1.\" Copyright (c) 2006 Robert N. M. Watson 2.\" All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 6.\" are met: 7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. --- 8 unchanged lines hidden (view full) --- 17.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 18.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 19.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 20.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 21.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 22.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 23.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 24.\" |
25.\" $FreeBSD: head/share/man/man4/audit.4 155392 2006-02-06 18:41:00Z rwatson $ |
26.\" |
27.Dd February 6, 2006 |
28.Os 29.Dt AUDIT 4 30.Sh NAME 31.Nm audit 32.Nd Security Event Audit 33.Sh SYNOPSIS 34.Cd "options AUDIT" 35.Sh DESCRIPTION --- 12 unchanged lines hidden (view full) --- 48Audit support is enabled at boot, if present in the kernel, using an 49.Xr rc.conf 5 50flag. 51The audit daemon, 52.Xr auditd 8 , 53is responsible for configuring the kernel to perform audit, pushing 54configuration data from the various audit configuration files into the 55kernel. |
56.Ss Audit Special Device 57The kernel audit facility provides a special device, 58.Pa /dev/audit , 59which is used by 60.Xr auditd 8 61to monitor for audit events, such as requests to cycle the log, low disk 62space conditions, and requests to terminate auditing. 63This device is not intended for use by applications. 64.Ss Audit Pipe Special Devices 65The kernel audit facility also a clonable special device, 66.Pa /dev/auditpipe , 67which allows appropriately privileged applications to gain direct access to 68the BSM audit stream without accessing audit trail files. 69As audit trail files are owned by the audit daemon until terminated, they 70are an unreliable way for applications to access live audit data; this 71special device inserts a "tee" in the audit event stream. 72This facility is appropriate for use by live monitoring tools, including 73intrusion detection. 74As the device is clonable, more than one instance of the device may be opened 75at a time; each device instance will provide access to all records. 76.Pp 77The audit pipe device provides discreet BSM audit records; if the read buffer 78passed by the application is too small to hold the next record in the 79sequence, it will be dropped. 80Unlike audit data written to the audit trail, the reliability of record 81delivery is not guaranteed. 82In particular, when an audit pipe queue fills, records will be dropped. 83Audit pipe devices are blocking by default, but support non-blocking I/O, 84asynchronous I/O using SIGIO, and support for polled operation via 85.Xr select 2 86and 87.Xr poll 2 . |
88.Sh SEE ALSO 89.Xr auditreduce 1 , 90.Xr praudit 1 , 91.Xr audit 2 , 92.Xr auditctl 2 , 93.Xr auditon 2 , 94.Xr getaudit 2 , 95.Xr getauid 2 , |
96.Xr poll 2 , 97.Xr select 2 , |
98.Xr setaudit 2 , 99.Xr setauid 2 , 100.Xr libbsm 3 , 101.Xr audit.log 5 , 102.Xr audit_class 5 , 103.Xr audit_control 5 , 104.Xr audit_event 5 , 105.Xr audit_user 5 , --- 41 unchanged lines hidden --- |