* What is expected: exclude action on the never list?
@ 2006-05-30 20:45 Michael C Thompson
2006-05-30 21:12 ` Steve Grubb
0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Michael C Thompson @ 2006-05-30 20:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steve Grubb, Linux Audit
Hey Steve,
I'm doing some testing (a rare occurrence I know), and I've noticed that
when the active rules are:
auditctl -a entry,always -S chmod
auditctl -a exclude,always -F msgtype=SYSCALL
The chmod actions are not logged. Now this is what I would expect to
happen when just reading those lines, not knowing about the internal
workings of audit. However, if the rules are
auditctl -a entry,always -S chmod
auditctl -a exclude,never -F msgtype=SYSCALL
the chmod actions are not logged either. I would read the second rule as
saying "do not exclude messages of type SYSCALL". Is this a correct
interpretation of the rule?
Thanks,
Mike
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: What is expected: exclude action on the never list?
2006-05-30 20:45 What is expected: exclude action on the never list? Michael C Thompson
@ 2006-05-30 21:12 ` Steve Grubb
2006-05-30 21:17 ` Linda Knippers
0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Steve Grubb @ 2006-05-30 21:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michael C Thompson; +Cc: Linux Audit
On Tuesday 30 May 2006 16:45, Michael C Thompson wrote:
> I would read the second rule as saying "do not exclude messages of type
> SYSCALL". Is this a correct interpretation of the rule?
That sounds reasonable, but I don't think that's what the kernel does. Maybe
it should be corrected. I think its a 1 or 2 liner.
-Steve
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: What is expected: exclude action on the never list?
2006-05-30 21:12 ` Steve Grubb
@ 2006-05-30 21:17 ` Linda Knippers
2006-05-30 22:27 ` Michael C Thompson
0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Linda Knippers @ 2006-05-30 21:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Steve Grubb; +Cc: Linux Audit
Steve Grubb wrote:
> On Tuesday 30 May 2006 16:45, Michael C Thompson wrote:
>
>>I would read the second rule as saying "do not exclude messages of type
>>SYSCALL". Is this a correct interpretation of the rule?
>
>
> That sounds reasonable, but I don't think that's what the kernel does. Maybe
> it should be corrected. I think its a 1 or 2 liner.
According to the manpage, I'd say the kernel is behaving as expected.
"Never" means never generate an audit record and "exclude" means even if
one was generated, it should be excluded. The two options together are
somewhat redundant but I don't think "never" was intended to mean "never
do what the previous option just said to do", at least not according to
the manpage.
-- ljk
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: What is expected: exclude action on the never list?
2006-05-30 21:17 ` Linda Knippers
@ 2006-05-30 22:27 ` Michael C Thompson
2006-05-30 22:40 ` Linda Knippers
0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Michael C Thompson @ 2006-05-30 22:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Linda Knippers; +Cc: Linux Audit
Linda Knippers wrote:
> Steve Grubb wrote:
>> On Tuesday 30 May 2006 16:45, Michael C Thompson wrote:
>>
>>> I would read the second rule as saying "do not exclude messages of type
>>> SYSCALL". Is this a correct interpretation of the rule?
>>
>> That sounds reasonable, but I don't think that's what the kernel does. Maybe
>> it should be corrected. I think its a 1 or 2 liner.
>
> According to the manpage, I'd say the kernel is behaving as expected.
>
> "Never" means never generate an audit record and "exclude" means even if
> one was generated, it should be excluded. The two options together are
> somewhat redundant but I don't think "never" was intended to mean "never
> do what the previous option just said to do", at least not according to
> the manpage.
Agreed. The wording is... confusing when compared to the rule. I guess
the real question which needs to be answered is "Do we need to be able
to force the capture of a rule?"... since audit by default does not
audit anything, and you have to explicitly add filters, I would say "no"
to this question.
That said, I think we should leave "exclude,always" as is, and either
change the man page to say something about "exclude,never" being the
same as "exclude,always", _or_ change the userspace to indicate that
"exclude,never" doesn't make sense.
Thanks,
Mike
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: What is expected: exclude action on the never list?
