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Satori CI - Automated Software Testing Platform

Project description

What is Satori CI?

Satori allows you to assert how systems and software behave. Automatize software and system testing using three different approaches:

  • On demand: you need to execute the test one time (ie, Security Testing, Stress Testing, etc)
  • Scheduled: you need to know on a regular basis what is the status of something (ie, Monitoring live systems every five minutes, Auditing weekly/monthly/yearly systems, etc)
  • CI/CD: you need to execute it every time you are pushing new code (ie, Security Testing, System Testing, etc)

Setup Satori CLI

Three steps:

  1. Execute on your command line terminal:
pip3 install satori-ci
  1. With Satori CLI installed, now we need to get a Satori Token to use it:
  1. Replace the string YOUR_TOKEN with your clipboard on the next command:
satori-cli config token YOUR_TOKEN`

Actions

You can take actions on:

  • run: whenever you are launching on demand scans for playbook files or directories
  • repo: whenever you are taking actions on repositories
  • monitor: visualize your scheduled playbooks
  • team: actions related to your team settings

Now, lets test software.

satori-cli run

Consider the following example "Hello World" program written in Python:

print("Hello World")

If save that into a file named hello_world.py and we execute this program, we would see the following on the console:

foo@bar:~$ python hello_world.py
Hello World

How can you test aumatically that that piece of software behaves according to specification? You can write a Satori Playbook using a simple and practical notation:

foo@bar:~$ cat .satori.yml
test:
    assertStdoutEqual: Hello World
    python:
    - [ python hello_world.py ]

Lets test the code with the playbook

foo@bar:~$ satori-cli run ./ --sync
Satori CI 1.2.3 - Automated Software Testing Platform 
Uploading... ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 331/331 bytes 0:00:00
UUID: AOQxDWDkXpZp
Report: https://www.satori-ci.com/report_details/?n=AOQxDWDkXpZp
- Report status: Completed | Result: Pass | Elapsed time: 62.6s
  • test: test > python
  • asserts:
      ░ assert: assertStdoutEqual
      ░ status: Pass
      ░ expected: Hello World
      - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 
  • testcases: 1
  • test_status: Pass
  • total_fails: 0
  - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 

The code and the Satori playbook instructions were executed on a new Docker instance hosted by AWS. Satori asserts that this piece of software output "Hello World". You can assert several things:

  • assertStdout: True|False

Is output produced?

  • assertStdoutEquals: String*

Is the output equal to the String?

  • assertStdoutNotEquals: String

Is the output different than String?

  • assertStdoutContains: String

Does the output contains the String?

  • assertStdoutNotContains: String

Does the output not contain the String?

  • assertStdoutSHA256: SHA256Checksum

Is the output equal to this SHA256 hash?

  • assertStdoutRegex: Regex

Does the output matches your regexp?

  • assertStdoutNotRegex: Regex

Does the output not match your regexp?

The previos can also be applied to assertStderr. Finally, you can assert the return code of your the execution using assertReturnCode.

Please let us know if you need to assert something else that we is not covered by them.

Setup Satori CI Github App

We tested on demand. Now let's do it as part of your regular Github CI process.

  1. Go to https://github.com/apps/satorici

  2. Click on Install

  3. Select the repositories where you will be installing it or select all repositories

By default you can get notifications via email and Github issues. If you want to get notified in slack, discord or telegram go to https://www.satori-ci.com/user-settings/ to define their details.

If you want to detail in your playbook to be notified when the scans are ready, add the following to them:

settings:
  log|logOnFail|logOnPass: slack|email|issue|discord|telegram

For example:

settings:
    logOnFail: slack
  
test:
    assertStdoutEqual: Hello World
    python:
    - [ python hello_world.py ]

and put it on a file named .satori.yml inside your repository.

satori-cli repo

You can check which repositories you connected with a playbook by running

foo@bar:~$ satori-cli repo

You can scan all your commits from your repository to see if there were any discrepancies at some point:

foo@bar:~$ satori-cli repo githubusername/repository scan -c 100 --sync

satori-cli playbook

Are used to assert software behaviors, wether they are source code files or live systems. You can see a list of public playbooks by running

Public playbooks

They can be imported by playbooks that you have in your CI or on assets being Monitored.

foo@bar:~$ satori-cli playbook --public
URI                          | Name                                            
satori://code/trufflehog.yml | Trufflehog will search for secrets in your code 
satori://code/semgrep.yml    | Static source code analysis with semgrep
  
...

You can check your private playbooks executed just by running satori-cli playbook

Import Playbooks

Playbooks can import other local or remote playbooks. We keep at TBC a list of playbooks that can be referenced with the

import:
    - satori://code/trufflehog.yml
    - satori://code/semgrep.yml

test:
    assertStdoutEqual: Hello World
    python:
    - [ python hello_world.py ]

Private Playbooks

We will store a copy of the playbooks that you have executed and show them to you whenever you execute the command:

foo@bar:~$ satori-cli playbooks private
Type    | URI                                                     | Name           | Imports
CI      | github://satorici/satori-cli/.satori.yml                |                |
Monitor | github://satorici/playbooks/test/satori/monitor.yml     | Monitor Assets | monitorBlog.yml
Run     | github://satorici/playbooks/test/satori/monitorBlog.yml | Monitor Blog   |
...

Is there a playbook that you would like us to add? Drop us a line at support@satori-ci.com

satori-cli monitor

Assert that your systems are running as expected by setting a schedule for your playbook. Playbooks that define a schedule can be monitored with:

satori-cli monitor

For example, you can define schedule a crontab rate to a playbook just as in the following exmaple to verify the Hello World website from Satori every hour:

settings:
  - name: Monitor Blog
  - schedule: "0 * * * *"
  - logOnFail: slack

test:
  assertStdout: "Hello World"
  blog:
  - [ curl -s https://www.satori-ci.com/hello-world/ ]

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