On Sun, Mar 19, 2017 at 9:46 PM, Steve Grubb <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello Richard and Paul, > > I was going to do a blog write up about booting the system with > audit_backlog_limit=8192 for STIG users and have stumbled on to a mystery. The > kernel initializes the variable to 64 at power on. During boot, if audit == 1, > then it holds events in the hopes that an audit daemon will show up later and > drain all the events. Anything over 64 events should fall off the end and > increment the lost counter and put a notice in syslog. > > However, when booting with audit_backlog_limit=8192, as soon as I log in I run > "auditctl -s" I can see I've lost 73 events. The I run "aureport --start boot" > and I see 644 total events. This is nowhere near the 8192 limit that I asked > for. So, why am I losing events? > > Additionally, I checked the logs and there is absolutely no message in syslog > showing that I've lost events. This is with failure mode set to 1 - which is > default at power on. And this is in spite of the the fact that the source code > seems to show that it should have printk'ed something. > > Any ideas? Can you replicate this finding?
It's funny, I just noticed this for the first time on Friday (the exact same lost count too), although it was a development kernel build with a *heavily* modified audit subsystem so I just assumed I had broken something with the queuing, the lost counter, or both. It's possible I still may have broken something in the v4.10 queue rework, or something broke a long time ago and we are just noticing it now. First off, can you create a GitHub issue for this and include your kernel build (e.g. 'uname -r')? Second, if you are seeing this on a +v4.10 kernel, do you see the same results with a +v4.9 kernel? -- paul moore www.paul-moore.com -- Linux-audit mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-audit
