On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 5:59 PM Casey Schaufler <casey(a)schaufler-ca.com> wrote:
On 8/16/2021 11:57 AM, Paul Moore wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 13, 2021 at 5:47 PM Casey Schaufler <casey(a)schaufler-ca.com>
wrote:
>> On 8/13/2021 1:43 PM, Paul Moore wrote:
...
> Yeah, the thought occurred to me, but we are clearly already in the
> maybe-the-assumptions-are-wrong stage so I'm not going to rely on that
> being 100%. We definitely need to track this down before we start
> making to many more guesses about what is working and what is not.
I've been tracking down where the audit context isn't set where
we'd expect it to be, I've identified 5 cases:
1000 AUDIT_GET - Get Status
1001 AUDIT_SET - Set status enable/disable/auditd
1010 AUDIT_SIGNAL_INFO
1130 AUDIT_SERVICE_START
1131 AUDIT_SEVICE_STOP
These are all events that relate to the audit system itself.
It seems plausible that these really aren't syscalls and hence
shouldn't be expected to have an audit_context. I will create a
patch that treats these as the special cases I believe them to be.
Yes, all but two of these could be considered to be audit subsystem
control messages, but AUDIT_SERVICE_{START,STOP} I think definitely
fall outside the audit subsystem control message category. The
AUDIT_SERVICE_{START,STOP} records are used to indicate when a
service, e.g. NetworkManager, starts and stops; on my fedora test
system they are generated by systemd since it manages service state on
that system; a quick example is below, but I'm sure you've seen plenty
of these already.
% ausearch -m SERVICE_START
time->Wed Aug 18 20:13:00 2021
type=SERVICE_START msg=audit(1629331980.779:1186): pid=1 uid=0 auid=4294967295 s
es=4294967295 subj=system_u:system_r:init_t:s0 msg='unit=NetworkManager-dispatch
er comm="systemd" exe="/usr/lib/systemd/systemd" hostname=? addr=?
terminal=? re
s=success'
However, regardless of if the message is related to controlling the
audit subsystem or not, we do want to be able to associate those
records with other related records, e.g. SYSCALL records. Looking at
the message types you listed above, they are all records that are
triggered by userspace via netlink messages; if you haven't already I
would start poking along that code path to see if something looks
awry.
I just spent a few minutes tracing the code paths up from audit
through netlink and then through the socket layer and I'm not seeing
anything obvious where the path differs from any other syscall;
current->audit_context *should* be valid just like any other syscall.
However, I do have to ask, are you only seeing these audit records
with a current->audit_context equal to NULL during early boot?
--
paul moore
www.paul-moore.com