misp-modules/docs/install.md

4.9 KiB

Install from pip

It is strongly recommended to use a virtual environment (see here for instructions https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/venv.html).

Once the virtual environment is loaded just use the command:

pip install misp-modules

Note: this install method might not yet be available.

Install from cloned repository

In this case the only requirement is to install poetry. Normally you just need to run pip install poetry, but see here for more alternatives https://python-poetry.org/docs/#installation.

Once poetry is installed, you can clone the repository and install misp-modules as follows:

git clone https://github.com/MISP/misp-modules.git && cd misp-modules
git submodule update --init
poetry install

Note that the dependencies will require a number of system packages installed. On Ubuntu these packages are libpoppler-cpp-dev, libzbar0, and tesseract-ocr. For an updated list, check the github action used to test the build inside .github/workflows.

Install the systemd unit

To run misp-modules as a service on a distribution based on systemd, you need to create the unit as follows and store it in a file /etc/systemd/system/misp-modules.service:

[Unit]
Description=MISP modules

[Service]
Type=simple
User=apache
Group=apache
ExecStart='/path/to/venv/bin/misp-modules -l 127.0.0.1 -s'
Restart=always
RestartSec=10

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Then, enable the misp-modules service and start it:

systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl enable --now misp-modules

Run the tests

To run tests you need to install misp-modules from the cloned repository, run the server, and then run the tests. You can do all these step with poetry.

poetry install
poetry run misp-modules

And in another terminal:

poetry run pytest

Build the documentation

To build the documentation you can use the provided Makefile. Inside you will find three targets:

  • generate_docs: install the depdendency and generate the documentation.

  • generate_docs: build the documentation using mkdocs.

  • deploy: deploy the documentation using mkdocs gh-deploy.

  • test-docs: run a local server exposing the newly built documentation.

Note: you can either run the targets using poetry (default), or using the Docker image squidfunk/mkdocs-material by setting the environment variable USE_DOCKER=true.

Run MISP modules

If you installed it using pip, you just need to execute the command misp-modules (source the virtual environment a second time to update the search paths). If you installed it from the cloned repository, just use poetry, i.e., poetry run misp-modules.

Run MISP modules in Docker

You can find an up-to-date container image and related documentation at the following repository: https://github.com/MISP/misp-docker .

Install misp-module on an offline instance

If misp-modules is available on PyPI

Once misp-modules is available on PyPI, you can just download all the necessary packages:

mkdir wheels
pip wheel misp-modules --no-cache-dir -w ./wheels

Move the wheels directory to the target system, and install them there:

pip install --no-cache-dir --use-deprecated=legacy-resolver /wheels/*.whl

Once again, using a virtual environment is recommended.

If misp-modules is not available on PyPI

You have two choices, the first approach uses poetry export to export the entire virtual environment so you can copy and run it on the target system; the second one uses poetry bundle to export a requirements.txt file.

Using poetry bundle

This is quite straightforward but it assumes your target system is relatively similar (same distribution, architecture, libaries).

poetry install
poetry self add poetry-plugin-bundle
poetry bundle venv /destination/path/

Using poetry export

This is a bit more convoluted and it is similar to how you would install misp-modules on an offline instance.

Just follow those instructions but replace the package misp-modules with -r requirements.txt.

Before doing so you need to generate the requirements.txt file. Due to the fact we are still supporting Python 3.8 and that Poetry still has some limitations (soon to be resolved) you need to need to replace the line python = ">=3.8.*,<3.13" inside pyproject.toml with your exact version (just run python --version).

The following sed command does everything for you.

sed -i "s/^python = .*/python = \"$(python -c 'import platform; print(platform.python_version())')\"/" pyproject.toml

Then, run the following commands to generate your very own requirements.txt.

poetry lock
poetry install
poetry self add poetry-plugin-export
poetry export --without-hashes -f requirements.txt -o requirements.txt

Note that misp-modules will not be part of the requirements.txt file and you will need to create the wheel yourself:

poetry build --output ./wheels