I have been investigating using libauparse in my austream replacement
audit daemon to do some inline data enhancement[1]. austream is
essentially a very thin wrapper which pulls audit records out of the
kernel, wraps them in a UDP syslog packet and sends them to the network.
It is very simple and very fast.
To measure the overhead of libauparse on austream I initialised auparse
as AUSOURCE_FEED, fed each received record into it, and spat them out
unmodified on receiving the AUPARSE_CB_EVENT_READY event. This added
more than an order of magnitude to the time austream spends in
userspace. A brief look at this overhead shows that about 40% is spent
in malloc()/free(), and 25% is spent in strlen, strdup, memcpy, memmove
and friends. I suspect that very substantial gains could be made in the
performance of libauparse by reworking the way it uses memory, and
passing the length of strings around with the strings. Unfortunately, I
suspect this would amount to a substantial rewrite.
Is this something anybody else is interested in? I guess performance
isn't so important if you're just scanning log files in non-real time.
Matt
[1] What I'd really like is a well-defined binary format from the kernel.
--
Matthew Booth, RHCA, RHCSS
Red Hat, Global Professional Services
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