Hi,
I should have read the man more carefully, I missed the checkpoint option on 
–ts ☹
I agree it would be better to have one directory per host.
With hosts added dynamically I need to find a way to automate the log rotation 
and the cyclic ausearch
Anyway, I saved my day.
Thanks a lot
Philippe

De : Burn Alting [mailto:[email protected]]
Envoyé : vendredi 28 février 2020 14:03
À : MAUPERTUIS, PHILIPPE; [email protected]
Objet : Re: corrupted checkpoint

Phillippe,

From man ausearch ..
     -ts, --start [start-date] [start-time]
              Search for events with time stamps equal to or after the given 
start time. The format of start time depends on your locale. You can check the 
format of your locale by running  date  '+%x'.   If  the
              date  is  omitted,  today  is  assumed.  If  the  time  is  
omitted,  midnight is assumed. Use 24 hour clock time rather than AM or PM to 
specify time. An example date using the en_US.utf8 locale is
              09/03/2009. An example of time is 18:00:00. The date format 
accepted is influenced by the LC_TIME environmental variable.

              You may also use the word: now, recent, boot, today, yesterday, 
this-week, week-ago, this-month, this-year, or checkpoint. Boot means the time 
of day to the second when the system last booted. Today
              means  starting  at  1  second  after midnight. Recent is 10 
minutes ago. Yesterday is 1 second after midnight the previous day. This-week 
means starting 1 second after midnight on day 0 of the week
              determined by your locale (see localtime). Week-ago means 
starting 1 second after midnight exactly 7 days ago. This-month means 1 second 
after midnight on day 1 of the month. This-year means  the  1
              second after midnight on the first day of the first month.

              checkpoint  means  ausearch  will  use the timestamp found within 
a valid checkpoint file ignoring the recorded inode, device, serial, node and 
event type also found within a checkpoint file. Essen‐
              tially, this is the recovery action should an invocation of 
ausearch with a checkpoint option fail with an exit status of 10, 11 or 12. It 
could be used in a shell script something like:

                   ausearch --checkpoint /etc/audit/auditd_checkpoint.txt -i
                   _au_status=$?
                   if test ${_au_status} eq 10 -o ${_au_status} eq 11 -o 
${_au_status} eq 12
                   then
                     ausearch --checkpoint /etc/audit/auditd_checkpoint.txt 
--start checkpoint -i
                   fi


That said, rather than sending events from multiple hosts to a single combined 
file, I would strongly recommend one maintain multiple files, one per host. The 
most recent change to the ausearch checkpoint code addressed this. So
given a directory structure like say,
  repository/
  repository/year/
  repository/year/month
  repository/year/month/day
  repository/year/month/day/hosta/auditd.log
  repository/year/month/day/hostb/auditd.log
  repository/year/month/day/hostc/auditd.log
  ...
  repository/year/month/day/hostN/auditd.log

one could orchestrate a script that run's multiple ausearch commands along the 
lines of
ausearch -if repository/year/month/day/hosta/auditd.log --checkpoint 
.../hosta.chkpt ...
ausearch -if repository/year/month/day/hostb/auditd.log --checkpoint 
.../hostb.chkpt ...

etc


On Fri, 2020-02-28 at 10:46 +0000, MAUPERTUIS, PHILIPPE wrote:
Hi
I set a cron job script to perform ausearch every 5 minutes  on a central log 
server.
The logs from various hosts are received together in the same file
The logs are rotated on a daily basis
Everything ran fine for several days, then suddently I got :
Corrupted checkpoint file. Inode match, but newer complete event 
(1582684501.003:48035) found before loaded checkpoint 1582684346.999:48034
The events are :
checkpoint
audit.log.3: node=xxxxxxxx type=USER_END msg=audit(1582684346.999:48034): 
pid=15666 uid=0 auid=0
newer event
audit.log.2: node= xxxxxxxx type=USER_ACCT msg=audit(1582684501.003:48035): 
pid=16000
I  guess the problem is due to the log rotation since the two messages are 
coming from the same host.
I have a few  questions
When it happens how can I restart the process ?
Is there a way to restart ausearch from the newer event ?
How could I extract the events between the checkpoint and the newer event ?
The checkpoint file contains :
dev=0xFD03
inode=1048581
output=xxxxxxxx 1582770601.342:380885 0x456

What is this : 0x456 ?
How can I find the value for a given event ?

Philippe


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