We have code that builds conditionally depending on the platform (mostly Orbit code) so we should run `golangci-lint` checks on all OSs. This adds it to run on macOS, for Windows see: https://github.com/fleetdm/fleet/issues/9943
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Testing and local development
- Testing and local development
License key
Do you need to test Fleet Premium features locally?
Use the --dev_license
flag to use the default development license key.
For example:
./build/fleet serve --dev --dev_license
Simulated hosts
It can be helpful to quickly populate the UI with simulated hosts when developing or testing features that require host information.
Check out /tools/osquery
directory instructions for starting up simulated hosts in your development environment.
Test suite
You must install the golangci-lint
command to run make test[-go]
or make lint[-go]
, using:
go install github.com/golangci/golangci-lint/cmd/golangci-lint@v1.51.1
Make sure it is available in your PATH
. To execute the basic unit and integration tests, run the following from the root of the repository:
REDIS_TEST=1 MYSQL_TEST=1 make test
Go unit tests
To run all Go unit tests, run the following:
REDIS_TEST=1 MYSQL_TEST=1 MINIO_STORAGE_TEST=1 SAML_IDP_TEST=1 make test-go
Go linters
To run all Go linters and static analyzers, run the following:
make lint-go
Javascript unit and integration tests
To run all JS unit tests, run the following:
make test-js
or
yarn test
Javascript linters
To run all JS linters and static analyzers, run the following:
make lint-js
or
yarn lint
MySQL tests
To run MySQL integration tests, set environment variables as follows:
MYSQL_TEST=1 make test-go
Email tests
To run email related integration tests using MailHog set environment as follows:
MAIL_TEST=1 make test-go
Network tests
A few tests require network access as they make requests to external hosts. Given that the network is unreliable and may not be available. Those hosts may also be unavailable so these tests are skipped by default. They are opt-in via the NETWORK_TEST
environment variable. To run them:
NETWORK_TEST=1 make test-go
Viewing test coverage
When you run make test
or make test-go
from the root of the repository, a test coverage report is generated at the root of the repo in a filed named coverage.txt
To explore a test coverage report on a line-by-line basis in the browser, run the following:
go tool cover -html=coverage.txt
To view test a test coverage report in a terminal, run the following:
go tool cover -func=coverage.txt
End-to-end tests
E2E tests are run using Docker and Cypress.
E2E tests are constantly evolving, and running them or examining CI results is the best way to understand what they cover, but at a high level, they cover:
- Setup
- Log in/out flows
- Host page Add hosts Label flows
- Query flows
- Policy flows
- Schedule flows scheduling packs
- Permissions Admin Observer (global and team) Maintainer
- Organizational Settings Settings adjustments Users
Preparation
Make sure dependencies are up to date and to build the Fleet binaries locally.
For Fleet Free tests:
make e2e-reset-db
make e2e-serve-free
For Fleet Premium tests:
make e2e-reset-db
make e2e-serve-premium
This will start a local Fleet server connected to the E2E database. Leave this server running for the duration of end-to-end testing.
make e2e-setup
This will initialize the E2E instance with a user.
Run tests
Tests can be run in interactive mode or from the command line.
Interactive
For Fleet Free tests:
yarn e2e-browser:free
For Fleet Premium tests:
yarn e2e-browser:premium
Use the graphical UI controls to run and view tests.
Command line
For Fleet Free tests:
yarn e2e-cli:free
For Fleet Premium tests:
yarn e2e-cli:premium
Tests will run automatically, and results are reported to the shell.
Test hosts
The Fleet repo includes tools to start testing osquery hosts. Please see the documentation in /tools/osquery for more information.
Manually testing email with MailHog
To intercept sent emails while running a Fleet development environment, first, as an Admin in the Fleet UI, navigate to the Organization settings.
Then, in the "SMTP options" section, enter any email address in the "Sender address" field, set the "SMTP server" to localhost
on port 1025
, and set "Authentication type" to None
. Note that you may use any active or inactive sender address.
