On Wednesday 23 January 2008 5:06:53 pm Linda Knippers wrote: > Eric Paris wrote: > > On Wed, 2008-01-23 at 16:05 -0500, Linda Knippers wrote: > >> This is unrelated to your patch but I think it would be nice if > >> audit_lost represented the number of audit messages lost since the > >> last time the message came out or the last time an audit record > >> came out. Today its a cumulative count since the system was > >> booted. Is it too much overhead to zero it? > > > > Shouldn't be too much overhead, we are already on a slow/unlikely > > path. What's the benefit though? Just don't want to have to do a > > subtraction? > > Well that, plus if the system is up for a long time (which we hope) > and the message is infrequent (which we also hope), then it could > take me a while to find the previous message in order to do the > subtraction. > > > If we are dropping the 'we lost some messages' message 0'ing the > > counter at that time would be a bad idea, certainly not unsolvable, > > but I don't see what it buys us. > > I wouldn't want to lose the message, just make it more useful. And > if we zero it we don't have to worry about it wrapping. As it is > now, its really just the count since the last time it wrapped.
I like Linda's idea of zero'ing the lost message counter once we are able to start sending messages again for all the reasons listed above. I haven't looked at the audit message sending code, but we are only talking about adding an extra conditional in the common case and in the worst case a conditional and an assignment. Granted they are atomic ops, but everyone keeps telling me that atomic ops are pretty quick on almost all of the platforms that Linux supports ... -- paul moore linux security @ hp -- Linux-audit mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-audit
