On 2017-01-17 08:55, Steve Grubb wrote: > On Tuesday, January 17, 2017 12:25:51 AM EST Richard Guy Briggs wrote: > > I'm just starting to look at the normalization of AUDIT_NETFILTER_PKT > > event messages and it is not quite as straightforward as I had expected. > > > > It is being tracked here: > > https://github.com/linux-audit/audit-kernel/issues/11 > > and refers to a previous posting from Mr. Dash Four from four years ago > > to which there was no reply. > > > > The example given in the tracker above for "frag=" is fairly > > straightforward, but digging more, there are a number of others that are > > not quite so obvious. > > > > How many different combinations of fields is acceptable? Can we create > > new message types for each one, or is there a preferred way to indicate > > which sub-type it is other than implicit from the arguments given? > > That would be preferential to swinging fields in and out. But we also don't > want to add too many new types. If two protocols look almost identical, I'd > try to coerce them to be the same. If adding 2 new types solves the problem > just do it. If it takes 10, then maybe we should understand why. Ok, I'll have a go at mapping some out and see where we end up... > > Others that are straightforward: > > - The first "truncated=" gets pulled in with "0". > > > > - "mark=" gets pulled in with "0". > > > > Ones that are not so straightforward: > > - "secmark" depends on a kernel config setting, so should it always be > > present but "(none)" if that kernel feature is compiled out? > > If this is selinux related, I'd treat it the same way that we do subj > everywhere else. Ok. > > - ARPHRD_ETHER pulls in 3 fields, I would pull them all in and set them > > to "(none)" to indicate that type isn't present. > > "(none)" is for character fields that have nothing. Typically we set -1 for > numeric fields that are unset. If numbers are expected, its going to get the > strtol() treatment and "(none)" will cause a conversion error. Ah, ok. I certainly don't want to break the parser, so I'll use -1 or find another way to indicate it. > > - audit_ip4() and audit_ip6 share "saddr=", "daddr=", proto=", but ip4 > > adds "ipid=", which would be set to "(none)" for ip6. > > That is numeric. -1? Yup, 16-bit. I'll make it -1. > -Steve > > > - audit_proto() pulls in "truncated=" again, then either "sport=" and > > "dport=" OR "icmptype=" and "icmpcode=". > > > > If all fields are pulled in, we end up adding 10 fields beyond a > > standard well-formed packet, and 15 beyond a truncated packet. > > > > Note: In the cases of "mark" and "secmark" both are unions. In the case of > > "mark", I don't see a problem since it isn't conditionally compiled out > > and won't be mis-interpreted. In the case of "secmark=", it could be > > mis-interpreted as offload_fwd_mark if that field is even compiled in, > > but that would be addressed in the compiler directive... > > > > > > One last question: Does anyone have a test suite that can generate any > > or all of these types of packets? > > > > > > Thanks! > > > > > > - RGB - RGB -- Richard Guy Briggs <rgb@xxxxxxxxxx> Kernel Security Engineering, Base Operating Systems, Red Hat Remote, Ottawa, Canada Voice: +1.647.777.2635, Internal: (81) 32635 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe netfilter-devel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html