Visit localhost:8025 to view MailHog's admin interface displaying all emails sent using the simulated mail server.
Development database management
In the course of development (particularly when crafting database migrations), it may be useful to backup, restore, and reset the MySQL database. This can be achieved with the following commands:
Backup:
make db-backup
The database dump is stored in backup.sql.gz
.
Restore:
make db-restore
Note that a "restore" will replace the state of the development database with the state from the backup.
Reset:
make db-reset
MySQL shell
Connect to the MySQL shell to view and interact directly with the contents of the development database.
To connect via Docker:
docker-compose exec mysql mysql -uroot -ptoor -Dfleet
Redis REPL
Connect to the redis-cli
in REPL mode to view and interact directly with the contents stored in Redis.
docker-compose exec redis redis-cli
Testing SSO
Fleet's docker-compose
file includes a SAML identity provider (IdP) for testing SAML-based SSO locally.
Configuration
Configure SSO on the Organization Settings page with the following:
Identity Provider Name: SimpleSAML
Entity ID: https://localhost:8080
Issuer URI: http://localhost:8080/simplesaml/saml2/idp/SSOService.php
Metadata URL: http://localhost:9080/simplesaml/saml2/idp/metadata.php
The identity provider is configured with two users:
Username: sso_user
Email: sso_user@example.com
Password: user123#
Username: sso_user2
Email: sso_user2@example.com
Password: user123#
Use the Fleet UI to invite one of these users with the associated email. Be sure the "Enable single sign-on" box is checked for that user. Now, after accepting the invitation, you should be able to log in as that user by clicking "Sign on with SimpleSAML" on the login page.
To add additional users, modify tools/saml/users.php and restart the simplesaml
container.
Testing Kinesis Logging
Tip: Install AwsLocal to ease interaction with
LocalStack. Alternatively, you can use the aws
client
and use --endpoint-url=http://localhost:4566
on all invocations.
The following guide assumes you have server dependencies running:
docker-compose up
#
# (Starts LocalStack with kinesis enabled.)
#
First, create one stream for "status" logs and one for "result" logs (see https://osquery.readthedocs.io/en/stable/deployment/logging/ for more information around the two types of logs):
$ awslocal kinesis create-stream --stream-name "sample_status" --shard-count 1
$ awslocal kinesis create-stream --stream-name "sample_result" --shard-count 1
$ awslocal kinesis list-streams
{
"StreamNames": [
"sample_result",
"sample_status"
]
}
Use the following configuration to run Fleet:
FLEET_OSQUERY_RESULT_LOG_PLUGIN=kinesis
FLEET_OSQUERY_STATUS_LOG_PLUGIN=kinesis
FLEET_KINESIS_REGION=us-east-1
FLEET_KINESIS_ENDPOINT_URL=http://localhost:4566
FLEET_KINESIS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=default
FLEET_KINESIS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=default
FLEET_KINESIS_STATUS_STREAM=sample_status
FLEET_KINESIS_RESULT_STREAM=sample_result
Here's a sample command for running fleet serve
:
make fleet && FLEET_OSQUERY_RESULT_LOG_PLUGIN=kinesis FLEET_OSQUERY_STATUS_LOG_PLUGIN=kinesis FLEET_KINESIS_REGION=us-east-1 FLEET_KINESIS_ENDPOINT_URL=http://localhost:4566 FLEET_KINESIS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=default FLEET_KINESIS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=default FLEET_KINESIS_STATUS_STREAM=sample_status FLEET_KINESIS_RESULT_STREAM=sample_result ./build/fleet serve --dev --dev_license --logging_debug
Fleet will now be relaying "status" and "result" logs from osquery agents to the LocalStack's kinesis.
Let's work on inspecting "status" logs received by Kinesis ("status" logs are easier to verify, to generate "result" logs so you need to configure "schedule queries").
