On Mon, Nov 26, 2018 at 8:48 AM Paul Moore <paul(a)paul-moore.com> wrote:
 On Fri, Nov 23, 2018 at 6:47 PM Ranran <ranshalit(a)gmail.com> wrote:
 > Hello,
 >
 > Is it possible to log all messages from within kernel, (without any
 > userspace application and daemon) ?
 If you are not running an audit daemon then the audit records will be
 written to kernel's ring buffer (look for them in dmesg).  This is not
 really considered ideal (e.g. one drawback is that the output is rate
 limited), but it can be attractive for small systems with a limited
 number of audit events; last I checked this is the approach used by
 Android. 
Not since the official merge into mainline. I wrote a libaudit port
and Android's
logd system uses it. It pulls them up from audit into userspace, does some stuff
and send them out to log cat and back down to dmesg (I have no idea why).
It also does things like make sure any denials seen are tracked by a
bug and outputs
the bug information in the log.
If you have the AOSP tree checked out, you can see it:
system/core/logd/LogAudit.cpp
 If you want to configure the audit subsystem beyond the "audit=1/0" on
 the kernel command line, or whatever systemd is doing these days, you
 will need to use auditctl (or a similar tool).  Unfortunately the
 in-kernel audit subsystem does a number of really awful things when it
 comes to the netlink interface so that generic netlink tools can not
 be used to configure the audit subsystem, you must use an audit
 specific tool.
 --
 paul moore
 
www.paul-moore.com
 --
 Linux-audit mailing list
 Linux-audit(a)redhat.com
 
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-audit