freebsd-dev/sys/security/audit/audit_pipe.c

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/*-
* Copyright (c) 2006 Robert N. M. Watson
* All rights reserved.
*
* This software was developed by Robert Watson for the TrustedBSD Project.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
* ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
* FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
* DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
* OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
* HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
* LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
* OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
* SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <sys/param.h>
#include <sys/condvar.h>
#include <sys/conf.h>
#include <sys/eventhandler.h>
#include <sys/filio.h>
#include <sys/kernel.h>
#include <sys/lock.h>
#include <sys/malloc.h>
#include <sys/mutex.h>
#include <sys/poll.h>
#include <sys/proc.h>
#include <sys/queue.h>
#include <sys/selinfo.h>
#include <sys/sigio.h>
#include <sys/signal.h>
#include <sys/signalvar.h>
#include <sys/systm.h>
#include <sys/uio.h>
#include <security/audit/audit.h>
#include <security/audit/audit_ioctl.h>
#include <security/audit/audit_private.h>
/*
* Implementation of a clonable special device providing a live stream of BSM
* audit data. This is a "tee" of the data going to the file. It provides
* unreliable but timely access to audit events. Consumers of this interface
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
* should be very careful to avoid introducing event cycles. Consumers may
* express interest via a set of preselection ioctls.
*/
/*
* Memory types.
*/
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_AUDIT_PIPE, "audit_pipe", "Audit pipes");
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_AUDIT_PIPE_ENTRY, "audit_pipeent",
"Audit pipe entries and buffers");
static MALLOC_DEFINE(M_AUDIT_PIPE_PRESELECT, "audit_pipe_presel",
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
"Audit pipe preselection structure");
/*
* Audit pipe buffer parameters.
*/
#define AUDIT_PIPE_QLIMIT_DEFAULT (128)
#define AUDIT_PIPE_QLIMIT_MIN (0)
#define AUDIT_PIPE_QLIMIT_MAX (1024)
/*
* Description of an entry in an audit_pipe.
*/
struct audit_pipe_entry {
void *ape_record;
u_int ape_record_len;
TAILQ_ENTRY(audit_pipe_entry) ape_queue;
};
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
/*
* Audit pipes allow processes to express "interest" in the set of records
* that are delivered via the pipe. They do this in a similar manner to the
* mechanism for audit trail configuration, by expressing two global masks,
* and optionally expressing per-auid masks. The following data structure is
* the per-auid mask description. The global state is stored in the audit
* pipe data structure.
*
* We may want to consider a more space/time-efficient data structure once
* usage patterns for per-auid specifications are clear.
*/
struct audit_pipe_preselect {
au_id_t app_auid;
au_mask_t app_mask;
TAILQ_ENTRY(audit_pipe_preselect) app_list;
};
/*
* Description of an individual audit_pipe. Consists largely of a bounded
* length queue.
*/
#define AUDIT_PIPE_ASYNC 0x00000001
#define AUDIT_PIPE_NBIO 0x00000002
struct audit_pipe {
int ap_open; /* Device open? */
u_int ap_flags;
struct selinfo ap_selinfo;
struct sigio *ap_sigio;
u_int ap_qlen;
u_int ap_qlimit;
u_int64_t ap_inserts; /* Records added. */
u_int64_t ap_reads; /* Records read. */
u_int64_t ap_drops; /* Records dropped. */
u_int64_t ap_truncates; /* Records too long. */
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
/*
* Fields relating to pipe interest: global masks for unmatched
* processes (attributable, non-attributable), and a list of specific
* interest specifications by auid.
*/
int ap_preselect_mode;
au_mask_t ap_preselect_flags;
au_mask_t ap_preselect_naflags;
TAILQ_HEAD(, audit_pipe_preselect) ap_preselect_list;
/*
* Current pending record list.
*/
TAILQ_HEAD(, audit_pipe_entry) ap_queue;
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
/*
* Global pipe list.
*/
TAILQ_ENTRY(audit_pipe) ap_list;
};
/*
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
* Global list of audit pipes, mutex to protect it and the pipes. Finer
* grained locking may be desirable at some point.
*/
static TAILQ_HEAD(, audit_pipe) audit_pipe_list;
static struct mtx audit_pipe_mtx;
/*
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
* This CV is used to wakeup on an audit record write. Eventually, it might
* be per-pipe to avoid unnecessary wakeups when several pipes with different
* preselection masks are present.
