Thanks for the quick response. That makes sense.

One other thing, on Redhat 6.4 if the watch dir does not exist, ie automount 
NFS, then auditd will bomb out and not even start.

On Redhat 6.8, it seems to not care and start up anyway (better).  Kernel or 
Auditd?

-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Grubb [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2016 10:38 AM
To: Vaughn, Chad M (US) <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: Audit watches on NFS mounts

On Thursday, October 20, 2016 2:42:07 PM EDT Vaughn, Chad M wrote:
> I noticed a weird behavior. I NFS mount /usr/local on my Redhat machines.
> 
> If I put a watch for a directory in that NFS mount:
> 
> -w /usr/local/mywatchdir/ -p rwxa -F exit!=-ENODATA -F success!=1 -k 
> watch
> 
> On Redhat 6.4, I don't see audit events when trying to remove or 
> change files in that dir. On Redhat 6.8, I do see the audit events 
> when trying to remove or changes files in that dir.
> 
> Any ideas of possible features added to auditd between those releases?  
> I would like to be able to speak to it for security audits.

Auditd is just the collector. The events are generated by the kernel. So, it 
would be a kernel change that may have allowed that. I don't know what was 
changed or which version did it. I do know that in the past it was not possible 
to audit nfs or fuse based file systems.

-Steve

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