![]() After #2802, depending on the task/platform, a mostly cached build on Cirrus CI is taking 30-60seconds. Eye balling a few tasks, it is now taking longer to download and unpack as well as check and re-upload the accumulated cache in the beginning and end of a task. For Debian 11, this was ~1:20 and 1:10 with a cache size of ~4.2GB. The default size limit for ccache is 5GB, there's no limit to the number of files. Running a fresh build on Debian 11, ccache -s indicates the actual required cache size is ~100MB and the number of files in cache is ~2.7k. Lower cache size to 500M and number of files to 20000, such that we don't unnecessarily accumulate the cache and spend resources on downloading, checking and re-uploading the cache. root@cirrus-ci-task-4907974120964096# ccache -s | grep -E 'files|size' files in cache 2736 cache size 96.7 MB max cache size 5.0 GB PRs have their own cache namespace, so they won't thrash the main's branch cache. I think main and release share their branch, so we should not be super aggressive. Though we're probably okay with cache misses on release once in a while. |
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.github/workflows | ||
auxil | ||
ci | ||
cmake@756a2a9ebb | ||
doc@d444e5e0f4 | ||
docker | ||
man | ||
scripts | ||
src | ||
testing | ||
.cirrus.yml | ||
.clang-format | ||
.clang-tidy | ||
.dockerignore | ||
.git-blame-ignore-revs | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.pre-commit-config.yaml | ||
.style.yapf | ||
.update-changes.cfg | ||
CHANGES | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
configure | ||
COPYING | ||
COPYING-3rdparty | ||
INSTALL | ||
Makefile | ||
NEWS | ||
README | ||
README.md | ||
VERSION | ||
zeek-config.h.in | ||
zeek-config.in | ||
zeek-path-dev.in | ||
zeek-version.h.in | ||
zkg-config.in |
The Zeek Network Security Monitor
A powerful framework for network traffic analysis and security monitoring.
Key Features — Documentation — Getting Started — Development — License
Follow us on Twitter at @zeekurity.
Key Features
-
In-depth Analysis Zeek ships with analyzers for many protocols, enabling high-level semantic analysis at the application layer.
-
Adaptable and Flexible Zeek's domain-specific scripting language enables site-specific monitoring policies and means that it is not restricted to any particular detection approach.
-
Efficient Zeek targets high-performance networks and is used operationally at a variety of large sites.
-
Highly Stateful Zeek keeps extensive application-layer state about the network it monitors and provides a high-level archive of a network's activity.
Getting Started
The best place to find information about getting started with Zeek is our web site www.zeek.org, specifically the documentation section there. On the web site you can also find downloads for stable releases, tutorials on getting Zeek set up, and many other useful resources.
You can find release notes in NEWS, and a complete record of all changes in CHANGES.
To work with the most recent code from the development branch of Zeek, clone the master git repository:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/zeek/zeek
With all dependencies in place, build and install:
./configure && make && sudo make install
Write your first Zeek script:
# File "hello.zeek"
event zeek_init()
{
print "Hello World!";
}
And run it:
zeek hello.zeek
For learning more about the Zeek scripting language, try.zeek.org is a great resource.
Development
Zeek is developed on GitHub by its community. We welcome contributions. Working on an open source project like Zeek can be an incredibly rewarding experience and, packet by packet, makes the Internet a little safer. Today, as a result of countless contributions, Zeek is used operationally around the world by major companies and educational and scientific institutions alike for securing their cyber infrastructure.
If you're interested in getting involved, we collect feature requests and issues on GitHub here and you might find these to be a good place to get started. More information on Zeek's development can be found here, and information about its community and mailing lists (which are fairly active) can be found here.
License
Zeek comes with a BSD license, allowing for free use with virtually no restrictions. You can find it here.
Tooling
We use the following tooling to help discover issues to fix, amongst a number of others.
- Clang-Tidy
- Coverity
- PVS-Studio - static analyzer for C, C++, C#, and Java code.