*/
static struct cv audit_pipe_cv;
/*
* Cloning related variables and constants.
*/
#define AUDIT_PIPE_NAME "auditpipe"
static eventhandler_tag audit_pipe_eh_tag;
static struct clonedevs *audit_pipe_clones;
/*
* Special device methods and definition.
*/
static d_open_t audit_pipe_open;
static d_close_t audit_pipe_close;
static d_read_t audit_pipe_read;
static d_ioctl_t audit_pipe_ioctl;
static d_poll_t audit_pipe_poll;
static d_kqfilter_t audit_pipe_kqfilter;
static struct cdevsw audit_pipe_cdevsw = {
.d_version = D_VERSION,
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
.d_flags = D_PSEUDO | D_NEEDGIANT,
.d_open = audit_pipe_open,
.d_close = audit_pipe_close,
.d_read = audit_pipe_read,
.d_ioctl = audit_pipe_ioctl,
.d_poll = audit_pipe_poll,
.d_kqfilter = audit_pipe_kqfilter,
.d_name = AUDIT_PIPE_NAME,
};
static int audit_pipe_kqread(struct knote *note, long hint);
static void audit_pipe_kqdetach(struct knote *note);
static struct filterops audit_pipe_read_filterops = {
.f_isfd = 1,
.f_attach = NULL,
.f_detach = audit_pipe_kqdetach,
.f_event = audit_pipe_kqread,
};
/*
* Some global statistics on audit pipes.
*/
static int audit_pipe_count; /* Current number of pipes. */
static u_int64_t audit_pipe_ever; /* Pipes ever allocated. */
static u_int64_t audit_pipe_records; /* Records seen. */
static u_int64_t audit_pipe_drops; /* Global record drop count. */
/*
* Free an audit pipe entry.
*/
static void
audit_pipe_entry_free(struct audit_pipe_entry *ape)
{
free(ape->ape_record, M_AUDIT_PIPE_ENTRY);
free(ape, M_AUDIT_PIPE_ENTRY);
}
/*
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
* Find an audit pipe preselection specification for an auid, if any.
*/
static struct audit_pipe_preselect *
audit_pipe_preselect_find(struct audit_pipe *ap, au_id_t auid)
{
struct audit_pipe_preselect *app;
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
TAILQ_FOREACH(app, &ap->ap_preselect_list, app_list) {
if (app->app_auid == auid)
return (app);
}
return (NULL);
}
/*
* Query the per-pipe mask for a specific auid.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_preselect_get(struct audit_pipe *ap, au_id_t auid,
au_mask_t *maskp)
{
struct audit_pipe_preselect *app;
int error;
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
app = audit_pipe_preselect_find(ap, auid);
if (app != NULL) {
*maskp = app->app_mask;
error = 0;
} else
error = ENOENT;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (error);
}
/*
* Set the per-pipe mask for a specific auid. Add a new entry if needed;
* otherwise, update the current entry.
*/
static void
audit_pipe_preselect_set(struct audit_pipe *ap, au_id_t auid, au_mask_t mask)
{
struct audit_pipe_preselect *app, *app_new;
/*
* Pessimistically assume that the auid doesn't already have a mask
* set, and allocate. We will free it if it is unneeded.
*/
app_new = malloc(sizeof(*app_new), M_AUDIT_PIPE_PRESELECT, M_WAITOK);
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
app = audit_pipe_preselect_find(ap, auid);
if (app == NULL) {
app = app_new;
app_new = NULL;
app->app_auid = auid;
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&ap->ap_preselect_list, app, app_list);
}
app->app_mask = mask;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
if (app_new != NULL)
free(app_new, M_AUDIT_PIPE_PRESELECT);
}
/*
* Delete a per-auid mask on an audit pipe.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_preselect_delete(struct audit_pipe *ap, au_id_t auid)
{
struct audit_pipe_preselect *app;
int error;
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
app = audit_pipe_preselect_find(ap, auid);
if (app != NULL) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&ap->ap_preselect_list, app, app_list);
error = 0;
} else
error = ENOENT;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
if (app != NULL)
free(app, M_AUDIT_PIPE_PRESELECT);
return (error);
}
/*
* Delete all per-auid masks on an audit pipe.
