-----Original Message-----
From: linux-audit-bounces(a)redhat.com
[mailto:linux-audit-bounces@redhat.com] On Behalf Of John Dennis
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 12:50 PM
To: Steve Grubb
Cc: Linux Audit
Subject: Re: [PATCH] Add End of Event record
How would a program determine AUDIT_EOE might be present in
the audit "protocol" since there is no versioning of the
"protocol" (using the term protocol loosely here, but in many
respects streaming audit data is a protocol).
John,
I have debated this in my head for a while, especially when I considered
writing my own dispatcher. At a high level, it is starting to sound
like these topics might be appropriate:
1. A (pseudo-)RFC describing the dispatcher "protocol"
2. A rigid, easily parsed record format - AUDIT_EOE might keep it easy
on the reporting subsystem
3. Administrative records are passed, perhaps at dispatchers startup and
at the start of a file when rotated, that documents which version of
auditd, uname -r, output of gnu_get_libc_version(), and the local system
date/time.
The administrative record, when mentioning auditd's version, may even
indicate a "backward compatible to version..." so that 1.2.6 might still
be able to parse 1.2.12, but as of 1.3 the format changed so backwards
compatability is broken.
My goal is this: 3 years from now, an employee is being investigated.
The investigator makes me pull up all the raw records from my network
and analyze them. Now I've interpreted user names, group names,
syscalls, and hostnames during capture (ausearch -i), but if the format
changed through the years, I need to have analysis tools be aware of the
format. This gets back to a previous posting I did on "Offline audit
trail analysis."
Charlie Todd
Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp.
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