Re: [PATCH 1/2] audit: stop an old auditd being starved out by a new auditd

From: Paul Moore
Date: Mon Sep 28 2015 - 14:56:16 EST


On Monday, September 28, 2015 07:17:31 AM Richard Guy Briggs wrote:
> On 15/09/25, Paul Moore wrote:

...

> > The audit_make_reply() function is the wrong thing to be using here, we
> > should create our own buffer from scratch like most other records. Also,
> > yes, we want to include the new pid, but I really don't think there is
> > any value in including the seqno of the AUDIT_SET/AUDIT_STATUS_PID
> > message.
>
> Most other records use audit_log_start(), which isn't what we want here,
> since we want to bypass the queue to test if it is still alive. We
> don't care if it is delivered. We just care if the socket is still
> alive. We don't want a context either.

Yes, that is why I mentioned creating the buffer from scratch.

> So, I believ audit_make_reply() can be used just fine, setting portid,
> seq, done and multi to zero.

The 'multi' flag should definitely be set to zero, 'seq' is fine at zero, but
I think we can do better with 'portid'; we know the 'portid' value so just use
it in the call to audit_make_reply().

I don't like that we are reusing audit_make_reply() for non-reply netlink
messages, but I'll get over that. This will likely get a revamp when we get
around to a proper fix of the queuing system.

> > > > Also, this is more of a attempted hijack message and not a simple
> > > > ping,
> > > > right?
> > >
> > > Ok, so maybe AUDIT_PING is not the appropriate name for it. I don't
> > > have a problem changing it, but I think the pid of the hijacker would be
> > > useful information to the ping-ee unless the ping message was only ever
> > > issues in a contextless kernel-initiated message.
> >
> > Let's change the message name, this isn't a ping message and we may want
> > to have a ping message at some point in the future.
>
> Ok, how about AUDIT_HIJACK_TEST, with a payload of the u32
> representation of the PID of the task attempting to replace it.

Why add the TEST? It is a hijack attempt, or at least it is if the record is
emitted successfully :) I would go simply with AUDIT_HIJACK or maybe
AUDIT_REPLACE (or similar) if "hijack" is a bit too inflammatory (it probably
is ...).

--
paul moore
security @ redhat

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