*/
static void
audit_pipe_preselect_flush_locked(struct audit_pipe *ap)
{
struct audit_pipe_preselect *app;
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
while ((app = TAILQ_FIRST(&ap->ap_preselect_list)) != NULL) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&ap->ap_preselect_list, app, app_list);
free(app, M_AUDIT_PIPE_PRESELECT);
}
}
static void
audit_pipe_preselect_flush(struct audit_pipe *ap)
{
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
audit_pipe_preselect_flush_locked(ap);
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
}
/*-
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
* Determine whether a specific audit pipe matches a record with these
* properties. Algorithm is as follows:
*
* - If the pipe is configured to track the default trail configuration, then
* use the results of global preselection matching.
* - If not, search for a specifically configured auid entry matching the
* event. If an entry is found, use that.
* - Otherwise, use the default flags or naflags configured for the pipe.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_preselect_check(struct audit_pipe *ap, au_id_t auid,
au_event_t event, au_class_t class, int sorf, int trail_preselect)
{
struct audit_pipe_preselect *app;
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
switch (ap->ap_preselect_mode) {
case AUDITPIPE_PRESELECT_MODE_TRAIL:
return (trail_preselect);
case AUDITPIPE_PRESELECT_MODE_LOCAL:
app = audit_pipe_preselect_find(ap, auid);
if (app == NULL) {
if (auid == AU_DEFAUDITID)
return (au_preselect(event, class,
&ap->ap_preselect_naflags, sorf));
else
return (au_preselect(event, class,
&ap->ap_preselect_flags, sorf));
} else
return (au_preselect(event, class, &app->app_mask,
sorf));
default:
panic("audit_pipe_preselect_check: mode %d",
ap->ap_preselect_mode);
}
return (0);
}
/*
* Determine whether there exists a pipe interested in a record with specific
* properties.
*/
int
audit_pipe_preselect(au_id_t auid, au_event_t event, au_class_t class,
int sorf, int trail_preselect)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
TAILQ_FOREACH(ap, &audit_pipe_list, ap_list) {
if (audit_pipe_preselect_check(ap, auid, event, class, sorf,
trail_preselect)) {
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (1);
}
}
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (0);
}
/*
* Append individual record to a queue -- allocate queue-local buffer, and
* add to the queue. We try to drop from the head of the queue so that more
* recent events take precedence over older ones, but if allocation fails we
* do drop the new event.
*/
static void
audit_pipe_append(struct audit_pipe *ap, void *record, u_int record_len)
{
struct audit_pipe_entry *ape, *ape_remove;
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
ape = malloc(sizeof(*ape), M_AUDIT_PIPE_ENTRY, M_NOWAIT | M_ZERO);
if (ape == NULL) {
ap->ap_drops++;
audit_pipe_drops++;
return;
}
ape->ape_record = malloc(record_len, M_AUDIT_PIPE_ENTRY, M_NOWAIT);
if (ape->ape_record == NULL) {
free(ape, M_AUDIT_PIPE_ENTRY);
ap->ap_drops++;
audit_pipe_drops++;
return;
}
bcopy(record, ape->ape_record, record_len);
ape->ape_record_len = record_len;
if (ap->ap_qlen >= ap->ap_qlimit) {
ape_remove = TAILQ_FIRST(&ap->ap_queue);
TAILQ_REMOVE(&ap->ap_queue, ape_remove, ape_queue);
audit_pipe_entry_free(ape_remove);
ap->ap_qlen--;
ap->ap_drops++;
audit_pipe_drops++;
}
TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&ap->ap_queue, ape, ape_queue);
ap->ap_inserts++;
ap->ap_qlen++;
selwakeuppri(&ap->ap_selinfo, PSOCK);
KNOTE_LOCKED(&ap->ap_selinfo.si_note, 0);
if (ap->ap_flags & AUDIT_PIPE_ASYNC)
pgsigio(&ap->ap_sigio, SIGIO, 0);
}
/*
* audit_pipe_submit(): audit_worker submits audit records via this
* interface, which arranges for them to be delivered to pipe queues.
*/
void
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
audit_pipe_submit(au_id_t auid, au_event_t event, au_class_t class, int sorf,
int trail_select, void *record, u_int record_len)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
/*
* Lockless read to avoid mutex overhead if pipes are not in use.
