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AUDITON(2) FreeBSD System Calls Manual AUDITON(2)
NAME
auditon - configure system audit parameters
SYNOPSIS
#include <bsm/audit.h>
int
auditon(int cmd, void *data, u_int length);
DESCRIPTION
The auditon() system call is used to manipulate various audit control
operations. The data argument should point to a structure whose type
depends on the command. The length argument specifies the size of *data
in bytes. The cmd argument may be any of the following:
A_SETPOLICY Set audit policy flags. The data argument must point
to a int value set to one or more the following audit
policy control values bitwise OR'ed together:
AUDIT_CNT, AUDIT_AHLT, AUDIT_ARGV, and AUDIT_ARGE.
If AUDIT_CNT is set, the system will continue even if
it becomes low on space and discontinue logging
events until the low space condition is remedied. If
it is not set, audited events will block until the
low space condition is remedied. Unaudited events,
however, are unaffected. If AUDIT_AHLT is set, a
panic(9) if it cannot write an event to the global
audit log file. If AUDIT_ARGV is set, then the
argument list passed to the execve(2) system call
will be audited. If AUDIT_ARGE is set, then the
environment variables passed to the execve(2) system
call will be audited. The default policy is none of
the audit policy control flags set.
A_SETKAUDIT Set the host information. The data argument must
point to a auditinfo_addr_t structure containing the
host IP address information. After setting, audit
records that are created as a result of kernel events
will contain this information.
A_SETKMASK Set the kernel preselection masks (success and
failure). The data argument must point to a
au_mask_t structure containing the mask values as
defined in <bsm/audit.h>. These masks are used for
non-attributable audit event preselection. The field
am_success specifies which classes of successful
audit events are to be logged to the audit trail.
The field am_failure specifies which classes of
failed audit events are to be logged. The value of
both fields is the bitwise OR'ing of the audit event
classes specified in bsm/audit.h. The various audit
classes are described more fully in audit_class(5).
A_SETQCTRL Set kernel audit queue parameters. The data argument
must point to a au_qctrl_t structure (defined in
<bsm/audit.h>) containing the kernel audit queue
control settings: aq_hiwater, aq_lowater, aq_bufsz,
aq_delay, and aq_minfree. The field aq_hiwater
available as defined with the field aq_lowater. The
field aq_bufsz defines the maximum length of the
audit record that can be supplied with audit(2). The
field aq_delay is unused. The field aq_minfree
specifies the minimum amount of free blocks on the
disk device used to store audit records. If the
value of free blocks falls below the configured
minimum amount, the kernel informs the audit daemon
about low disk space. The value is to be specified
in percent of free file system blocks. A value of 0
results in a disabling of the check. The default and
maximum values (default/maximum) for the audit queue
control parameters are:
aq_hiwater 100/10000 (audit records)
aq_lowater 10/aq_hiwater (audit records)
aq_bufsz 32767/1048576 (bytes)
aq_delay (Not currently used.)
A_SETSTAT Return ENOSYS. (Not implemented.)
A_SETUMASK Return ENOSYS. (Not implemented.)
A_SETSMASK Return ENOSYS. (Not implemented.)
A_SETCOND Set the current auditing condition. The data
argument must point to a int value containing the new
audit condition, one of AUC_AUDITING, AUC_NOAUDIT, or
AUC_DISABLED. If AUC_NOAUDIT is set, then auditing
is temporarily suspended. If AUC_AUDITING is set,
auditing is resumed. If AUC_DISABLED is set, the
auditing system will shutdown, draining all audit
records and closing out the audit trail file.
A_SETCLASS Set the event class preselection mask for an audit
event. The data argument must point to a
au_evclass_map_t structure containing the audit event
and mask. The field ec_number is the audit event and
ec_class is the audit class mask. See audit_event(5)
for more information on audit event to class mapping.
A_SETPMASK Set the preselection masks for a process. The data
argument must point to a auditpinfo_t structure that
contains the given process's audit preselection masks
for both success and failure. The field ap_pid is
the process id of the target process. The field
ap_mask must point to a au_mask_t structure which
holds the preselection masks as described in the
A_SETKMASK section above.
A_SETFSIZE Set the maximum size of the audit log file. The data
argument must point to a au_fstat_t structure with
the af_filesz field set to the maximum audit log file
size. A value of 0 indicates no limit to the size.
