freebsd-skq/contrib/openbsm
Kirk McKusick 88640c0e8b Create new EINTEGRITY error with message "Integrity check failed".
An integrity check such as a check-hash or a cross-correlation failed.
The integrity error falls between EINVAL that identifies errors in
parameters to a system call and EIO that identifies errors with the
underlying storage media. EINTEGRITY is typically raised by intermediate
kernel layers such as a filesystem or an in-kernel GEOM subsystem when
they detect inconsistencies. Uses include allowing the mount(8) command
to return a different exit value to automate the running of fsck(8)
during a system boot.

These changes make no use of the new error, they just add it. Later
commits will be made for the use of the new error number and it will
be added to additional manual pages as appropriate.

Reviewed by:    gnn, dim, brueffer, imp
Discussed with: kib, cem, emaste, ed, jilles
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D18765
2019-01-17 06:35:45 +00:00
..
bin Consider the following situation: 2018-12-07 03:13:36 +00:00
bsm
compat
config
etc
libauditd In r316006 the getstrfromtype_locked() function was modified to return 2019-01-09 01:16:35 +00:00
libbsm Create new EINTEGRITY error with message "Integrity check failed". 2019-01-17 06:35:45 +00:00
m4
man
modules
sys Create new EINTEGRITY error with message "Integrity check failed". 2019-01-17 06:35:45 +00:00
test
tools
.travis.yml
aclocal.m4
autogen.sh
configure
configure.ac
CREDITS
FREEBSD-upgrade
INSTALL
LICENSE
Makefile.am
Makefile.in
NEWS
README
TODO
VERSION

OpenBSM

  Introduction

OpenBSM is an open-source implementation of Sun's BSM event auditing file
format and API.  Originally created for Apple Computer by McAfee Research,
OpenBSM is now maintained by volunteers and through the generous contributions
of several organizations.

OpenBSM includes several command line tools, including auditreduce(8) and
praudit(8) for reducing and printing audit trails, as well as the libbsm(3)
library to manage configuration files, generate audit records, and parse and
print audit trails.  It also includes the auditd(8) audit configuration
daemon, and the auditdistd(8) audit-trail distribution daemon.

Coupled with a kernel audit implementation, OpenBSM can be used to maintain
system audit streams, and is a foundation for a full audit-enabled system.
Portions of OpenBSM, including include files and token-building routines, are
reusable in a kernel audit implementation, and may be found in the FreeBSD
and Mac OS X kernels.

  Contents

OpenBSM consists of several directories:

    bin/           Audit-related command line tools and daemons
    bsm/           Library header files for BSM
    compat/        Compatibility code to build on various operating systems
    etc/           Sample /etc/security configuration files
    libauditd/     Common audit management functions for auditd and launchd
    libbsm/        Implementation of BSM library interfaces and man pages
    man/           System call and configuration file man pages
    modules/       Directory for auditfilterd module source
    sys/           System header files for BSM
    test/          Test token sets and geneneration program
    tools/         Tool directory, including audump to dump databases

The following programs are included with OpenBSM:

    audit          Command line audit control tool
    auditd         Audit management daemon
    auditdistd     Audit trail distribution daemon
    auditfilterd   Experimental event monitoring framework
    auditreduce    Audit trail reduction tool
    audump         Debugging tool to parse and print audit databases
    praudit        Tool to print audit trails

  Build and Installation

Please see the file INSTALL for build and installation instructions.

  Contributions

The TrustedBSD Project would appreciate the contribution of bug fixes, 
enhancements, etc, under the same license found in the top-level LICENSE file.
Please see the file CREDITS to learn more about who has contributed to the
project.

  Location

Information on OpenBSM may be found on the OpenBSM home page:

    http://www.OpenBSM.org/

Information on TrustedBSD may be found on the TrustedBSD home page:

    http://www.TrustedBSD.org/