![]() If for any reason the name of the database for using misp isn't named "misp", connectivity will fail because database.php does not get updated with the correct name from .env Ran into this when using a forked version of this project where the web container is run in Docker but MySQL database is running in prod database cluster and required a specific naming convention. Other parameters in .env are also not updated or translated into database.php |
||
---|---|---|
web | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
README.md | ||
docker-compose.yml | ||
template.env |
README.md
MISP Docker
The files in this repository are used to create a Docker container running a MISP ("Malware Information Sharing Platform") instance.
I rewrote the Docker file to split the components in multiple containers (which is more in the philosophy of Docker). Therefore there is no longer a Dockerfile in the root directory.
The MISP container needs at least a MySQL container to store the data. By default it listen to port 443 and port 80, which is redirected to 443.
The build is based on Ubuntu and will install all the required components, using the INSTALL script provided in the MISP repository.
Using the Install script has the advantage that we can rely on a tested installation routine which is maintained and kept up to date. The amount of custom work to be done in the Dockerfile and run.sh files is limited to the necessary to make MISP container compliant.
The following configuration steps are performed automatically:
- Reconfiguration of the base URL in
config.php
- Generation of a new salt in
config.php
- Generation of a self-signed certificate
- Optimization of the PHP environment (php.ini) to match the MISP recommended values
- Creation of the MySQL database
- Generation of the admin PGP key
- Installation of misp modules
Building your image
Fetch files
$ git clone https://github.com/MISP/misp-docker
$ cd misp-docker
# Copy template.env to .env (on the root directory) and edit the environment variables at .env file
$ cp template.env .env
$ vi .env
Build the containers
$ docker-compose build
or
$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml build
Run containers
$ docker-compose up
or
$ docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up