The Broker library implements Bro’s high-level communication patterns:
- remote logging
- remote events
- distributed data stores
Remote logging and events all follow a pub/sub communication model between Broker endpoints that are directly peered with each other. An endpoint also has the option of subscribing to its own messages. Subscriptions are matched prefix-wise and endpoints have the capability of fine-tuning the subscription topic strings they wish to advertise to peers as well as the messages they wish to send to them.
The distributed data store functionality allows a master data store associated with one Broker endpoint to be cloned at peer endpoints which may then perform lightweight, local queries against the clone, which automatically stays synchronized with the master store. Clones cannot modify their content directly, instead they send modifications to the centralized master store which applies them and then broadcasts them to all clones.
Applications which integrate the Broker library may communicate with each other using the above-mentioned patterns which are common to Bro.
See the User Manual for more information. For offline reading, it’s
also available in the doc/
directory of the source tree.
Compiling Broker requires the following libraries/tools to already be installed:
- C++ compiler with C++11 support (GCC 4.8+ or Clang 3.3+)
- OpenSSL headers/libraries (http://www.openssl.org)
- CMake 2.8.12 or greater (https://cmake.org)
The optional Python bindings also require Python 2.7 or greater
along with Python development packages. For Python 2.7, you’ll
also need the ipaddress
backport from Python 3.
By default, Broker will use an integrated version of the C++ Actor
Framework (CAF; https://actor-framework.org), though there’s still the
option to specify an exernal CAF version via the --with-caf=
configure script option.
To compile and install into /usr/local
:
./configure
make
make install
See ./configure --help
for more advanced configuration options.