*/
if (TAILQ_FIRST(&audit_pipe_list) == NULL)
return;
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
TAILQ_FOREACH(ap, &audit_pipe_list, ap_list) {
if (audit_pipe_preselect_check(ap, auid, event, class, sorf,
trail_select))
audit_pipe_append(ap, record, record_len);
}
audit_pipe_records++;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
cv_broadcastpri(&audit_pipe_cv, PSOCK);
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
}
/*
* audit_pipe_submit_user(): the same as audit_pipe_submit(), except that
* since we don't currently have selection information available, it is
* delivered to the pipe unconditionally.
*
* XXXRW: This is a bug. The BSM check routine for submitting a user record
* should parse that information and return it.
*/
void
audit_pipe_submit_user(void *record, u_int record_len)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
/*
* Lockless read to avoid mutex overhead if pipes are not in use.
*/
if (TAILQ_FIRST(&audit_pipe_list) == NULL)
return;
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
TAILQ_FOREACH(ap, &audit_pipe_list, ap_list)
audit_pipe_append(ap, record, record_len);
audit_pipe_records++;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
cv_broadcastpri(&audit_pipe_cv, PSOCK);
}
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
/*
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
* Pop the next record off of an audit pipe.
*/
static struct audit_pipe_entry *
audit_pipe_pop(struct audit_pipe *ap)
{
struct audit_pipe_entry *ape;
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
ape = TAILQ_FIRST(&ap->ap_queue);
KASSERT((ape == NULL && ap->ap_qlen == 0) ||
(ape != NULL && ap->ap_qlen != 0), ("audit_pipe_pop: qlen"));
if (ape == NULL)
return (NULL);
TAILQ_REMOVE(&ap->ap_queue, ape, ape_queue);
ap->ap_qlen--;
return (ape);
}
/*
* Allocate a new audit pipe. Connects the pipe, on success, to the global
* list and updates statistics.
*/
static struct audit_pipe *
audit_pipe_alloc(void)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
ap = malloc(sizeof(*ap), M_AUDIT_PIPE, M_NOWAIT | M_ZERO);
if (ap == NULL)
return (NULL);
ap->ap_qlimit = AUDIT_PIPE_QLIMIT_DEFAULT;
TAILQ_INIT(&ap->ap_queue);
knlist_init(&ap->ap_selinfo.si_note, &audit_pipe_mtx, NULL, NULL,
NULL);
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
/*
* Default flags, naflags, and auid-specific preselection settings to
* 0. Initialize the mode to the global trail so that if praudit(1)
* is run on /dev/auditpipe, it sees events associated with the
* default trail. Pipe-aware application can clear the flag, set
* custom masks, and flush the pipe as needed.
*/
bzero(&ap->ap_preselect_flags, sizeof(ap->ap_preselect_flags));
bzero(&ap->ap_preselect_naflags, sizeof(ap->ap_preselect_naflags));
TAILQ_INIT(&ap->ap_preselect_list);
ap->ap_preselect_mode = AUDITPIPE_PRESELECT_MODE_TRAIL;
/*
* Add to global list and update global statistics.
*/
TAILQ_INSERT_HEAD(&audit_pipe_list, ap, ap_list);
audit_pipe_count++;
audit_pipe_ever++;
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
return (ap);
}
/*
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
* Flush all records currently present in an audit pipe; assume mutex is held.
*/
static void
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
audit_pipe_flush(struct audit_pipe *ap)
{
struct audit_pipe_entry *ape;
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
while ((ape = TAILQ_FIRST(&ap->ap_queue)) != NULL) {
TAILQ_REMOVE(&ap->ap_queue, ape, ape_queue);
audit_pipe_entry_free(ape);
ap->ap_qlen--;
}
KASSERT(ap->ap_qlen == 0, ("audit_pipe_free: ap_qlen"));
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
}
/*
* Free an audit pipe; this means freeing all preselection state and all
* records in the pipe. Assumes mutex is held to prevent any new records
* from being inserted during the free, and that the audit pipe is still on
* the global list.
*/
static void
audit_pipe_free(struct audit_pipe *ap)
{
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
audit_pipe_preselect_flush_locked(ap);
audit_pipe_flush(ap);
knlist_destroy(&ap->ap_selinfo.si_note);
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
TAILQ_REMOVE(&audit_pipe_list, ap, ap_list);
free(ap, M_AUDIT_PIPE);
audit_pipe_count--;
}
/*
* Audit pipe clone routine -- provide specific requested audit pipe, or a
* fresh one if a specific one is not requested.