Get "status" logging stream shard ID:
$ awslocal kinesis list-shards --stream-name sample_status
{
"Shards": [
{
"ShardId": "shardId-000000000000",
"HashKeyRange": {
"StartingHashKey": "0",
"EndingHashKey": "340282366920938463463374607431768211455"
},
"SequenceNumberRange": {
"StartingSequenceNumber": "49627262640659126499334026974892685537161954570981605378"
}
}
]
}
Get the shard-iterator for the status logging stream:
awslocal kinesis get-shard-iterator --shard-id shardId-000000000000 --shard-iterator-type TRIM_HORIZON --stream-name sample_status
{
"ShardIterator": "AAAAAAAAAAERtiUrWGI0sq99TtpKnmDu6haj/80llVpP80D4A5XSUBFqWqcUvlwWPsTAiGin/pDYt0qJ683PeuSFP0gkNISIkGZVcW3cLvTYtERGh2QYVv+TrAlCs6cMpNvPuW0LwILTJDFlwWXdkcRaFMjtFUwikuOmWX7N4hIJA+1VsTx4A0kHfcDxHkjYi1WDe+8VMfYau+fB1XTEJx9AerfxdTBm"
}
Finally, you can use the above ShardIterator
to get "status" log records:
awslocal kinesis get-records --shard-iterator AAAAAAAAAAERtiUrWGI0sq99TtpKnmDu6haj/80llVpP80D4A5XSUBFqWqcUvlwWPsTAiGin/pDYt0qJ683PeuSFP0gkNISIkGZVcW3cLvTYtERGh2QYVv+TrAlCs6cMpNvPuW0LwILTJDFlwWXdkcRaFMjtFUwikuOmWX7N4hIJA+1VsTx4A0kHfcDxHkjYi1WDe+8VMfYau+fB1XTEJx9AerfxdTBm
[...]
{
"SequenceNumber": "49627262640659126499334026986980734807488684740304699394",
"ApproximateArrivalTimestamp": "2022-03-02T19:45:54-03:00",
"Data": "eyJob3N0SWRlbnRpZmllciI6Ijg3OGE2ZWRmLTcxMzEtNGUyOC05NWEyLWQzNDQ5MDVjYWNhYiIsImNhbGVuZGFyVGltZSI6IldlZCBNYXIgIDIgMjI6MDI6NTQgMjAyMiBVVEMiLCJ1bml4VGltZSI6IjE2NDYyNTg1NzQiLCJzZXZlcml0eSI6IjAiLCJmaWxlbmFtZSI6Imdsb2dfbG9nZ2VyLmNwcCIsImxpbmUiOiI0OSIsIm1lc3NhZ2UiOiJDb3VsZCBub3QgZ2V0IFJQTSBoZWFkZXIgZmxhZy4iLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjoiNC45LjAiLCJkZWNvcmF0aW9ucyI6eyJob3N0X3V1aWQiOiJlYjM5NDZiMi0wMDAwLTAwMDAtYjg4OC0yNTkxYTFiNjY2ZTkiLCJob3N0bmFtZSI6ImUwMDg4ZDI4YTYzZiJ9fQo=",
"PartitionKey": "149",
"EncryptionType": "NONE"
}
],
[...]
