On Wednesday, July 18, 2018 3:59:24 PM EDT Paul Moore wrote: > On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 3:36 PM Steve Grubb <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Wednesday, July 18, 2018 2:36:11 PM EDT Paul Moore wrote: > > > > Changes in v2: > > > > - The audit_adjtime() function has been modified to only log those > > > > fields that contain values that are actually used, resulting in more > > > > compact records. > > > > - The audit_adjtime() call has been moved to do_adjtimex() in > > > > timekeeping.c > > > > - Added an additional patch (for review) that simplifies the > > > > detection > > > > if the syscall is read-only. > > > > > > Looking at these new records, and trying to guess a bit at the > > > original intent of the feature request, I think we may be going a bit > > > overboard with the information we are logging. I'm thinking all we > > > really need to capture in the audit log is the system time both before > > > and after the change (for the sake of simplicity I suggest using a > > > data format similar to the audit record timestamp). > > > > > > While I created the GH issue for this, I believe the original request > > > came from a Red Hat BZ that Steve created; Steve, what sort of > > > certification requirements (if any?) are there for logging system time > > > changes? > > > > That we record any attempts to change the system time. The problem is > > that > > adjtimex passes a data structure that is opaque to user space. So, we > > can't tell if someone is setting time, adjusting a tolerance, or simply > > retrieving status. > > > > With stime, we can clearly see the time that was sent into the kernel and > > it unconditionally sets time. With settimeofday, it uses a data > > structure that we cannot see, but whatever the contents are we are > > definitely setting time. Same goes for clock_settime. Only in 1 case do > > we actually see what the time is. So, that is not really needed. So, I > > think what we need to know is did the syscall do anything that adjusted > > the system's notion of time? And that's all. > > So presumably my above suggestion of simply recording the system time > both before and after the change would be sufficient, yes?
Well, I think that we need to make it obvious that a time setting has changed as in a y/n answer. Doing a comparison of the time to get a y/n answer is less obvious if you are doing a grep. Also, what time will the event have? I presume that the event will have the new time since we are on the exit filter. So, do we really need to collect that? -Steve -- Linux-audit mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-audit