A_GETCLASS Return the event to class mapping for the designated
audit event. The data argument must point to a
au_evclass_map_t structure. See the A_SETCLASS
section above for more information.
ap_mask (the preselection mask), ap_termid (the
terminal ID), and ap_asid (the audit session ID) of
the given target process. The process ID of the
target process is passed into the kernel using the
ap_pid field. See the section A_SETPMASK above and
getaudit(2) for more information.
A_GETPINFO_ADDR Return the extended audit settings for a process.
The data argument must point to a auditpinfo_addr_t
structure which is similar to the auditpinfo_t
structure described above. The exception is the
ap_termid (the terminal ID) field which points to a
au_tid_addr_t structure can hold much a larger
terminal address and an address type. The process ID
of the target process is passed into the kernel using
the ap_pid field. See the section A_SETPMASK above
and getaudit(2) for more information.
A_GETSINFO_ADDR Return the extended audit settings for a session.
The data argument must point to a auditinfo_addr_t
structure. The audit session ID of the target
session is passed into the kernel using the ai_asid
field. See getaudit_addr(2) for more information
about the auditinfo_addr_t structure.
A_GETKMASK Return the current kernel preselection masks. The
data argument must point to a au_mask_t structure
which will be set to the current kernel preselection
masks for non-attributable events.
A_GETPOLICY Return the current audit policy setting. The data
argument must point to a int value which will be set
to one of the current audit policy flags. The audit
policy flags are described in the A_SETPOLICY section
above.
A_GETQCTRL Return the current kernel audit queue control
parameters. The data argument must point to a
au_qctrl_t structure which will be set to the current
kernel audit queue control parameters. See the
A_SETQCTL section above for more information.
A_GETFSIZE Returns the maximum size of the audit log file. The
data argument must point to a au_fstat_t structure.
The af_filesz field will be set to the maximum audit
log file size. A value of 0 indicates no limit to
the size. The af_currsz field will be set to the
current audit log file size.
A_GETCWD Return ENOSYS. (Not implemented.)
A_GETCAR Return ENOSYS. (Not implemented.)
A_GETSTAT Return ENOSYS. (Not implemented.)
A_GETCOND Return the current auditing condition. The data
argument must point to a int value which will be set
to the current audit condition, one of AUC_AUDITING,
AUC_NOAUDIT or AUC_DISABLED. See the A_SETCOND
AUDIT_TRIGGER_READ_FILE (read the audit_control
file), AUDIT_TRIGGER_CLOSE_AND_DIE (close the current
log file and exit), AUDIT_TRIGGER_NO_SPACE (no disk
space left for audit log file).
AUDIT_TRIGGER_ROTATE_USER (request audit log file
rotation). AUDIT_TRIGGER_INITIALIZE (initialize
audit subsystem for Mac OS X only). or
AUDIT_TRIGGER_EXPIRE_TRAILS (request audit log file
expiration).
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, the value 0 is returned; otherwise the
value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
ERRORS
The auditon() function will fail if:
[ENOSYS] Returned by options not yet implemented.
[EFAULT] A failure occurred while data transferred to or from
the kernel failed.
[EINVAL] Illegal argument was passed by a system call.
[EPERM] The process does not have sufficient permission to
complete the operation.
The A_SENDTRIGGER command is specific to the FreeBSD and Mac OS X
implementations, and is not present in Solaris.
SEE ALSO
audit(2), auditctl(2), getaudit(2), getaudit_addr(2), getauid(2),
setaudit(2), setaudit_addr(2), setauid(2), libbsm(3)
HISTORY
The OpenBSM implementation was created by McAfee Research, the security
division of McAfee Inc., under contract to Apple Computer Inc. in 2004.
It was subsequently adopted by the TrustedBSD Project as the foundation
for the OpenBSM distribution.
AUTHORS
This software was created by McAfee Research, the security research
division of McAfee, Inc., under contract to Apple Computer Inc.
Additional authors include Wayne Salamon, Robert Watson, and SPARTA Inc.
The Basic Security Module (BSM) interface to audit records and audit
event stream format were defined by Sun Microsystems.
This manual page was written by Tom Rhodes <trhodes@FreeBSD.org>, Robert
Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org>, and Wayne Salamon <wsalamon@FreeBSD.org>.
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 April 7, 2016 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11