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Message Start:
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Steve,

Hi, we have what I think is a new but undesirable result trying to audit access 
failures on files in a NISPOM audit configuration.
We are not seeing audit events for the access failures if the file has a parent 
directory in the path that blocks access.
Example:
Directory                             Permission
/var                                       755
/var/test                              755
/var/test/bin                     700
/var/test/bin/file             740

If an unprivileged user attempts to change /var/test/bin/file there is no audit 
event recorded, either for the file or the parent directory /var/test/bin.
Our theory is that the failure to open the /var/test/bin directory causes the 
audit path to be broken, or something to the like, please excuse my terminology 
faux pas.
 This is happening on the following configuration:

-          Kernel  - 2.6.18-238.5.1.el5

-          Auditd - 1.7.18-2.el5

We have tried the following auditd rules (among others), no change in result:

-          -w /var/test/bin/file -p rwxa

-          -a exit,always -S open -F path=/var/test/bin/file -F success=0

-          -a exit,always -S open -R dir=/var/test/ -F success=0

And, this is something New, we have been using watches to audit this file for 
years with previous kernel and auditd versions, such as:

-          Kernel -  2.6.9-100.ELsmp

-          Auditd -  1.0.16-4.el4_8.1

On this system we get audit events for access failures using a simple file 
watch.

Are we missing something obvious?
Thanks! For any help,

Tom Call, LMCO
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