kibana/x-pack
Ryland Herrick 4cc5b3a4d3
[SIEM] Client NP Cutover (#64251)
* Move SIEM public/ folder to NP plugin

This is solely renames; fixes come next.

* Update relative imports in our API tests

* Fix linter errors following move to NP folder

These paths got a little shorter, so some lines could be collapsed.

* Move client dependencies to NP package.json

I'm removing the @types/js-yaml for now because I'm not sure we need it;
I'll add it back later if we do.

* Fix relative imports to other plugins

* Fix errant uses of ui/chrome

* Remove legacy plugin shim

* Move feature registration into plugin

This previously had to be part of legacy bootstrapping due to an order
of operations issue.

* Disconnect legacy plugin

The index file should now be redundant with what's in the plugin:

* app registration
* feature registration

* Move public gitattributes

* Remove references to legacy embeddables

We can now use the NP API. Maps embeddable will not work here until
their work is merged, but this should prevent us from importing legacy
code and thus breaking the build.

* Add our frontend dependencies to kibana.json

These are all required for now, because that's how they're typed. If
they _should_ be optional (and I think several should), we need to
update the type and handle the null case within the app.

* Replace use of ui/new_platform mocks in embeddable utils

* Fix remaining jest tests

* Replace build-breaking ui/new_platform mocks with equivalents in core
proper
* Remove unnecessary mocks of ui/new_platform

* Remove references to legacy SIEM folder

* I left the reference in CODEOWNERS in case someone tries to sneak
something back
* I left the .gitignore reference for the same reason

* Fix mocks of relative paths

These were not caught by typescript and were causing test failures.

* Export our client plugin contracts

They're empty for now.

* Move from deprecated appmount API

The new one dropped a param we weren't using.

* Add missing mock causing test failures

* Don't re-export core types from our plugin

Import them from core where we need them, instead

* Move Actions UI registry outside of mount

This is already imported, there's no benefit (and potential timing
issues) with doing this inside the mount.

* Add security's setup contract to our StartServices

This doesn't change what's used, only how we're typing it. The types are now a
little more truthful as:

* our StartPlugins don't include setup contracts
* our StartServices includes everything we use at Start time, including
the one setup plugin.

* Add order and icon back to the sidebar link

* Replace plugin class properties with constants

These are shared, and should be consistent.

* Enable our UI on NP

* Add missed plugin dependencies

We're not using their contracts, but we are importing code from them.

* Revert use of constant in translation

Can't do that, whoops

* i18n our feature catalogue entry

* Remove unnecessary array from single element

* Remove unused keys

These were the legacy translations used... well, I don't know where they
were used.

* Ignore circular dependencies in external plugins

* Normalize exclusions

* Add undeclared dependencies to kibana.json

We import our maps embeddable from maps, and we pass inspector to the
embeddable. I just missed these in my audit. This was causing errors in
the map embeddable.

* Await our call to setLayerList

This is an async call that we need to complete before we can render.

* Reduce siem plugin size

When we load our initial plugin (before our app is loaded), were were
implicitly importing all of kibana_react with this import. While a
global module prevents this from affecting our bundle size currently,
that could change in the future. Since we only need a reference to our
class, we just import that instead.
2020-04-27 17:59:21 -05:00
..
.github Migrate x-pack-kibana source to kibana 2018-04-24 13:48:10 -07:00
build_chromium Fix rawChecksums in chromium build and rename for clarity (#44665) 2019-09-03 12:49:07 -07:00
dev-tools chore(NA): add file-loader into jest moduleNameMapper (#64330) 2020-04-23 21:14:51 +01:00
examples Example plugins in X-Pack (#63823) 2020-04-17 20:15:36 +02:00
legacy [SIEM] Client NP Cutover (#64251) 2020-04-27 17:59:21 -05:00
plugins [SIEM] Client NP Cutover (#64251) 2020-04-27 17:59:21 -05:00
scripts [Reporting/Test] move functional tests to apps (#64368) 2020-04-27 14:24:55 -07:00
tasks Refactor test entry by runner (#44679) 2020-02-18 16:21:36 -06:00
test [SIEM] Client NP Cutover (#64251) 2020-04-27 17:59:21 -05:00
test_utils [Index management] Fix regression on mappings editor forms (#62437) 2020-04-06 14:40:16 +02:00
typings [Metrics UI] Refactor With* containers to hooks (#59503) 2020-04-14 09:01:41 -07:00
.gitignore [Telemetry] Migrate public to NP (#56285) 2020-02-13 09:44:01 +02:00
.i18nrc.json [SIEM] Client NP Cutover (#64251) 2020-04-27 17:59:21 -05:00
.kibana-plugin-helpers.json
gulpfile.js
index.js [SIEM] Client NP Cutover (#64251) 2020-04-27 17:59:21 -05:00
package.json Bump cypress dev-dependency from 4.2.0 to 4.4.1 (#64408) 2020-04-27 14:23:33 +02:00
README.md Refactor test entry by runner (#44679) 2020-02-18 16:21:36 -06:00
tsconfig.json [SIEM] Server cutover to New Platform (#63430) 2020-04-17 12:31:54 -05:00
yarn.lock Add lockfile symlinks (#55440) 2020-01-27 11:38:20 -05:00

Elastic License Functionality

This directory tree contains files subject to the Elastic License. The files subject to the Elastic License are grouped in this directory to clearly separate them from files licensed under the Apache License 2.0.