*/
static void
audit_pipe_clone(void *arg, struct ucred *cred, char *name, int namelen,
struct cdev **dev)
{
int i, u;
if (*dev != NULL)
return;
if (strcmp(name, AUDIT_PIPE_NAME) == 0)
u = -1;
else if (dev_stdclone(name, NULL, AUDIT_PIPE_NAME, &u) != 1)
return;
i = clone_create(&audit_pipe_clones, &audit_pipe_cdevsw, &u, dev, 0);
if (i) {
*dev = make_dev(&audit_pipe_cdevsw, unit2minor(u), UID_ROOT,
GID_WHEEL, 0600, "%s%d", AUDIT_PIPE_NAME, u);
if (*dev != NULL) {
dev_ref(*dev);
(*dev)->si_flags |= SI_CHEAPCLONE;
}
}
}
/*
* Audit pipe open method. Explicit privilege check isn't used as this
* allows file permissions on the special device to be used to grant audit
* review access. Those file permissions should be managed carefully.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_open(struct cdev *dev, int oflags, int devtype, struct thread *td)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
ap = dev->si_drv1;
if (ap == NULL) {
ap = audit_pipe_alloc();
if (ap == NULL) {
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (ENOMEM);
}
dev->si_drv1 = ap;
} else {
KASSERT(ap->ap_open, ("audit_pipe_open: ap && !ap_open"));
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (EBUSY);
}
ap->ap_open = 1;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
fsetown(td->td_proc->p_pid, &ap->ap_sigio);
return (0);
}
/*
* Close audit pipe, tear down all records, etc.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_close(struct cdev *dev, int fflag, int devtype, struct thread *td)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
ap = dev->si_drv1;
KASSERT(ap != NULL, ("audit_pipe_close: ap == NULL"));
KASSERT(ap->ap_open, ("audit_pipe_close: !ap_open"));
funsetown(&ap->ap_sigio);
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
ap->ap_open = 0;
audit_pipe_free(ap);
dev->si_drv1 = NULL;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (0);
}
/*
* Audit pipe ioctl() routine. Handle file descriptor and audit pipe layer
* commands.
*
* Would be desirable to support filtering, although perhaps something simple
* like an event mask, as opposed to something complicated like BPF.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_ioctl(struct cdev *dev, u_long cmd, caddr_t data, int flag,
struct thread *td)
{
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
struct auditpipe_ioctl_preselect *aip;
struct audit_pipe *ap;
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
au_mask_t *maskp;
int error, mode;
au_id_t auid;
ap = dev->si_drv1;
KASSERT(ap != NULL, ("audit_pipe_ioctl: ap == NULL"));
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
/*
* Audit pipe ioctls: first come standard device node ioctls, then
* manipulation of pipe settings, and finally, statistics query
* ioctls.
*/
switch (cmd) {
case FIONBIO:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
if (*(int *)data)
ap->ap_flags |= AUDIT_PIPE_NBIO;
else
ap->ap_flags &= ~AUDIT_PIPE_NBIO;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case FIONREAD:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
if (TAILQ_FIRST(&ap->ap_queue) != NULL)
*(int *)data =
TAILQ_FIRST(&ap->ap_queue)->ape_record_len;
else
*(int *)data = 0;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case FIOASYNC:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
if (*(int *)data)
ap->ap_flags |= AUDIT_PIPE_ASYNC;
else
ap->ap_flags &= ~AUDIT_PIPE_ASYNC;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case FIOSETOWN:
error = fsetown(*(int *)data, &ap->ap_sigio);
break;
case FIOGETOWN:
*(int *)data = fgetown(&ap->ap_sigio);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_QLEN:
*(u_int *)data = ap->ap_qlen;
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_QLIMIT:
*(u_int *)data = ap->ap_qlimit;
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_SET_QLIMIT:
/* Lockless integer write. */
if (*(u_int *)data >= AUDIT_PIPE_QLIMIT_MIN ||
*(u_int *)data <= AUDIT_PIPE_QLIMIT_MAX) {
ap->ap_qlimit = *(u_int *)data;
error = 0;
} else
error = EINVAL;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_QLIMIT_MIN:
*(u_int *)data = AUDIT_PIPE_QLIMIT_MIN;
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_QLIMIT_MAX:
*(u_int *)data = AUDIT_PIPE_QLIMIT_MAX;
error = 0;
break;
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
case AUDITPIPE_GET_PRESELECT_FLAGS:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
maskp = (au_mask_t *)data;
*maskp = ap->ap_preselect_flags;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_SET_PRESELECT_FLAGS:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
maskp = (au_mask_t *)data;
ap->ap_preselect_flags = *maskp;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_PRESELECT_NAFLAGS:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
maskp = (au_mask_t *)data;
*maskp = ap->ap_preselect_naflags;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_SET_PRESELECT_NAFLAGS:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
maskp = (au_mask_t *)data;
ap->ap_preselect_naflags = *maskp;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_PRESELECT_AUID:
aip = (struct auditpipe_ioctl_preselect *)data;
error = audit_pipe_preselect_get(ap, aip->aip_auid,
&aip->aip_mask);
break;
