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From: Steve Grubb <sgrubb@redhat.com>
To: Bond Masuda <bond.masuda@jlbond.com>
Cc: linux-audit@redhat.com
Subject: Re: audit log still getting rotated even with max_log_file_action = ignore?
Date: Fri, 06 Nov 2015 14:12:52 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <37102497.kx1YEe0YIN@x2> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <563CEC5C.5010301@jlbond.com>

On Friday, November 06, 2015 10:07:24 AM Bond Masuda wrote:
> On 11/02/2015 03:32 PM, Steve Grubb wrote:
> > I took a quick look at the code. I can't see how this is happening
> > unless auditd is receiving a SIGUSR1 signal. You might want to put
> > some syslog calls in to auditd-event.c log when auditd gets told to
> > rotate so that it can be correlated to other system activities. -Steve
> 
> Hi Steve,
> 
> The cron script i mention below does use "service auditd rotate", which
> does send a SIGUSR1. But these rotations are happening outside the time
> frame when that cron job runs.

Can you find any other cron job running around that time?


> Additionally, they seem to rotate around when the log file reaches about
> 90MB. It almost seems like there's some default behavior?

The settings to note in your email are these:

num_logs = 5
max_log_file = 6
max_log_file_action = ignore
admin_space_left = 50
admin_space_left_action = exec /usr/local/bin/remove_oldest_audit_log

This means you would have 6 log files that 5 MB each. However, the max_log_file 
action says ignore.


> I was wondering if maybe my syntax in the config file was wrong and auditd was
> ignoring my setting and just using defaults?

It might be that you are hitting the admin_space_left_action which runs 
remove_oldest_audit_log. That is my only guess. Does the math work out for 
partition size - size of all logs being approximayely  50MB? If so, this is 
your problem and you might need a bigger partition.

But based on a quick review of the man page, you might set num_logs = 0. That 
is supposed to disable rotating as long as max_log_size_action != rotate. You 
have ignore, so that should work if you don't have the problem noted above.

-Steve


> >> I have a cron job in /etc/cron.daily/auditd that I use to rotate +
> >> compress the audit logs, but this is not what is causing the audit log
> >> rotation.
> >> 
> >> Is there another setting I must set in order for it to not automatically
> >> rotate the audit log? How do I achieve the desired effect, where the
> >> audit log is only rotated when my cron script runs?

  reply	other threads:[~2015-11-06 19:12 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2015-11-02 21:40 audit log still getting rotated even with max_log_file_action = ignore? Bond Masuda
2015-11-02 23:32 ` Steve Grubb
2015-11-06 18:07   ` Bond Masuda
2015-11-06 19:12     ` Steve Grubb [this message]
2015-11-08  6:05       ` Bond Masuda

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