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authorMax Englander <max.englander@gmail.com>2020-07-04 15:15:28 +0000
committerPaul Moore <paul@paul-moore.com>2020-07-21 11:21:44 -0400
commitb43870c74f3fdf0cd06bf5f1b7a5ed70a2cd4ed2 (patch)
treee858b27d67516e5769337eaa9e56d07a2cf22f12 /security
parentf1d9b23cabc61e58509164c3c3132556476491d2 (diff)
audit: report audit wait metric in audit status reply
In environments where the preservation of audit events and predictable usage of system memory are prioritized, admins may use a combination of --backlog_wait_time and -b options at the risk of degraded performance resulting from backlog waiting. In some cases, this risk may be preferred to lost events or unbounded memory usage. Ideally, this risk can be mitigated by making adjustments when backlog waiting is detected. However, detection can be difficult using the currently available metrics. For example, an admin attempting to debug degraded performance may falsely believe a full backlog indicates backlog waiting. It may turn out the backlog frequently fills up but drains quickly. To make it easier to reliably track degraded performance to backlog waiting, this patch makes the following changes: Add a new field backlog_wait_time_total to the audit status reply. Initialize this field to zero. Add to this field the total time spent by the current task on scheduled timeouts while the backlog limit is exceeded. Reset field to zero upon request via AUDIT_SET. Tested on Ubuntu 18.04 using complementary changes to the audit-userspace and audit-testsuite: - https://github.com/linux-audit/audit-userspace/pull/134 - https://github.com/linux-audit/audit-testsuite/pull/97 Signed-off-by: Max Englander <max.englander@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Paul Moore <paul@paul-moore.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'security')
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