Another item that came up here at Tresys is the ability to do log
monitoring. After our initial parse/search routine, we would like to be
able to check every so often to see if new messages have been generated and
then display the messages if they match our search criteria. How do you
imagine this fitting in to the API? Can we work this in somehow?
Kevin Carr
Tresys Technology
410.340.3092
On Friday 10 March 2006 16:33, Steve Grubb wrote:
> OK. I think the last round of comments was helpful.
Audit Event Parsing Library Specifications
==========================================
Definitions
-----------
An audit event is all records that have the same host, timestamp, and
serial number. Each event on a host has a unique timestamp and serial
number. An event is composed of multiple records which have information
about
different aspects of an audit event. Each record is denoted by a type
which
indicates what fields will follow. Information in the fields are held by a
name/value pair that contains an '=' between them. Each field is separated
from one another by a space or comma.
Ground Rules
------------
All functions that begin with ausearch are related to searching for a
subset
of events based on certain criteria. All functions that begin with auparse
are used to access events, records, and fields sequentially and without
regard to any search options that may be in effect. All functions return 1
on success and 0 on failure unless otherwise noted. Where the return type
is
a char pointer, NULL will indicate failure. The data structures will be
hidden from the external application. Access to fields is a name/value
style.
You access the fields through functions that either return a pointer to an
immutable, zero-terminated array of ASCII characters or integral values.
Every
function (except auparse_init) takes a parameter, au, which is the
internal
state information for the current query.
Name-Value Matching Operators
-----------------------------
The ausearch_ functions will select records in its search results based on
operators used for matching name/value pairs. For fields that are numeric,
the following mathematical operators are allowed: =,!=,>,=>,<,<=. The
field
is converted to a number before matching is done.
For fields that are non-numeric, the operators in use will be:
= The string completely matches
!= The string does not match
~ A substring match is done
regex Regular expression is used
Functions
---------
auparse_state_t - is an opaque data type used for maintaining library
state.
typedef enum { AUSOURCE_LOGS, AUSOURCE_FILE, AUSOURCE_FILE_ARRAY,
AUSOURCE_BUFFER, AUSOURCE_BUFFER_ARRAY } ausource_t;
auparse_state_t *auparse_init(ausource_t source, const void *b) - allow
init
of library. Set data source: logs, file, null terminated array of
filenames,
buffer, null terminated array of addresses. The pointer 'b' is used to set
the file name or pass the buff when those types are given.
typedef enum { AUSEARCH_STOP_EVENT, AUSEARCH_STOP_RECORD,
AUSEARCH_STOP_FIELD } austop_t;
int ausearch_set_param(auparse_state_t *au, const char *field, const char
*op,
const char *value, austop_t where) - set search
options. The field would be the left hand side of the audit name/value
pairs.
The op would be the operator described in the section above telling how to
match. The value would be the right hand side of the audit field
name/value
pairs. The where parameter tells the search library where to place the
internal cursor when a match is found. It could be on first field of first
record, first field of record containing the match, or the field that
matches.
int ausearch_next_event(auparse_state_t *au) - traverse to the next event
that
yields a match based on the given search criteria.
int auparse_next_event(auparse_state_t *au) - traverse to next event. This
allows access to time and serial number.
typedef struct
{
time_t sec; // Event seconds
unsigned int milli; // millisecond of the timestamp
unsigned long serial; // Serial number of the event
const char *host; // Machine's name
} event_t;
event_t auparse_get_timestamp(auparse_state_t *au) - retrieve time stamp
of
current record
time_t auparse_get_time(auparse_state_t *au) - retrieve time in seconds of
current record
time_t auparse_get_milli(auparse_state_t *au) - retrieve milliseconds time
of
current record
unsigned long auparse_get_serial(auparse_state_t *au) - retrieve serial
number
of current record
const char *auparse_get_node(auparse_state_t *au) - retrieve host (node)
name
of current record
int auparse_first_record(auparse_state_t *au) - set iterator to first
record
in current event
int auparse_next_record(auparse_state_t *au) - traverse to next record in
event. This allows access to the event type
int auparse_get_type(auparse_state_t *au) - retrieve type of current
record
int auparse_first_field(auparse_state_t *au) - set field pointer to first
in
current record
int auparse_next_field(auparse_state_t *au) - traverse the fields in a
record
const char *auparse_find_field(auparse_state_t *au, const char *name) -
find a
given field in a event or record. Name is the left hand side of the
name/value
pair. Returns pointer to the value as ascii text.
const char *auparse_find_field_next(auparse_state_t *au) - find the next
occurance of that field in the same record. Returns pointer to the value
as
ascii text.
const char *auparse_get_field_str(auparse_state_t *au) - return current
field
value as a string
int auparse_get_field_int(auparse_state_t *au) - return current field
value
as an int
const char *auparse_interpret_field(auparse_state_t *au) - interpret the
current field
int auparse_destroy(auparse_state_t *au) - free all data structures and
close
file descriptors
Code Example
------------
int main(void)
{
auparse_state_t *au = auparse_init(AUSOURCE_LOGS, NULL);
if (au == NULL)
exit(1);
if (!ausearch_set_param(au, "auid", "=", "500",
AUSEARCH_STOP_EVENT))
exit(1);
while (ausearch_next_event(au)) {
if (auparse_find_field(au, "auid")) {
printf("auid=%s\n", auparse_interpret_field(au));
}
}
auparse_destroy(au);
return 0;
}
--
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