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Audit support is enabled at boot, if present in the kernel, using an rc.conf(5) flag. The audit daemon, auditd(8), is responsible for configuring the kernel to perform audit, pushing configuration data from the various audit configuration files into the kernel.
Support for kernel audit first appeared in FreeBSD 6.2 .
The Basic Security Module (BSM) interface to audit records and audit event stream format were defined by Sun Microsystems.
This manual page was written by Robert Watson <Mt rwatson@FreeBSD.org>.
Instrumentation of auditable events in the kernel is not complete, as some system calls do not generate audit records, or generate audit records with incomplete argument information.
Mandatory Access Control (MAC) labels, as provided by the mac(4) facility, are not audited as part of records involving MAC decisions.
Currently the audit syscalls are not supported for jailed processes. However, if a process has audit session state associated with it, audit records will still be produced and a zonename token containing the jail's ID or name will be present in the audit records.
AUDIT (4) | April 28, 2019 |
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