The Data
field is base64 encoded. You can use the following command to decode:
echo eyJob3N0SWRlbnRpZmllciI6Ijg3OGE2ZWRmLTcxMzEtNGUyOC05NWEyLWQzNDQ5MDVjYWNhYiIsImNhbGVuZGFyVGltZSI6IldlZCBNYXIgIDIgMjI6MDI6NTQgMjAyMiBVVEMiLCJ1bml4VGltZSI6IjE2NDYyNTg1NzQiLCJzZXZlcml0eSI6IjAiLCJmaWxlbmFtZSI6Imdsb2dfbG9nZ2VyLmNwcCIsImxpbmUiOiI0OSIsIm1lc3NhZ2UiOiJDb3VsZCBub3QgZ2V0IFJQTSBoZWFkZXIgZmxhZy4iLCJ2ZXJzaW9uIjoiNC45LjAiLCJkZWNvcmF0aW9ucyI6eyJob3N0X3V1aWQiOiJlYjM5NDZiMi0wMDAwLTAwMDAtYjg4OC0yNTkxYTFiNjY2ZTkiLCJob3N0bmFtZSI6ImUwMDg4ZDI4YTYzZiJ9fQo= | base64 -d
{"hostIdentifier":"878a6edf-7131-4e28-95a2-d344905cacab","calendarTime":"Wed Mar 2 22:02:54 2022 UTC","unixTime":"1646258574","severity":"0","filename":"glog_logger.cpp","line":"49","message":"Could not get RPM header flag.","version":"4.9.0","decorations":{"host_uuid":"eb3946b2-0000-0000-b888-2591a1b666e9","hostname":"e0088d28a63f"}}
Testing pre-built installers
Pre-built installers are kept in a blob storage like AWS S3. As part of your your local development there's a MinIO instance running on http://localhost:9000. To test the pre-built installers functionality locally:
- Build the installers you want using
fleetctl package
. Be sure to include the--insecure
flag for local testing. - Use the installerstore tool to upload them to your MinIO instance.
- Configure your fleet server setting
FLEET_PACKAGING_GLOBAL_ENROLL_SECRET
to match your global enroll secret. - Set
FLEET_SERVER_SANDBOX_ENABLED=1
, as the endpoint to retrieve the installer is only available in the sandbox.
FLEET_SERVER_SANDBOX_ENABLED=1 FLEET_PACKAGING_GLOBAL_ENROLL_SECRET=xyz ./build/fleet serve --dev
Be sure to replace the FLEET_PACKAGING_GLOBAL_ENROLL_SECRET
value above with the global enroll
secret from the fleetctl package
command used to build the installers.
MinIO also offers a web interface at http://localhost:9001. Credentials are minio
/ minio123!
.
Telemetry
You can configure the server to record and report trace data using OpenTelemetry or Elastic APM and use a tracing system like Jaeger to consume this data and inspect the traces locally.
Please refer to tools/telemetry for instructions.
MDM setup and testing
To run your local server with the MDM features enabled, you need to get certificates and keys.
ABM setup
To enable the DEP enrollment flow, the Fleet server needs three things:
- A private key.
- A certificate.
- An encrypted token generated by Apple.
Private key + certificate
You can generate the private key and the certificate using fleetctl
:
fleetctl generate mdm-apple-bm
This will output two files fleet-apple-mdm-bm-public-key.crt
and fleet-apple-mdm-bm-private.key
, save them in a safe place.
Encrypted token
Ask @zwass to create an account for you in ABM
Once you have access:
- Go to https://business.apple.com/#/main/preferences/myprofile
- Click on "+ Add" to create a new MDM server.
- Use a name that allows you to identify the server.
- Under "Upload Public Key," upload the
fleet-apple-mdm-bm-public-key.crt
you generated before. - Click "Save."
- Click on the "Download Token" button at the top and confirm the download in the modal.
- Save the token in a safe place.
APNs and SCEP setup
The server also needs a private key + certificate to identify with Apple's APNs servers, and another for SCEP.
Both can be generated using the command below. The email must be a company email address. It cannot be an email address from commercial email providers like gmail.com.
$ fleetctl generate mdm-apple --email <email> --org <organization>
Using the above syntax, a command would look like this:
$ fleetctl generate mdm-apple --email it@example.com --org "Acme Co."
Successful output would look like this:
Sending certificate signing request (CSR) for Apple Push Notification service (APNs) to <email>...
Generating APNs key, Simple Certificate Enrollment Protocol (SCEP) certificate, and SCEP key...
Success!
Generated your APNs key at fleet-mdm-apple-apns.key
Generated your SCEP certificate at fleet-mdm-apple-scep.crt
Generated your SCEP key at fleet-mdm-apple-scep.key
Go to your email to download a CSR from Fleet. Then, visit https://identity.apple.com/pushcert to upload the CSR. You should receive an APNs certificate in return from Apple.
