Richard Guy Briggs
2018-06-14 20:31:57 UTC
Hi Al,
I'm trying to trigger records for all the instances of
AUDIT_CONFIG_CHANGE, but I'm having trouble with a few.
AUDIT_TRIM ("auditctl -t": Trim the subtrees after a mount command.):
My reading is that should trigger at least one message (which it does)
and potentially more depending on existing tree watches and mounts via
audit_trim_trees(). I've not been able to trigger any additional ones.
What I've tried to do to trigger additional ones is to mount a
filesystem, create a subdirectory within it, set a watch on that
subdirectory, unmount the filesystem and then run a trim command. I've
also tried the other way around, which I didn't expect to work, creating
a subdirectory, set a watch on that subdirectory, mount a filesystem on
its parent, then run a trim command.
AUDIT_MAKE_EQUIV ("auditctl -q mount-point,subtree": Make subtree
equivalent under mount point.):
The way I read this code is it should trigger at least one message
(which it does) and potentially more depending on failures of
iterate_mounts() in audit_tag_tree(). I don't know how to trigger the
latter. Are you able to prescribe a recipe to do so?
Any insights? Thanks!
- RGB
--
Richard Guy Briggs <***@redhat.com>
Sr. S/W Engineer, Kernel Security, Base Operating Systems
Remote, Ottawa, Red Hat Canada
IRC: rgb, SunRaycer
Voice: +1.647.777.2635, Internal: (81) 32635
I'm trying to trigger records for all the instances of
AUDIT_CONFIG_CHANGE, but I'm having trouble with a few.
AUDIT_TRIM ("auditctl -t": Trim the subtrees after a mount command.):
My reading is that should trigger at least one message (which it does)
and potentially more depending on existing tree watches and mounts via
audit_trim_trees(). I've not been able to trigger any additional ones.
What I've tried to do to trigger additional ones is to mount a
filesystem, create a subdirectory within it, set a watch on that
subdirectory, unmount the filesystem and then run a trim command. I've
also tried the other way around, which I didn't expect to work, creating
a subdirectory, set a watch on that subdirectory, mount a filesystem on
its parent, then run a trim command.
AUDIT_MAKE_EQUIV ("auditctl -q mount-point,subtree": Make subtree
equivalent under mount point.):
The way I read this code is it should trigger at least one message
(which it does) and potentially more depending on failures of
iterate_mounts() in audit_tag_tree(). I don't know how to trigger the
latter. Are you able to prescribe a recipe to do so?
Any insights? Thanks!
- RGB
--
Richard Guy Briggs <***@redhat.com>
Sr. S/W Engineer, Kernel Security, Base Operating Systems
Remote, Ottawa, Red Hat Canada
IRC: rgb, SunRaycer
Voice: +1.647.777.2635, Internal: (81) 32635