From: Alexander Viro <aviro@redhat.com>
To: "Wieprecht, Karen M." <Karen.Wieprecht@jhuapl.edu>
Cc: "Todd, Charles" <CTODD@ball.com>, linux-audit@redhat.com
Subject: Re: close(2) not being audited?
Date: Fri, 26 Jan 2007 17:19:33 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <20070126221933.GF14621@devserv.devel.redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <FC11D747323EB24493CDC753367EEB92019FA4D3@aplesnation.dom1.jhuapl.edu>
On Fri, Jan 26, 2007 at 03:14:10PM -0500, Wieprecht, Karen M. wrote:
> Actually, the exact wording says:
>
> "Successful and unsuccessful accesses to security-relevant objects and
> directories"
>
> It does not specify exactly how that should be collected, but the
> NISPOM does request that the audit record include who tried to access
> it, what they tried to access, the time and date of the access attempt,
> what command they were trying to run (rm, chmod, etc.), and if they
> were successful or not. What happens behind the scenes after the
> operating system takes over the request may not be of as much interest
> unless collecting that info helps to provide the above details to the
> audit record.
Please, define "access". Consider the following sequence:
on April 1st:
fd = open(foo, O_RDWR);
p = mmap(..., fd, ...);
close(fd);
two days later: modify area pointed to by p
a month later: munmap(p, ...);
What do you want in the log? More specifically, _when_ do you want it?
Is that close() worth more than munmap()? All file access will be done
at least a couple of days after it and file will remain open for more than
a month, despite successful call of close(2).
The main question here is what are those logs supposed to be useful for,
beside the CYA exercises.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-01-26 22:19 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2006-12-28 21:58 close(2) not being audited? Todd, Charles
2006-12-30 14:36 ` Steve Grubb
2007-01-26 17:37 ` Steve Grubb
2007-01-26 18:03 ` John D. Ramsdell
2007-01-26 20:14 ` Wieprecht, Karen M.
2007-01-26 22:19 ` Alexander Viro [this message]
2007-01-26 23:00 ` Timothy R. Chavez
2007-01-26 23:01 ` Timothy R. Chavez
2007-01-26 23:20 ` Alexander Viro
2007-01-26 23:46 ` Timothy R. Chavez
2007-01-28 21:40 ` James Antill
2007-01-29 20:19 ` Timothy R. Chavez
2007-01-26 23:29 ` Alexander Viro
2007-01-27 0:03 ` Timothy R. Chavez
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