auditd on nonexistent files

Davíð Steinn Geirsson dsg at sensa.is
Tue Sep 15 09:25:01 UTC 2015


Hi,

On 09/15/2015 09:15 AM, Steve Grubb wrote:
> On Mon, 14 Sep 2015 16:01:17 +0000
> Davíð Steinn Geirsson <dsg at sensa.is> wrote:
> 
>> Hi all,
>>
>> What is the best practice for using auditd for file integrity
>> monitoring?
>>
>> From the documentation, I have this, which works fine:
>> -a always,exit -F dir=/bin -F perm=wa
>>
>> However, it seems that if I have a rule on a nonexistent directory,
>> auditd will fail to add the rule (I assume because it's adding a watch
>> on an inode or something like that?), but it will also just stop
>> reading audit.rules and not add any subsequent rules.
>>
>> This is bad in an environment where we have to have FIM for critical
>> application files, but where another team may be maintaining some of
>> the apps and therefore might remove some watched directories,
>> especially as their mishaps may impact auditing for other parts of
>> the system.
>>
>>
>> Can something be done to get better behaviour here?
>>
>> I see two ways it could be better
>> 1) (the ideal case) auditd will add rules even for nonexistent
>> directories, and when they are created will add a watch for them. If a
>> directory is removed and another created with the same name, auditd
>> will add a watch on the new directory.
> 
> Which kernel are you using? I want to think this was fixed in kernels
> around 2.6.36 or later. This original problem was that the audit
> watches are based on inotify which needs an inode. If there's no inode,
> you can't place the watch.

The machines I'm working with are RHEL6 with 2.6.32, but I just tried
with a machine with a 3.18 kernel and got the same behaviour.

> 
> 
>> 2) auditd still cannot add watches to nonexistent directories, but a
>> failed rule add from audit.rules will become a warning rather than an
>> error so subsequent watches still get added.
> 
> Check into adding -i or -c near the top of your rules.

Thanks, that helps for a workaround. Not sure how I missed that in the
manpage.


> 
> -Steve
> 
> 
>> I suspect 1) is not possible, but can I get auditd to behave like in
>> 2)?
>>
>> Best regards,
>> Davíð
>>
> 

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