Next, use the generated certificates to deploy Fleet with `mdm` configuration: https://fleetdm.com/docs/deploying/configuration#mobile-device-management-mdm
Note that:
- Fleet must be running for the command to succeed.
- You must be logged in to
fleetctl
using a global admin account. See Building Fleet for details on getting Fleet setup locally. - To login into https://identity.apple.com/pushcert you can use your ABM account generated in the previous step.
- Save all the certificates and keys in a safe place.
Another option, if for some reason the fleetctl generate
command fails or you don't have a supported email address handy is to use openssl
to generate your SCEP key pair:
$ openssl genrsa -out fleet-mdm-apple-scep.key 4096
$ openssl req -x509 -new -nodes -key fleet-mdm-apple-scep.key -sha256 -days 1826 -out fleet-mdm-apple-scep.crt -subj '/CN=Fleet Root CA/C=US/O=Fleet DM.'
Running the server
Try to store all the certificates and tokens you generated in the earlier steps together in a safe place outside of the repo, then start the server with:
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_ENABLE=1 \
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_SCEP_CHALLENGE=scepchallenge \
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_SCEP_CERT=/path/to/fleet-mdm-apple-scep.crt \
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_SCEP_KEY=/path/to/fleet-mdm-apple-scep.key \
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_BM_SERVER_TOKEN=/path/to/dep_encrypted_token.p7m \
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_BM_CERT=/path/to/fleet-apple-mdm-bm-public-key.crt \
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_BM_KEY=/path/to/fleet-apple-mdm-bm-private.key \
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_APNS_CERT=/path/to/mdmcert.download.push.pem \
FLEET_MDM_APPLE_APNS_KEY=/path/to/mdmcert.download.push.key \
./build/fleet serve --dev --dev_license --logging_debug
Note: if you need to enroll VMs using MDM, the server needs to run behind TLS with a valid certificate. In a separate terminal window/tab, create a local tunnel to your server using ngrok
(brew install ngrok/ngrok/ngrok
if you don't have it.)
ngrok http https://localhost:8080
NOTE: If this is your first time using ngrok this command will fail and you will see a message about signing up. Open the sign up link and complete the sign up flow. You can rerun the same command and ngrok should work this time. After this open the forwarding link, you will be asked to confirm that you'd like to be forwarded to your local server and should accept.
Don't forget to edit your Fleet server settings (through the UI or fleetctl
) to use the URL ngrok
provides to you. You need to do this whenever you restart ngrok
.
Testing MDM
To test MDM, you'll need one or more virtual machines (VMs) that you can use to enroll to your server.
Choose and download a VM software, some options:
- VMware Fusion: https://www.vmware.com/products/fusion.html
- UTM: https://mac.getutm.app/
If you need a license please use your Brex card (and submit the receipt on Brex.)
With the software in place, you need to create a VM and install macOS, the steps to do this vary depending on your software of choice.
If you are using VMWare, we've used this guide in the past, please reach out in #g-mdm before starting so you can get the right serial numbers.
If you are using UTM, you can simply click "Create a New Virtual Machine" button with the default settings. This creates a VM running the latest macOS.
Testing manual enrollment
- Create a manual profile with:
fleetctl apple-mdm enrollment-profiles create-manual
- Open the URL that the command outputs in your VM, download and install the configuration profile.
Testing DEP enrollment
NOTE: Currently this is not possible for M1 Mac machines.
- Create a DEP profile with:
fleetctl apple-mdm enrollment-profiles create-automatic --dep-profile ./tools/mdm/apple/dep_sample_profile.json
-
In ABM, look for the computer with the serial number that matches the one your VM has, click on it and click on "Edit MDM Server" to assign that computer to your MDM server.
-
Boot the machine, it should automatically enroll into MDM.