case AUDITPIPE_SET_PRESELECT_AUID:
aip = (struct auditpipe_ioctl_preselect *)data;
audit_pipe_preselect_set(ap, aip->aip_auid, aip->aip_mask);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_DELETE_PRESELECT_AUID:
auid = *(au_id_t *)data;
error = audit_pipe_preselect_delete(ap, auid);
break;
case AUDITPIPE_FLUSH_PRESELECT_AUID:
audit_pipe_preselect_flush(ap);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_PRESELECT_MODE:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
*(int *)data = ap->ap_preselect_mode;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_SET_PRESELECT_MODE:
mode = *(int *)data;
switch (mode) {
case AUDITPIPE_PRESELECT_MODE_TRAIL:
case AUDITPIPE_PRESELECT_MODE_LOCAL:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
ap->ap_preselect_mode = mode;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
default:
error = EINVAL;
}
break;
case AUDITPIPE_FLUSH:
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
audit_pipe_flush(ap);
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_MAXAUDITDATA:
*(u_int *)data = MAXAUDITDATA;
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_INSERTS:
*(u_int *)data = ap->ap_inserts;
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_READS:
*(u_int *)data = ap->ap_reads;
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_DROPS:
*(u_int *)data = ap->ap_drops;
error = 0;
break;
case AUDITPIPE_GET_TRUNCATES:
*(u_int *)data = ap->ap_truncates;
error = 0;
break;
default:
error = ENOTTY;
}
return (error);
}
/*
* Audit pipe read. Pull one record off the queue and copy to user space.
* On error, the record is dropped.
Introduce support for per-audit pipe preselection independent from the global audit trail configuration. This allows applications consuming audit trails to specify parameters for which audit records are of interest, including selecting records not required by the global trail. Allowing application interest specification without changing the global configuration allows intrusion detection systems to run without interfering with global auditing or each other (if multiple are present). To implement this: - Kernel audit records now carry a flag to indicate whether they have been selected by the global trail or by the audit pipe subsystem, set during record commit, so that this information is available after BSM conversion when delivering the BSM to the trail and audit pipes in the audit worker thread asynchronously. Preselection by either record target will cause the record to be kept. - Similar changes to preselection when the audit record is created when the system call is entering: consult both the global trail and pipes. - au_preselect() now accepts the class in order to avoid repeatedly looking up the mask for each preselection test. - Define a series of ioctls that allow applications to specify whether they want to track the global trail, or program their own preselection parameters: they may specify their own flags and naflags masks, similar to the global masks of the same name, as well as a set of per-auid masks. They also set a per-pipe mode specifying whether they track the global trail, or user their own -- the door is left open for future additional modes. A new ioctl is defined to allow a user process to flush the current audit pipe queue, which can be used after reprogramming pre-selection to make sure that only records of interest are received in future reads. - Audit pipe data structures are extended to hold the additional fields necessary to support preselection. By default, audit pipes track the global trail, so "praudit /dev/auditpipe" will track the global audit trail even though praudit doesn't program the audit pipe selection model. - Comment about the complexities of potentially adding partial read support to audit pipes. By using a set of ioctls, applications can select which records are of interest, and toggle the preselection mode. Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
2006-06-05 14:48:17 +00:00
*
* Providing more sophisticated behavior, such as partial reads, is tricky
* due to the potential for parallel I/O. If partial read support is
* required, it will require a per-pipe "current record being read" along
* with an offset into that trecord which has already been read. Threads
* performing partial reads will need to allocate per-thread copies of the
* data so that if another thread completes the read of the record, it can be
* freed without adding reference count logic. If this is added, a flag to
* indicate that only atomic record reads are desired would be useful, as if
* different threads are all waiting for records on the pipe, they will want
* independent record reads, which is currently the behavior.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_read(struct cdev *dev, struct uio *uio, int flag)
{
struct audit_pipe_entry *ape;
struct audit_pipe *ap;
int error;
ap = dev->si_drv1;
KASSERT(ap != NULL, ("audit_pipe_read: ap == NULL"));
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
do {
/*
* Wait for a record that fits into the read buffer, dropping
* records that would be truncated if actually passed to the
* process. This helps maintain the discreet record read
* interface.
