AU_MASK(3) | Library Functions Manual | AU_MASK(3) |
au_preselect
,
getauditflagsbin
,
getauditflagschar
— convert
between string and numeric values of audit masks
Basic Security Module Library (libbsm, -lbsm)
<bsm/libbsm.h>
int
au_preselect
(au_event_t
event, au_mask_t *mask_p, int
sorf, int flag) int
getauditflagsbin
(char
*auditstr, au_mask_t *masks)
int
getauditflagschar
(char
*auditstr, au_mask_t *masks, int
verbose)
These interfaces support processing of an audit mask represented by type au_mask_t, including conversion between numeric and text formats, and computing whether or not an event is matched by a mask.
The
au_preselect
()
function calculates whether or not the audit event passed via
event is matched by the audit mask passed via
mask_p. The sorf argument
indicates whether or not to consider the event as a success, if the
AU_PRS_SUCCESS
flag is set, or failure, if the
AU_PRS_FAILURE
flag is set. The
flag argument accepts additional arguments influencing
the behavior of au_preselect
(), including
AU_PRS_REREAD
, which causes the event to be
re-looked up rather than read from the cache, or
AU_PRS_USECACHE
which forces use of the cache.
The
getauditflagsbin
()
function converts a string representation of an audit mask passed via a
character string pointed to by auditstr, returning the
resulting mask, if valid, via *masks.
The
getauditflagschar
()
function converts the audit event mask passed via
*masks and converts it to a character string in a
buffer pointed to by auditstr. See the
BUGS section for more information on how to
provide a buffer of sufficient size. If the verbose
flag is set, the class description string retrieved from
audit_class(5) will be used; otherwise, the two-character
class name.
The au_preselect
() function makes implicit
use of various audit database routines, and may influence the behavior of
simultaneous or interleaved processing of those databases by other code.
The au_preselect
() function returns 0 on
success, or returns -1 if there is a failure looking up the event type or
other database access, in which case errno will be set
to indicate the error. It returns 1 if the event is matched; 0 if not.
The getauditflagsbin
() and
getauditflagschar
() functions return the
value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and
the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
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.
This software was created by Robert Watson, Wayne Salamon, and Suresh Krishnaswamy for McAfee Research, the security research division of McAfee, Inc., under contract to Apple Computer, Inc.
The Basic Security Module (BSM) interface to audit records and audit event stream format were defined by Sun Microsystems.
The errno variable may not always be properly set in the event of an error.
The getauditflagschar
() function does not
provide a way to indicate how long the character buffer is, in order to
detect overflow. As a result, the caller must always provide a buffer of
sufficient length for any possible mask, which may be calculated as three
times the number of non-zero bits in the mask argument in the event
non-verbose class names are used, and is not trivially predictable for
verbose class names. This API should be replaced with a more robust one.
April 19, 2005 | Mac OS X 12 |