On Mon, 17 Dec 2007 08:36:39 -0500, "Steve Grubb" <sgrubb(a)redhat.com>
said:
On Monday 17 December 2007 08:21:18 Mathew Brown wrote:
> I was wondering if the Linux Audit Daemon could be used to address the
> issue of Oracle auditing. Has anyone investigated this possibility?
What would you like to know about Oracle?
Hi Steve,
Thanks for your reply. What I was interested in is auditing all
queries and modifications to the database. I'm looking at it from a
compliance perspective (and trying to minimize the power of the sysdba
account). I've looked at alternative solutions such as the Oracle
Vault which enables logging but it's too CPU intensive. I thought
that the Linux audit daemon might provide me with similar
functionality but have the added benefit of not requiring writes
locally (send to remove syslog for example).
> Ideally, I would like to audit all network (listener) as well
as all
> local access (an Oracle DBA running sqlplus directly on the machine).
You mean accepting the connection? I think you can get all accepts that
Oracle
would issue, but I don't know if you will get the remote address in the
logs.
You also cannot tell it that you want accepts of a specific socket.
You might want to spend some time looking at Oracle from strace. That is
about
the view of the world from the Linux Audit System. If you can't find
anything
worth logging from that, it most likely means that you'd want Oracle to
be
patched to send meaningful events to the audit system.
-Steve
--
Mathew Brown
mathewbrown(a)fastmail.fm
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