2006-05-30 22:27 ` Michael C Thompson
@ 2006-05-30 22:40 ` Linda Knippers
2006-05-30 22:43 ` Michael C Thompson
0 siblings, 1 reply; 6+ messages in thread
From: Linda Knippers @ 2006-05-30 22:40 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michael C Thompson; +Cc: Linux Audit
Michael C Thompson wrote:
> Linda Knippers wrote:
>
>> Steve Grubb wrote:
>>
>>> On Tuesday 30 May 2006 16:45, Michael C Thompson wrote:
>>>
>>>> I would read the second rule as saying "do not exclude messages of type
>>>> SYSCALL". Is this a correct interpretation of the rule?
>>>
>>>
>>> That sounds reasonable, but I don't think that's what the kernel
>>> does. Maybe it should be corrected. I think its a 1 or 2 liner.
>>
>>
>> According to the manpage, I'd say the kernel is behaving as expected.
>>
>> "Never" means never generate an audit record and "exclude" means even if
>> one was generated, it should be excluded. The two options together are
>> somewhat redundant but I don't think "never" was intended to mean "never
>> do what the previous option just said to do", at least not according to
>> the manpage.
>
>
> Agreed. The wording is... confusing when compared to the rule. I guess
> the real question which needs to be answered is "Do we need to be able
> to force the capture of a rule?"... since audit by default does not
> audit anything, and you have to explicitly add filters, I would say "no"
> to this question.
>
> That said, I think we should leave "exclude,always" as is, and either
> change the man page to say something about "exclude,never" being the
> same as "exclude,always", _or_ change the userspace to indicate that
> "exclude,never" doesn't make sense.
I'm not sure "always" makes sense either, at least not as described in
the manpage since it says to always write out record at syscall exit
time.
-- ljk
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
* Re: What is expected: exclude action on the never list?
2006-05-30 22:40 ` Linda Knippers
@ 2006-05-30 22:43 ` Michael C Thompson
0 siblings, 0 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Michael C Thompson @ 2006-05-30 22:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Linda Knippers; +Cc: Linux Audit
Linda Knippers wrote:
> Michael C Thompson wrote:
>> Linda Knippers wrote:
>>
>>> Steve Grubb wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Tuesday 30 May 2006 16:45, Michael C Thompson wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I would read the second rule as saying "do not exclude messages of type
>>>>> SYSCALL". Is this a correct interpretation of the rule?
>>>>
>>>> That sounds reasonable, but I don't think that's what the kernel
>>>> does. Maybe it should be corrected. I think its a 1 or 2 liner.
>>>
>>> According to the manpage, I'd say the kernel is behaving as expected.
>>>
>>> "Never" means never generate an audit record and "exclude" means even if
>>> one was generated, it should be excluded. The two options together are
>>> somewhat redundant but I don't think "never" was intended to mean "never
>>> do what the previous option just said to do", at least not according to
>>> the manpage.
>>
>> Agreed. The wording is... confusing when compared to the rule. I guess
>> the real question which needs to be answered is "Do we need to be able
>> to force the capture of a rule?"... since audit by default does not
>> audit anything, and you have to explicitly add filters, I would say "no"
>> to this question.
>>
>> That said, I think we should leave "exclude,always" as is, and either
>> change the man page to say something about "exclude,never" being the
>> same as "exclude,always", _or_ change the userspace to indicate that
>> "exclude,never" doesn't make sense.
>
> I'm not sure "always" makes sense either, at least not as described in
> the manpage since it says to always write out record at syscall exit
> time.
So it sounds like the man page needs to be reworded... if I think of
anything clear and enlightening, I will pass it on.
I think that the "exclude,always" construct (outside of what the man
page says) has inherent meaning, so I would leave it as is. Would you
agree that changing the "exclude,never" to be invalidated in userspace
makes sense?
Mike
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2006-05-30 22:43 UTC | newest]
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2006-05-30 20:45 What is expected: exclude action on the never list? Michael C Thompson
2006-05-30 21:12 ` Steve Grubb
2006-05-30 21:17 ` Linda Knippers
2006-05-30 22:27 ` Michael C Thompson
2006-05-30 22:40 ` Linda Knippers
2006-05-30 22:43 ` Michael C Thompson
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