Hi,
I see it many times before, but never take a time to post about it.
Scrips in /etc/periodic are grepping logs for yesterday date, but
without specifying year (because some logs do not have year logged).
This results in false positive alerts in security e-mails from our
lightly loaded servers, where logs are not enough rotated.
For example /var/log/auth.log is 62KB (838 lines) and contains entries
for almost 2 years.
Today I get following alert:
Feb 15 22:36:03 XXX sshd[89758]: Invalid user t1na from xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
Feb 15 22:50:56 XXX sshd[89850]: Invalid user medina from xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
Feb 15 22:50:57 XXX sshd[89852]: Invalid user student from xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
Feb 15 22:50:58 XXX sshd[89854]: Invalid user student from xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
(hostname and IP are replaced by X)
But looking in to auth.log I found zero entries from yesterday - Feb 15
entries were logged 1 year ago!
So I propose to set all daemons / syslog to log year too (as %Y) and
change yesterday=`date -v-1d "+%b %e "` to yesterday=`date -v-1d "+%b
%e %Y"` in periodic scripts.
The affected scripts are:
460.status-mail-rejects
470.status-named
800.loginfail
900.tcpwrap
Maybe some others, I did just a quick grep -rsn 'date -v-1d'
/etc/periodic and I don't know the logic used in other script to get
yesterday messages.
What do you think about it?
Miroslav Lachman
_______________________________________________
freebsd-security@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-security
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-security-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"