated", "challenging", "complex", "intimidating". .. [#] Pronunciation is said to be somewhere on the continuum between "brooping" and "burping". Broccoli API Reference ###################### The `API documentation <../../broccoli-api/index.html>`_ describes Broccoli's public C interface.