*/
while ((ape = audit_pipe_pop(ap)) == NULL) {
if (ap->ap_flags & AUDIT_PIPE_NBIO) {
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (EAGAIN);
}
error = cv_wait_sig(&audit_pipe_cv, &audit_pipe_mtx);
if (error) {
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (error);
}
}
if (ape->ape_record_len <= uio->uio_resid)
break;
audit_pipe_entry_free(ape);
ap->ap_truncates++;
} while (1);
ap->ap_reads++;
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
/*
* Now read record to user space memory. Even if the read is short,
* we abandon the remainder of the record, supporting only discreet
* record reads.
*/
error = uiomove(ape->ape_record, ape->ape_record_len, uio);
audit_pipe_entry_free(ape);
return (error);
}
/*
* Audit pipe poll.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_poll(struct cdev *dev, int events, struct thread *td)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
int revents;
revents = 0;
ap = dev->si_drv1;
KASSERT(ap != NULL, ("audit_pipe_poll: ap == NULL"));
if (events & (POLLIN | POLLRDNORM)) {
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
if (TAILQ_FIRST(&ap->ap_queue) != NULL)
revents |= events & (POLLIN | POLLRDNORM);
else
selrecord(td, &ap->ap_selinfo);
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
}
return (revents);
}
/*
* Audit pipe kqfilter.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_kqfilter(struct cdev *dev, struct knote *kn)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
ap = dev->si_drv1;
KASSERT(ap != NULL, ("audit_pipe_kqfilter: ap == NULL"));
if (kn->kn_filter != EVFILT_READ)
return (EINVAL);
kn->kn_fop = &audit_pipe_read_filterops;
kn->kn_hook = ap;
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
knlist_add(&ap->ap_selinfo.si_note, kn, 1);
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
return (0);
}
/*
* Return true if there are records available for reading on the pipe.
*/
static int
audit_pipe_kqread(struct knote *kn, long hint)
{
struct audit_pipe_entry *ape;
struct audit_pipe *ap;
mtx_assert(&audit_pipe_mtx, MA_OWNED);
ap = (struct audit_pipe *)kn->kn_hook;
KASSERT(ap != NULL, ("audit_pipe_kqread: ap == NULL"));
if (ap->ap_qlen != 0) {
ape = TAILQ_FIRST(&ap->ap_queue);
KASSERT(ape != NULL, ("audit_pipe_kqread: ape == NULL"));
kn->kn_data = ape->ape_record_len;
return (1);
} else {
kn->kn_data = 0;
return (0);
}
}
/*
* Detach kqueue state from audit pipe.
*/
static void
audit_pipe_kqdetach(struct knote *kn)
{
struct audit_pipe *ap;
ap = (struct audit_pipe *)kn->kn_hook;
KASSERT(ap != NULL, ("audit_pipe_kqdetach: ap == NULL"));
mtx_lock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
knlist_remove(&ap->ap_selinfo.si_note, kn, 1);
mtx_unlock(&audit_pipe_mtx);
}
/*
* Initialize the audit pipe system.
*/
static void
audit_pipe_init(void *unused)
{
TAILQ_INIT(&audit_pipe_list);
mtx_init(&audit_pipe_mtx, "audit_pipe_mtx", NULL, MTX_DEF);
cv_init(&audit_pipe_cv, "audit_pipe_cv");
clone_setup(&audit_pipe_clones);
audit_pipe_eh_tag = EVENTHANDLER_REGISTER(dev_clone,
audit_pipe_clone, 0, 1000);
if (audit_pipe_eh_tag == NULL)
panic("audit_pipe_init: EVENTHANDLER_REGISTER");
}
SYSINIT(audit_pipe_init, SI_SUB_DRIVERS, SI_ORDER_MIDDLE, audit_pipe_init,
NULL);