Development

By default, Kibana will run with X-Pack installed as mentioned in the contributing guide.

Elasticsearch will run with a basic license. To run with a trial license, including security, you can specifying that with the yarn es command.

Example: yarn es snapshot --license trial --password changeme

By default, this will also set the password for native realm accounts to the password provided (changeme by default). This includes that of the kibana user which elasticsearch.username defaults to in development. If you wish to specific a password for a given native realm account, you can do that like so: --password.kibana=notsecure

Testing

Running specific tests

Test runner Test location Runner command (working directory is kibana/x-pack)
Jest x-pack/**/*.test.js
x-pack/**/*.test.ts
cd x-pack && node scripts/jest -t regexp [test path]
Functional x-pack/test/*integration/**/config.js
x-pack/test/*functional/config.js
x-pack/test/accessibility/config.js
node scripts/functional_tests_server --config x-pack/test/[directory]/config.js
node scripts/functional_test_runner --config x-pack/test/[directory]/config.js --grep=regexp

Examples:

  • Run the jest test case whose description matches 'filtering should skip values of null': cd x-pack && yarn test:jest -t 'filtering should skip values of null' plugins/ml/public/application/explorer/explorer_charts/explorer_charts_container_service.test.js
  • Run the x-pack api integration test case whose description matches the given string: node scripts/functional_tests_server --config x-pack/test/api_integration/config.js node scripts/functional_test_runner --config x-pack/test/api_integration/config.js --grep='apis Monitoring Beats list with restarted beat instance should load multiple clusters'

In addition to to providing a regular expression argument, specific tests can also be run by appeding .only to an it or describe function block. E.g. describe( to describe.only(.

Running all tests

You can run unit tests by running:

yarn test

If you want to run tests only for a specific plugin (to save some time), you can run:

yarn test --plugins <plugin>[,<plugin>]*    # where <plugin> is "reporting", etc.

Debugging browser tests

yarn test:karma:debug

Initializes an environment for debugging the browser tests. Includes an dedicated instance of the kibana server for building the test bundle, and a karma server. When running this task the build is optimized for the first time and then a karma-owned instance of the browser is opened. Click the "debug" button to open a new tab that executes the unit tests.

Run single tests by appending grep parameter to the end of the URL. For example http://localhost:9876/debug.html?grep=ML%20-%20Explorer%20Controller will only run tests with 'ML - Explorer Controller' in the describe block.

Running server unit tests

You can run mocha unit tests by running:

yarn test:mocha

Running functional tests

For more info, see the Elastic functional test development guide.

The functional UI tests, the API integration tests, and the SAML API integration tests are all run against a live browser, Kibana, and Elasticsearch install. Each set of tests is specified with a unique config that describes how to start the Elasticsearch server, the Kibana server, and what tests to run against them. The sets of tests that exist today are functional UI tests (specified by this config), API integration tests (specified by this config), and SAML API integration tests (specified by this config).

The script runs all sets of tests sequentially like so:

  • builds Elasticsearch and X-Pack
  • runs Elasticsearch with X-Pack
  • starts up the Kibana server with X-Pack
  • runs the functional UI tests against those servers
  • tears down the servers
  • repeats the same process for the API and SAML API integration test configs.

To do all of this in a single command run:

node scripts/functional_tests

Developing functional UI tests

If you are developing functional tests then you probably don't want to rebuild Elasticsearch and wait for all that setup on every test run, so instead use this command to build and start just the Elasticsearch and Kibana servers:

node scripts/functional_tests_server

After the servers are started, open a new terminal and run this command to run just the tests (without tearing down Elasticsearch or Kibana):

node scripts/functional_test_runner

For both of the above commands, it's crucial that you pass in --config to specify the same config file to both commands. This makes sure that the right tests will run against the right servers. Typically a set of tests and server configuration go together.

Read more about how the scripts work here.

For a deeper dive, read more about the way functional tests and servers work here.

Running API integration tests

API integration tests are run with a unique setup usually without UI assets built for the Kibana server.

API integration tests are intended to test only programmatic API exposed by Kibana. There is no need to run browser and simulate user actions, which significantly reduces execution time. In addition, the configuration for API integration tests typically sets optimize.enabled=false for Kibana because UI assets are usually not needed for these tests.

To run only the API integration tests:

node scripts/functional_tests --config test/api_integration/config

Running SAML API integration tests

We also have SAML API integration tests which set up Elasticsearch and Kibana with SAML support. Run only API integration tests with SAML enabled like so:

node scripts/functional_tests --config test/saml_api_integration/config

Running Jest integration tests

Jest integration tests can be used to test behavior with Elasticsearch and the Kibana server.

node scripts/jest_integration

An example test exists at test_utils/jest/integration_tests/example_integration.test.ts

Running Reporting functional tests

See here for more information on running reporting tests.