CLI Documentation ================= Kolide Fleet provides a server which allows you to manage and orchestrate an osquery deployment across of a set of workstations and servers. For certain use-cases, it makes sense to maintain the configuration and data of an osquery deployment in source-controlled files. It is also desirable to be able to manage these files with a familiar command-line tool. To facilitate this, we are working on an experimental CLI called `fleetctl`. ### Warning: In Progress This CLI is largely just a proposal and large sections (if not most) of this do not work. The objective user-experience is documented here so that contributors working on this feature can share documentation with the community to gather feedback. ## Inspiration Inspiration for the `fleetctl` command-line experience as well as the file format has been principally derived from the [Kubernetes](https://kubernetes.io/) container orchestration tool. This is for a few reasons: - Format Familiarity: At Kolide, we love Kubernetes and we think it is the future of production infrastructure management. We believe that many of the people that use this interface to manage Fleet will also be Kubernetes operators. By using a familiar command-line interface and file format, the cognitive overhead can be reduced since the operator is already familiar with how these tools work and behave. - Established Best Practices: Kubernetes deployments can easily become very complex. Because of this, Kubernetes operators have an established set of best practices that they often follow when writing and maintaining config files. Some of these best practices and tips are documented on the [official Kubernetes website](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/overview/#general-config-tips) and some are documented by [the community](https://www.mirantis.com/blog/introduction-to-yaml-creating-a-kubernetes-deployment/). Since the file format and workflow is so similar, we can re-use these best practices when managing Fleet configurations. ## `fleetctl` - The CLI The `fleetctl` tool is heavily inspired by the [`kubectl`](https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/kubectl-overview/) tool. If you are familiar with `kubectl`, this will all feel very familiar to you. If not, some further explanation would likely be helpful. Fleet exposes the aspects of an osquery deployment as a set of "objects". Objects may be a query, a pack, a set of configuration options, etc. The documentation for [Declarative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Configuration Files](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tutorials/object-management-kubectl/declarative-object-management-configuration/) says the following about the object lifecycle: > Objects can be created, updated, and deleted by storing multiple object configuration files in a directory and using `kubectl apply` to recursively create and update those objects as needed. Similarly, Fleet objects can be created, updated, and deleted by storing multiple object configuration files in a directory and using `fleetctl apply` to recursively create and update those objects as needed. ### Help Output ``` $ fleetctl --help fleetctl controls an instance of the Kolide Fleet osquery fleet manager. Find more information at https://kolide.com/fleet Usage: fleetctl [command] [flags] Commands: fleetctl query - run a query across your fleet fleetctl apply - apply a set of osquery configurations fleetctl edit - edit your complete configuration in an ephemeral editor fleetctl config - modify how and which Fleet server to connect to fleetctl help - get help on how to define an intent type fleetctl version - print full version information ``` ### Workflow ```bash # Make sure you're currently using the current server (in this case: production linux hosts) fleetctl config set-context production-linux # Edit the config file (or files) for your Fleet instance (or one of them) and apply the file vim fleet-linux.yml fleetctl apply -f ./fleet-linux.yml # Commit the changes to an upstream source tree git add fleet-linux.yml git commit -m "new changes to osquery production linux configuration" git push ``` ## Configuration File Format A Fleet configuration is defined using one or more declarative "messages" in yaml syntax. Each message can live in it's own file or multiple in one file, each separated by `---`. Each file/message contains a few required top-level keys: - `apiVersion` - the API version of the file/request - `spec` - the "data" of the request - `kind ` - the type of file/object (i.e.: pack, query, config) The file may optionally also include some `metadata` for more complex data types (i.e.: packs). When you reason about how to manage these config files, consider following the [General Config Tips](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/overview/#general-config-tips) published by the Kubernetes project. Some of the especially relevant tips are included here as well: - When defining configurations, specify the latest stable API version. - Configuration files should be stored in version control before being pushed to the cluster. This allows quick roll-back of a configuration if needed. It also aids with cluster re-creation and restoration if necessary. - Group related objects into a single file whenever it makes sense. One file is often easier to manage than several. See the [config-single-file.yml](../../examples/config-single-file.yml) file as an example of this syntax. - Don’t specify default values unnecessarily – simple and minimal configs will reduce errors. All of these files can be concatenated together into [one file](../../examples/config-single-file.yml) (seperated by `---`), or they can be in [individual files with a directory structure](../../examples/config-many-files) like the following: ``` |-- config.yml |-- labels.yml |-- packs | `-- osquery-monitoring.yml `-- queries.yml ``` ### Osquery Configuration Options The following file describes configuration options passed to the osquery instance. All other configuration data will be over-written by the application of this file. ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: options spec: config: options: distributed_interval: 3 distributed_tls_max_attempts: 3 logger_plugin: tls logger_tls_endpoint: /api/v1/osquery/log logger_tls_period: 10 decorators: load: - "SELECT version FROM osquery_info" - "SELECT uuid AS host_uuid FROM system_info" always: - "SELECT user AS username FROM logged_in_users WHERE user <> '' ORDER BY time LIMIT 1" interval: 3600: "SELECT total_seconds AS uptime FROM uptime" overrides: # Note configs in overrides take precedence over the default config defined # under the config key above. With this config file, the base config would # only be used for Windows hosts, while Mac and Linux hosts would pull # these overrides. platforms: darwin: options: distributed_interval: 10 distributed_tls_max_attempts: 10 logger_plugin: tls logger_tls_endpoint: /api/v1/osquery/log logger_tls_period: 300 disable_tables: chrome_extensions docker_socket: /var/run/docker.sock file_paths: users: - /Users/%/Library/%% - /Users/%/Documents/%% etc: - /etc/%% linux: options: distributed_interval: 10 distributed_tls_max_attempts: 3 logger_plugin: tls logger_tls_endpoint: /api/v1/osquery/log logger_tls_period: 60 schedule_timeout: 60 docker_socket: /etc/run/docker.sock file_paths: homes: - /root/.ssh/%% - /home/%/.ssh/%% etc: - /etc/%% tmp: - /tmp/%% exclude_paths: homes: - /home/not_to_monitor/.ssh/%% tmp: - /tmp/too_many_events/ decorators: load: - "SELECT * FROM cpuid" - "SELECT * FROM docker_info" interval: 3600: "SELECT total_seconds AS uptime FROM uptime" ``` ### Host Labels The following file describes the labels which hosts should be automatically grouped into. The label resource should reference the query by name. Both of these resources can be included in the same file as such: ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: label spec: name: slack_not_running query: slack_not_running --- apiVersion: kolide.com/v1/alpha1 kind: query spec: name: slack_not_running query: > SELECT * from system_info WHERE NOT EXISTS ( SELECT * FROM processes WHERE name LIKE "%Slack%" ); ``` ### Osquery Queries For especially long or complex queries, you may want to define one query in one file. Continued edits and applications to this file will update the query as long as the `metadata.name` does not change. If you want to change the name of a query, you must first create a new query with the new name and then delete the query with the old name. Make sure the old query name is not defined in any packs before deleting it or an error will occur. ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: query spec: name: docker_processes descriptions: The docker containers processes that are running on a system. query: select * from docker_container_processes; support: osquery: 2.9.0 platforms: - linux - darwin ``` To define multiple queries in a file, concatenate multiple `query` resources together in a single file with `---`. For example, consider a file that you might store at `queries/osquery_monitoring.yml`: ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: query spec: name: osquery_version description: The version of the Launcher and Osquery process query: select launcher.version, osquery.version from kolide_launcher_info launcher, osquery_info osquery; support: launcher: 0.3.0 osquery: 2.9.0 --- apiVersion: v1 kind: query spec: name: osquery_schedule description: Report performance stats for each file in the query schedule. query: select name, interval, executions, output_size, wall_time, (user_time/executions) as avg_user_time, (system_time/executions) as avg_system_time, average_memory, last_executed from osquery_schedule; --- apiVersion: v1 kind: query spec: name: osquery_info description: A heartbeat counter that reports general performance (CPU, memory) and version. query: select i.*, p.resident_size, p.user_time, p.system_time, time.minutes as counter from osquery_info i, processes p, time where p.pid = i.pid; --- apiVersion: v1 kind: query spec: name: osquery_events description: Report event publisher health and track event counters. query: select name, publisher, type, subscriptions, events, active from osquery_events; ``` ### Query Packs To define query packs, reference queries defined elsewhere by name. This is why the "name" of a query is so important. You can define many of these packs in many files. ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: pack spec: name: osquery_monitoring targets: labels: - all_hosts queries: - query: osquery_version name: osquery_version_differential interval: 7200 - query: osquery_version name: osquery_version_snapshot interval: 7200 snapshot: true - query: osquery_schedule interval: 7200 removed: false - query: osquery_events interval: 86400 removed: false - query: oquery_info interval: 600 removed: false ```