On 2018-04-27 02:37, Wajih Ul Hassan wrote:
 Thanks for your replies. However, I am now thinking of another
solution.
 Let's say I can capture write() in the userspace by either instrumenting
 the LibC or LD_PRELOAD wrapper and store the string buffer passed to
 write().
 Can I call/generate *some other non-instrusive* syscall which can take that
 string buffer that I stored earlier and that syscall with the buffer will
 be visible in the audit.log? I am not worried about performance hit right
 now. 
Use an AUDIT_USER message with the text and some identifier that links
it with a particular write call?
 On Thu, Apr 26, 2018 at 7:46 PM Casey Schaufler
<casey(a)schaufler-ca.com> wrote:
 > On 4/26/2018 5:08 PM, Sargun Dhillon wrote:
 > > On Thu, Apr 26, 2018 at 4:40 PM, Casey Schaufler
<casey(a)schaufler-ca.com>
 > wrote:
 > >> On 4/26/2018 3:57 PM, Steve Grubb wrote:
 > >>> On Thu, 26 Apr 2018 20:34:57 +0000
 > >>> Wajih Ul Hassan <wajih.lums(a)gmail.com> wrote:
 > >>>
 > >>>> Hi all,
 > >>>>  .....
 > >> You could write a Linux Security Module (LSM) to monitor the
 > >> content of writes. The performance impact would be rather
 > >> amazing.
 > >>
 > > I would recommend using BPF + kprobes + perf_event buffers for this
 > > purpose. There are enough places you can probe to grab these strings
 > > in the kernel, and if you do your filtering in BPF, you can then push
 > > it into kernel space based on filtering. Although, AFAIK, the BPF JITs
 > > don't do vectorization of instructions, but it's still not too bad. If
 > > you put your kprobe on the syscall itself, and probe the userspace
 > > addr, remember you're going to be open to a time-of-use, time-of-check
 > > style attack.
 >
 > That looks like a whole lot of mechanism to perform a simple task. 
- RGB
--
Richard Guy Briggs <rgb(a)redhat.com>
Sr. S/W Engineer, Kernel Security, Base Operating Systems
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