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Add startswith as a string comparison operator. #623
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Currently, the only way to do a substring match is the 'contains' operator. This is less than ideal when you specifically want to test the beginning of a string for the substring, as contains will traverse the entire string and may return a match in the middle of the string. Add a startswith operator that specifically tests for a substring match at the beginning of the string. There were a few places in non-string comparison operators where any operator not in the set of supported operators was assumed to be 'contains'. Replace this with checks for all operators including 'icontains', 'startswith' with appropriate error messages.
mstemm
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Jul 9, 2016
draios/sysdig#623 adds support for a startswith to allow for string prefix matching. Use that operator for rules that really want to check the beginning of a pathname, directory, etc. to make them faster and avoid FPs.
mstemm
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Jul 9, 2016
draios/sysdig#623 adds support for a startswith operator to allow for string prefix matching. Modify the parser to recognize that operator, and use that operator for rules that really want to check the beginning of a pathname, directory, etc. to make them faster and avoid FPs.
mstemm
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Jul 11, 2016
draios/sysdig#623 adds support for a startswith operator to allow for string prefix matching. Modify the parser to recognize that operator, and use that operator for rules that really want to check the beginning of a pathname, directory, etc. to make them faster and avoid FPs.
gianlucaborello
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Aug 16, 2016
Currently, the only way to do a substring match is the 'contains' operator. This is less than ideal when you specifically want to test the beginning of a string for the substring, as contains will traverse the entire string and may return a match in the middle of the string. Add a startswith operator that specifically tests for a substring match at the beginning of the string. There were a few places in non-string comparison operators where any operator not in the set of supported operators was assumed to be 'contains'. Replace this with checks for all operators including 'icontains', 'startswith' with appropriate error messages.
dmyerscough
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Mar 3, 2017
Currently, the only way to do a substring match is the 'contains' operator. This is less than ideal when you specifically want to test the beginning of a string for the substring, as contains will traverse the entire string and may return a match in the middle of the string. Add a startswith operator that specifically tests for a substring match at the beginning of the string. There were a few places in non-string comparison operators where any operator not in the set of supported operators was assumed to be 'contains'. Replace this with checks for all operators including 'icontains', 'startswith' with appropriate error messages.
leogr
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Dec 21, 2022
draios/sysdig#623 adds support for a startswith operator to allow for string prefix matching. Modify the parser to recognize that operator, and use that operator for rules that really want to check the beginning of a pathname, directory, etc. to make them faster and avoid FPs.
leogr
pushed a commit
to falcosecurity/rules
that referenced
this pull request
Dec 21, 2022
draios/sysdig#623 adds support for a startswith operator to allow for string prefix matching. Modify the parser to recognize that operator, and use that operator for rules that really want to check the beginning of a pathname, directory, etc. to make them faster and avoid FPs.
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Add startswith as a string comparison operator.
Currently, the only way to do a substring match is the 'contains'
operator. This is less than ideal when you specifically want to test the
beginning of a string for the substring, as contains will traverse the
entire string and may return a match in the middle of the string.
Add a startswith operator that specifically tests for a substring match
at the beginning of the string.
There were a few places in non-string comparison operators where any
operator not in the set of supported operators was assumed to be
'contains'. Replace this with checks for all operators including
'icontains', 'startswith' with appropriate error messages.
@luca3m @ldegio @gianlucaborello