Hello,
On Thursday, January 08, 2015 03:33:08 PM Burak Gürer wrote:
 On 08-01-2015 15:03, Steve Grubb wrote:
 > On Thursday, January 08, 2015 12:12:14 PM Burak Gürer wrote:
 >> Hi everyone!
 >> 
 >> first of all sorry for my bad english!
 >> 
 >> i could not accomplish to get rid of from auid=4294967295 issue
 >> 
 >> i have implemented that suggestions:
 >> 
 >> 
https://www.redhat.com/archives/linux-audit/2010-June/msg00002.html
 >> 
https://people.redhat.com/sgrubb/audit/audit-faq.txt
 >> 
 >> but not succeed.
 >> is there any other reasons or solutions?
 > 
 > There is a chance that --with-audit or --enable-audit was not used in the
 > configuration of the utilities. I can't say for certain without knowing
 > more about your distribution.
 
 distrubution is:
 
 [root@test /root]# lsb_release -a
 
 LSB Version:
 :core-3.1-amd64:core-3.1-ia32:core-3.1-noarch:graphics-3.1-amd64:graphics-3.
 :1-ia32:graphics-3.1-noarch
 Distributor ID:    RedHatEnterpriseServer
 Description:    Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.2 (Tikanga)
 Release:    5.2
 Codename:    Tikanga 
OK. Then I know that auditing is enabled in everything possible.
 >> by the way suggestions in the links, is it important to
where we put the
 >> suggested confs:
 >> 
 >> e.g. which line to put "audit=1"
 > 
 > That is a kernel boot parameter.
 
 is this correct?:
 
 # grub.conf generated by anaconda
 #
 # Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file
 # NOTICE:  You have a /boot partition.  This means that
 #          all kernel and initrd paths are relative to /boot/, eg.
 #          root (hd0,0)
 #          kernel /vmlinuz-version ro root=/dev/sda2
 #          initrd /initrd-version.img
 #boot=/dev/sda
 default=0
 timeout=5
 splashimage=(hd0,0)/grub/splash.xpm.gz
 hiddenmenu
 title Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server (2.6.18-92.el5)
      root (hd0,0)
      kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.18-92.el5 ro root=LABEL=/ *audit=1* rhgb quiet 
Yes, this is correct, assuming that the '*' was added just for emphasis but is 
absent in the real file. That must be in place for each bootable kernel for it 
to universally work.
      initrd /initrd-2.6.18-92.el5.img
 
 >> or which line to put "session required pam_loginuid.so"
 > 
 > This would go into the pam configuration of system entry points. For
 > example, it would be in /etc/pam.d/login. But it would NOT go into
 > /etc/pam.d/system- auth or /etc/pam.d/su. This should already be
 > configured by your distribution and you shouldn't need to adjust it.
 > 
 >> and further are kernel or audit package versions important?
 > 
 > Yes. But not to the two questions you ask above. More important is whether
 > or not auditing is enabled in the packages by your distribution. The
 > audit facilities from your question has been available almost 10 years.
 > So, I wonder if auditing is enabled.
 
 so how can i check if auditing is enabled? 
For RHEL5, I know its enabled. But based on your questions above, you are 
asking 2 things. Where to put audit=1 and if pam_loginuid is right. For these, 
# cat /proc/cmdline
and
# cat /proc/self/loginuid
would let you check. In the first, make sure audit=1 is there and in the second 
case, the output should be the uid under which you logged into the system.
-Steve