On Thursday, June 09, 2016 07:59:43 PM Richard Guy Briggs wrote:
 On 16/06/09, Steve Grubb wrote:
 > On Wednesday, June 08, 2016 10:05:01 PM Deepa Dinamani wrote:
 > > struct timespec is not y2038 safe.
 > > Audit timestamps are recorded in string format into
 > > an audit buffer for a given context.
 > > These mark the entry timestamps for the syscalls.
 > > Use y2038 safe struct timespec64 to represent the times.
 > > The log strings can handle this transition as strings can
 > > hold upto 1024 characters.
 > 
 > Have you tested this with ausearch or any audit utilities? As an aside, a
 > time stamp that is up to 1024 characters long is terribly wasteful
 > considering how many events we get.
 
 Steve,
 
 I don't expect the size of the time stamp text to change since the
 format isn't being changed and I don't expect the date stamp text length
 to change until Y10K, but you never know what will happen in 8
 millenia...  (Who knows, maybe that damn Linux server in my basement
 will still be running then...)
 
 Isn't the maximum message length MAX_AUDIT_MESSAGE_LENGTH (8970 octets)? 
Bytes, yes. But I was thinking that if its going to get big we should consider 
switching from a base 10 representation to base 16. That would give us back a 
few bytes. We discuss this on the linux-audit list rather than the main list.
-Steve