eBPF probes coming from the drivers build grid
Co-authored-by: Lorenzo Fontana <lo@linux.com>
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Di Donato <leodidonato@gmail.com>
The new Falco kernel modules URLs are:
`<base_url>/kernel-module/<driver_version>/falco_<target_id>_<kernel_release>_<kernel_version>`
Co-authored-by: Lorenzo Fontana <lo@linux.com>
Signed-off-by: Leonardo Di Donato <leodidonato@gmail.com>
* Supporting files to build/test via jenkins
Changes to build/test via jenkins, which also means running all tests in
a container instead of directly on the host:
- Jenkinsfile controls the stages, build.sh does the build and
run-tests.sh does the regression tests.
- Create a new container falcosecurity/falco-tester that includes the
dependencies required to run the regression tests. This is a different
image than falco-builder because it doesn't need to be centos 6 based,
doesn't install any compiler/etc, and installs the test running
framework we use (avocado). We now use a newer version of avocado,
which resulted in some small changes to how it is run and how yaml
options are parsed.
- Modify run_regression_tests.sh to download trace files to the build
directory and only if not present. Also honor BUILD_TYPE/BUILD_DIR,
which is provided via the docker run cmd.
- The package tests are now moved to a separate falco_tests_package.yaml
file. They will use rpm installs by default instead of debian
packages. Also add the ability to install rpms in addition to debian
packages.
- Automate the process of creating the docker local package by: 1)
Adding CMake rules to copy the Dockerfile, entrypoint to the build
directory and 2) Copy test trace files and rules into the build
directory. This allows running the docker build command from
build/docker/local instead of the source directory.
- Modify the way the container test is run a bit to use the trace
files/rules copied into the container directly instead of host-mounted
trace files.
* Use container builder + tester for travis
We'll probably be using jenkins soon, but this will allow switching back
to travis later if we want.
* Use download.draios.com for binutils packages
That way we won't be dependent on snapshot.debian.org.
* Load/unload kernel module on start/stop
When falco is started, load the kernel module. (The falco binary also
will do a modprobe if it can't open the inspector, as a backup).
When falco is stopped, unload the kernel module.
This fixes https://github.com/falcosecurity/falco/issues/418.
* Put script execute line in right place.
* Use correct copyright years.
Also include the start year.
* Improve copyright notices.
Use the proper start year instead of just 2018.
Add the right owner Draios dba Sysdig.
Add copyright notices to some files that were missing them.
Replace references to GNU Public License to Apache license in:
- COPYING file
- README
- all source code below falco
- rules files
- rules and code below test directory
- code below falco directory
- entrypoint for docker containers (but not the Dockerfiles)
I didn't generally add copyright notices to all the examples files, as
they aren't core falco. If they did refer to the gpl I changed them to
apache.
Start packaging (and building when necessary) a falco-specific kernel
module in falco releases. Previously, falco would depend on sysdig and
use its kernel module instead.
The kernel module was already templated to some degree in various
places, so we just had to change the templated name from
sysdig/sysdig-probe to falco/falco-probe.
In containers, run falco-probe-loader instead of
sysdig-probe-loader. This is actually a script in the sysdig repository
which is modified in https://github.com/draios/sysdig/pull/789, and uses
the filename to indicate what kernel module to build and/or load.
For the falco package itself, don't depend on sysdig any longer but instead
depend on dkms and its dependencies, using sysdig as a guide on the set
of required packages.
Additionally, for the package pre-install/post-install scripts start
running falco-probe-loader.
Finally, add a --version argument to falco so it can pass the desired
version string to falco-probe-loader.
Move the c++ and lua code implementing falco engine/falco common to its
own directory userspace/engine. It's compiled as a static library
libfalco_engine.a, and has its own CMakeLists.txt so it can be included
by other projects.
The engine's CMakeLists.txt has a add_subdirectory for the falco rules
directory, so including the engine also builds the rules.
The variables you need to set to use the engine's CMakeLists.txt are:
- CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX: the root directory below which everything is
installed.
- FALCO_ETC_DIR: where to install the rules file.
- FALCO_SHARE_DIR: where to install lua code, relative to the
- install/package root.
- LUAJIT_INCLUDE: where to find header files for lua.
- FALCO_SINSP_LIBRARY: the library containing sinsp code. It will be
- considered a dependency of the engine.
- LPEG_LIB/LYAML_LIB/LIBYAML_LIB: locations for third-party libraries.
- FALCO_COMPONENT: if set, will be included as a part of any install()
commands.
Instead of specifying /usr/share/falco in config_falco_*.h.in, use
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX and FALCO_SHARE_DIR.
The lua code for the engine has also moved, so the two lua source
directories (userspace/engine/lua and userspace/falco/lua) need to be
available separately via falco_common, so make it an argument to
falco_common::init.
As a part of making it easy to include in another project, also clean up
LPEG build/defs. Modify build-lpeg to add a PREFIX argument to allow for
object files/libraries being in an alternate location, and when building
lpeg, put object files in a build/ subdirectory.
Make sure that references to variables that may be paths (which in turn
may contain spaces) are quoted, so cmake won't break on the spaces.
This fixes https://github.com/draios/falco/issues/79.