On 8/24/12 5:49 PM, Simon L. B. Nielsen wrote: > On Fri, Aug 24, 2012 at 1:52 PM, Thomas <freebsdli...@bsdunix.ch> wrote: >> On 8/19/12 4:46 PM, Paul Schenkeveld wrote: >>> On Thu, Aug 09, 2012 at 11:44:02AM +0200, Roberto wrote: >>> >>> Having read all responses so far I think a summary of the issue at hand >>> is: >>> >>> - Uname only reports on the kernel version, currently we do not store >>> nor report the userland version. >>> >>> - People would love to know what version of FreeBSD, both kernel and >>> userland, is currently installed/running. >>> >>> - Userland can either be upgraded using make {build,install}world or >>> by freebsd-update, neither logs the version to which userland was >>> updated. >>> >>> - Reporting the userland version is not trivial as not necessarily all >>> parts of userland are of the same version, especially after doing >>> an buildworld/instrallworld with a changed src.conf or make.conf. >>> >>> - We currently reflect the last booted kernel version in /etc/motd. >>> >>> My suggestion would be: >>> >>> - Teach both installworld and freebsd-update to maintain manifest >>> files of what is installed and log that update, place all manifests >>> somewhere under /var/db and the update log in /var/log. >>> >>> - If the above log message is well defined and includes the method >>> by which the update was done, it can be parsed by /etc/rc.d/motd >>> and we could extend the information in /etc/motd to also include >>> information about userland. Something like: >>> >>> <tool> <timestamp> <who> <current-version> >>> portupgrade 2012-08-19T16:26:41 paul 8.3-RELEASE-p4 >>> installworld 2012-08-19T16:31:36 paul 8-STABLE-r231558 >>> >>> - Having manifests of what's installed, one could check if all files >>> are stil the right version, if older manifests are not discarded >>> when performing an update this could also detect files that were >>> not updated for whatever reason or that were reverted, i.e. by >>> restoring some backup. E.g.: >>> >>> Current userland version: 8.3-RELEASE-p4 >>> /usr/sbin/named is at 8.3-RELEASE-p2 >>> /usr/bin/openssl is at 8.3-RELEASE >>> >>> - Such a time-consuming check could be run from periodic (weekly or >>> monthly perhapd) and be a valuable tool to warn sysadmins of files >>> not being what they should be. >>> >>> - Adding, in the case of freebsd-update, a signature to the manifest >>> files that can be checked against the signature in the freebsd-update >>> master repository could turn this tool into something of a integrity >>> checking tool. >>> >> >> Sounds good if you have a just a few systems. In a large environment, >> snmp is quite common to collect release information. >> >> AFAIK snmp uses kern.version and kern.osrelease for this.This sysctls >> are read only. Any ideas how this issue can be fixed for >> snmp in a easy way? > > Make the snmp daemon not do it that way and support magic new scheme > which we will hopefully come up with? >
It would be nice if this could be part of a MIB for bsnmpd(1) in base or net-snmp in ports. FreeBSD-MIB for bsnmpd(1) uses uname(3) for freeBSDVersion OBJECT-IDENTITY but according to the comments in FreeBSD-MIB.txt it can be overwritten. Not sure what net-snmp is using. Regards, Thomas _______________________________________________ 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"