Writting to audit with an application
geckiv
geckiv at optonline.net
Mon Mar 19 19:58:46 UTC 2007
Steve,
I never heard of dbus before. Is there an example how it keeps it's
CAP_AUDIT_WRITE and changes uids? Is this just using setuid() some how?
Thanks,
Frank
Steve Grubb wrote:
>On Saturday 17 March 2007 17:34:57 geckiv wrote:
>
>
>> Thanks for the reply. I must have something wrong with my system as I
>>can't get it to work even running it as root. I get an error of:
>>
>>FAILURE: errno = 22
>>Error writing audit file: Invalid argument
>>Error writing audit: Illegal seek
>>
>>
>
>This does sound wrong. Maybe strace would shed some light on how its going
>wrong? What kernel are you using?
>
>
>
>>Also how do I set auditd to allow other process(s) running not as root
>>to write to the netlink/kernel ( i.e. set CAP_AUDIT_WRITE)?
>>
>>
>
>You can't. The audit system is designed to be high integrity meaning only
>trusted apps or processes that run as root or started as root but dropped
>privileges keeping CAP_AUDIT_WRITE. The audit event is written to the kernel,
>not auditd (meaning the kernel must be compiled with syscall audit support at
>a minimum). The kernel may decide to give the event to auditd.
>
>
>
>>I could not find any info on this. Also where do I find these trusted app
>>examples?
>>
>>
>
>dbus, nscd, passwd, shadow-utils, pam, ...
>
>
>
>>Is this something I down loa the src of Linux and look for?
>>
>>
>
>No, dbus is an example of a program that keeps CAP_AUDIT_WRITE after starting
>as root but changes uids. passwd is setuid root. pam runs as part of
>applications that stay root.
>
>-Steve
>
>
>
>
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