Florian,
Did you get and answer for this?
Regards.
On 10 Jul 2012, at 08:29, Florian Crouzat <gentoo(a)floriancrouzat.net> wrote:
Hi,
This is my first message to the list to please be indulgent, I might be mixing concepts
here between auditd, selinux and pam. Any guidance much appreciated.
For PCI-DSS, in order to be allowed to have a real root shell instead of firing sudo all
the time (and it's lack of glob/completion), I'm trying to have any commands fired
in any kind of root shell logged. (Of course it doesn't protect against malicious root
users but that's off-topic).
So, I've been able to achieve that purpose by using :
$ grep tty /etc/pam.d/{su*,system-auth}
/etc/pam.d/su:session required pam_tty_audit.so enable=root
/etc/pam.d/sudo:session required pam_tty_audit.so open_only enable=root
/etc/pam.d/sudo-i:session required pam_tty_audit.so open_only enable=root
/etc/pam.d/su-l:session required pam_tty_audit.so enable=root
/etc/pam.d/system-auth:session required pam_tty_audit.so disable=* enable=root
Every keystroke are logged in /var/log/audit/audit.log which is great. My only issue is
that I just realized that prompt passwords are also logged, eg MySQL password or
Spacewalk, etc.
I can read them in plain text when doing "aureport --tty -if
/var/log/audit/audit.log and PCI-DSS forbid any kind of storage of passwords, is there a
workaround ? Eg: don't log keystrokes when the prompt is "hidden" (inputting
a password)
I'd like very much to be able to obtain real root shells for ease of work (sudo -i)
my only constraint beeing: log everything but don't store any password.
Thanks,
--
Cheers,
Florian Crouzat
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