On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 07:00:51PM -0500, Paul Moore wrote:
In the process of trying to explain things a bit further (see the
discussion thread in 0/2), I realized that some example code might
speak better than I could. Below is what I was thinking for a fix; I
haven't tested it, so it may blow up badly, but hopefully it makes
things a bit more clear.
One thing of note, I did away with the kstrtol() altogether, when we
are only looking for zero and one it seems easier to just compare the
strings.
diff --git a/kernel/audit.c b/kernel/audit.c
index 1a3e75d9a66c..5dd63f60ef90 100644
--- a/kernel/audit.c
+++ b/kernel/audit.c
@@ -61,6 +61,7 @@
#include <linux/gfp.h>
#include <linux/pid.h>
#include <linux/slab.h>
+#include <linux/string.h>
#include <linux/audit.h>
@@ -86,6 +87,7 @@ static int audit_initialized;
#define AUDIT_OFF 0
#define AUDIT_ON 1
#define AUDIT_LOCKED 2
+#define AUDIT_ARGERR 3 /* indicate a "audit=X" syntax error at boot
*/
u32 audit_enabled = AUDIT_OFF;
bool audit_ever_enabled = !!AUDIT_OFF;
@@ -1581,6 +1583,12 @@ static int __init audit_init(void)
if (audit_initialized == AUDIT_DISABLED)
return 0;
+ /* handle any delayed error reporting from audit_enable() */
+ if (audit_default == AUDIT_ARGERR) {
+ pr_err("invalid 'audit' parameter value, use 0 or
1\n");
+ audit_default = AUDIT_ON;
+ }
+
If you are just going to pr_err() on invalid audit parameter instead of
panic, you don't need AUDIT_ARGERR at all or the delayed error reporting
of it here. You can just use pr_err() in audit_enable() directly.
audit_buffer_cache =
kmem_cache_create("audit_buffer",
sizeof(struct audit_buffer),
0, SLAB_PANIC, NULL);
@@ -1618,19 +1626,23 @@ postcore_initcall(audit_init);
/* Process kernel command-line parameter at boot time. audit=0 or audit=1. */
static int __init audit_enable(char *str)
{
- long val;
+ /* NOTE: we can't reliably send any messages to the console here */
- if (kstrtol(str, 0, &val))
- panic("audit: invalid 'audit' parameter value (%s)\n",
str);
- audit_default = (val ? AUDIT_ON : AUDIT_OFF);
+ if (!strcasecmp(str, "off") || !strcmp(str, "0"))
+ audit_default = AUDIT_OFF;
+ else if (!strcasecmp(str, "on") || !strcmp(str, "1"))
+ audit_default = AUDIT_ON;
+ else
+ audit_default = AUDIT_ARGERR;
Just pr_err() here and set audit_default = AUDIT_ON for the error case.
- if (audit_default == AUDIT_OFF)
+ if (audit_default) {
+ audit_enabled = AUDIT_ON;
+ audit_ever_enabled = AUDIT_ON;
+ } else {
+ audit_enabled = AUDIT_OFF;
+ audit_ever_enabled = AUDIT_OFF;
audit_initialized = AUDIT_DISABLED;
- if (audit_set_enabled(audit_default))
- panic("audit: error setting audit state (%d)\n",
audit_default);
You could leave this here if you did error
reporting/audit_default=AUDIT_ON in audit_enable() directly.
-
- pr_info("%s\n", audit_default ?
- "enabled (after initialization)" : "disabled (until
reboot)");
+ }
return 1;
}
Another idea I had was switching those original panic() calls to
audit_panic(), and then making audit_failure another __setup option,
i.e. audit_failure={silent,printk,panic} corresponding to
AUDIT_FAIL_{SILENT,PRINTK,PANIC}. You could default it to
AUDIT_FAIL_PRINTK as it is today. Users that really cared could boot
with audit_failure=panic. I don't know if that would be overloading
audit_panic() outside of its intended purpose, though.
Greg