cec3f31b9d | ||
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.github | ||
examples | ||
modules | ||
server | ||
server-configs | ||
.env | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
build-docker-compose.yml | ||
docker-compose.yml |
README.md
CoolAcid's MISP Docker images
A (nearly) production ready Dockered MISP
This is based on some of the work from the DSCO docker build, nearly all of the details have been rewritten.
- Components are split out where possible, currently this is only the MISP modules
- Over writable configuration files
- Allows volumes for file store
- Cron job runs updates, pushes, and pulls - Logs go to docker logs
- Docker-Compose uses off the shelf images for Redis and MySQL
- Images directly from docker hub, no build required
- Slimmed down images by using build stages and slim parent image, removes unnecessary files from images
Docker Tags
Docker hub builds the images automatically based on git tags. I try and tag using the following details
v[MISP Version][Our build version]
- MISP version is the MISP tag we're building
- Our build version is the iteration for our changes with the same MISP version
- Core and modules are split into [core]-version and [modules]-version respectively
Getting Started
Development/Test
-
Grab the
docker-compose.yml
andserver-configs/email.php
files (Keep directory structure) -
A dry run will create sane default configurations
-
docker-compose up
-
Login to
https://localhost
- User:
admin@admin.test
- Password:
admin
- User:
-
Profit
Using the image for development
Pull the entire repository, you can build the images using docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml -f build-docker-compose.yml build
Once you have the docker container up you can access the container by running docker-compose exec misp /bin/bash
.
This will provide you with a root shell. You can use apt update
and then install any tools you wish to use.
Finally, copy any changes you make outside of the container for commiting to your branch.
git diff -- [dir with changes]
could be used to reduce the number of changes in a patch file, however, becareful when using the git diff
command.
Updating
Updating the images should be as simple as docker-compose pull
which, unless changed in the docker-compose.yml
file will pull the latest built images.
Production
-
It is recommended to specify which build you want to be running, and modify that version number when you would like to upgrade
-
Use docker-compose, or some other config management tool
-
Directory volume mount SSL Certs
./ssl
:/etc/ssl/certs
- Certificate File:
cert.pem
- Certificate Key File:
key.pem
- CA File for Cert Authentication (optional)
ca.pem
- Certificate File:
-
Directory volume mount and create configs:
/var/www/MISP/app/Config/
-
Additional directory volume mounts:
/var/www/MISP/app/files
/var/www/MISP/.gnupg
/var/www/MISP/.smime
Building
If you are interested in building the project from scratch - git clone
or download the entire repo and run docker-compose -f build-docker-compose.yml build
Image file sizes
-
Core server(Saved: 2.5GB)
- Original Image: 3.17GB
- First attempt: 2.24GB
- Remove chown: 1.56GB
- PreBuild python modules, and only pull submodules we need: 800MB
- PreBuild PHP modules: 664MB
-
Modules (Saved: 640MB)
- Original: 1.36GB
- Pre-build modules: 750MB