On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 10:27 AM, Mark Moseley <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 4:07 PM, Mark Moseley <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On Wed, Oct 10, 2012 at 4:00 PM, Steve Grubb <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> On Wednesday, October 10, 2012 03:45:08 PM Mark Moseley wrote:
>>>> On Tue, Oct 9, 2012 at 4:54 PM, Al Viro <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> > Again, relying on pathnames for forensics (or security in general) is
>>>> > a serious mistake (cue unprintable comments about apparmor and similar
>>>> > varieties of snake oil). And using audit as poor man's ktrace analog
>>>> > is... misguided, to put it very mildly.
>>>>
>>>> Caveat: I'm just a sysadmin, so this stuff is as darn near "magic" as
>>>> I get to see on a regular basis, so it's safe to expect some naivety
>>>> and/or misguidedness on my part :)
>>>>
>>>> I'm just using it as a log of files that have been written/changed on
>>>> moderately- to heavily-used systems. If there's another in-kernel
>>>> mechanism that'd be better suited for that sort of thing (at least
>>>> without adding a lot of overhead), I'd be definitely eager to know
>>>> about it. It's a web hosting environment, with customer files all
>>>> solely on NFS, so writes to the same directory can come from an
>>>> arbitrary number of servers. When they get swamped with write
>>>> requests, the amount of per-client stats exposed by our Netapp and
>>>> Oracle NFS servers is often only enough to point us at a client server
>>>> with an abusive user on it (but not much more, without turning on
>>>> debugging). Having logs of who's doing writes would be quite useful,
>>>> esp when writes aren't happening at that exact moment and wouldn't
>>>> show up in tools like iotop. The audit subsystem seemed like the best
>>>> fit for this kind of thing, but I'm more than open to whatever works.
>>>
>>> The audit system is the best fit. But I think Al is saying there are some
>>> limitations. i know that Eric pushed some patches a while back that makes a
>>> stronger effort at collecting some of this information. What kernel are you
>>> using?
Would you happen to have a pointer to those patches? I've been surfing
the archives and not gotten lucky yet with finding the applicable
patchset.
>> Yup, understood. I've been playing with a variety of boxes, but mostly
>> within the 3.0.x and 3.2.x series. I'll drop 3.5.6 on some of these
>> boxes and see if my issues are already fixed (and proceed directly to
>> foot-in-mouth chagrined stage -- usually takes slightly longer to get
>> to that stage).
>
> Just gave 3.5.6 a shot and in these two particular cases, the result
> is the same: chroot'd actions are logged in the audit entry relative
> to the chroot, and the unlinkat/chmodat/chownat audit log entries only
> have one item with the bare filename and no indication of directory.
renameat seems to be the toughest of all of them (where
unlinkat/chmodat/chownat give you a hint in another audit entry). This
is doing a renameat(), from /home/moseley/tmp/tmp/renameat/1/a1 to
/home/moseley/tmp/tmp/renameat/2/a2
type=SYSCALL msg=audit(1351557710.520:74211): arch=c000003e
syscall=264 success=yes exit=0 a0=3 a1=40075c a2=4 a3=400759 items=4
ppid=22742 pid=15181 auid=0 uid=0 gid=0 euid=0 suid=0 fsuid=0 egid=0
sgid=0 fsgid=0 tty=pts17 ses=1727 comm="rename" exe="/tmp/rename"
key=(null)
type=CWD msg=audit(1351557710.520:74211): cwd="/tmp"
type=PATH msg=audit(1351557710.520:74211): item=0 name="/tmp"
inode=2367550 dev=08:02 mode=040775 ouid=1000 ogid=1000 rdev=00:00
type=PATH msg=audit(1351557710.520:74211): item=1 name="/tmp"
inode=2367551 dev=08:02 mode=040775 ouid=1000 ogid=1000 rdev=00:00
type=PATH msg=audit(1351557710.520:74211): item=2 name="a1"
inode=2367552 dev=08:02 mode=0100664 ouid=1000 ogid=1000 rdev=00:00
type=PATH msg=audit(1351557710.520:74211): item=3 name="a2"
inode=2367552 dev=08:02 mode=0100664 ouid=1000 ogid=1000 rdev=00:00
Anything else I could/should be trying? I'm more than willing to
experiment. I just always assume I'm missing some key flag or
something.
Here's the simple example code ... and, yes, I *do* know how to use
variables, just didn't bother here ;)
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <dirent.h>
int main() {
DIR *a;
DIR *b;
char* dir1 = "/home/moseley/tmp/tmp/renameat/1";
char* dir2 = "/home/moseley/tmp/tmp/renameat/2";
a = opendir( dir1 );
b = opendir( dir2 );
int afd = dirfd( a );
int bfd = dirfd( b );
renameat( afd, "a1", bfd, "a2" );
}