PERFORCE change 84875 for review

Wayne Salamon wsalamon at FreeBSD.org
Thu Oct 6 01:10:18 GMT 2005


http://perforce.freebsd.org/chv.cgi?CH=84875

Change 84875 by wsalamon at gretsch on 2005/10/06 01:09:55

	Move the audit_arg_xxx() functions into the new source file and 
	add the new file to the config.

Affected files ...

.. //depot/projects/trustedbsd/audit3/sys/conf/files#9 edit
.. //depot/projects/trustedbsd/audit3/sys/security/audit/audit_arg.c#2 edit
.. //depot/projects/trustedbsd/audit3/sys/security/audit/kern_audit.c#45 edit

Differences ...

==== //depot/projects/trustedbsd/audit3/sys/conf/files#9 (text+ko) ====

@@ -1843,8 +1843,9 @@
 posix4/p1003_1b.c		standard
 posix4/posix4_mib.c		standard
 rpc/rpcclnt.c			optional nfsclient
+security/audit/audit_arg.c	optional audit
+security/audit/audit_syscalls.c	standard
 security/audit/audit_trigger.c	optional audit
-security/audit/audit_syscalls.c	standard
 security/audit/kern_audit.c	optional audit
 security/audit/kern_bsm_audit.c	optional audit
 security/audit/kern_bsm_klib.c	optional audit

==== //depot/projects/trustedbsd/audit3/sys/security/audit/audit_arg.c#2 (text+ko) ====

@@ -21,985 +21,25 @@
  */
 
 #include <sys/param.h>
-#include <sys/condvar.h>
-#include <sys/conf.h>
-#include <sys/file.h>
 #include <sys/filedesc.h>
-#include <sys/fcntl.h>
 #include <sys/ipc.h>
-#include <sys/kernel.h>
-#include <sys/kthread.h>
-#include <sys/malloc.h>
 #include <sys/mount.h>
-#include <sys/namei.h>
 #include <sys/proc.h>
-#include <sys/queue.h>
 #include <sys/socket.h>
 #include <sys/socketvar.h>
 #include <sys/protosw.h>
 #include <sys/domain.h>
-#include <sys/sysproto.h>
-#include <sys/sysent.h>
 #include <sys/systm.h>
-#include <sys/ucred.h>
-#include <sys/uio.h>
 #include <sys/un.h>
-#include <sys/unistd.h>
 #include <sys/vnode.h>
 
 #include <netinet/in.h>
 #include <netinet/in_pcb.h>
 
-#include <bsm/audit.h>
-#include <bsm/audit_kevents.h>
 #include <security/audit/audit.h>
 #include <security/audit/audit_private.h>
 
 /*
- * The AUDIT_EXCESSIVELY_VERBOSE define enables a number of
- * gratuitously noisy printf's to the console.  Due to the
- * volume, it should be left off unless you want your system
- * to churn a lot whenever the audit record flow gets high.
- */
-//#define	AUDIT_EXCESSIVELY_VERBOSE
-#ifdef AUDIT_EXCESSIVELY_VERBOSE
-#define	AUDIT_PRINTF(x)	printf x
-#else
-#define	AUDIT_PRINTF(X)
-#endif
-
-#if 0
-#if DIAGNOSTIC
-#if defined(assert)
-#undef assert()
-#endif
-#define assert(cond)    \
-    ((void) ((cond) ? 0 : panic("%s:%d (%s)", __FILE__, __LINE__, # cond)))
-#else
-#include <kern/assert.h>
-#endif /* DIAGNOSTIC */
-#endif
-#define assert(x)	KASSERT(x, x)
-
-MALLOC_DEFINE(M_AUDIT, "audit", "Audit event records");
-
-/*
- * Audit control settings that are set/read by system calls and are 
- * hence non-static.
- */
-/* 
- * Define the audit control flags.
- */
-int					audit_enabled;
-int					audit_suspended;
-
-/*
- * Flags controlling behavior in low storage situations.
- * Should we panic if a write fails?  Should we fail stop
- * if we're out of disk space?
- */
-int					audit_panic_on_write_fail;
-int					audit_fail_stop;
-
-/*
- * Audit queue control settings (minimum free, low/high water marks, etc.)
- */
-struct au_qctrl				audit_qctrl;
-
-/*
- * Global audit statistiscs. 
- */
-struct audit_fstat 			audit_fstat;
-
-/*
- * Preselection mask for non-attributable events.
- */
-struct au_mask			 	audit_nae_mask;
-
-/*
- * Mutex to protect global variables shared between various threads and
- * processes.
- */
-static struct mtx			audit_mtx;
-
-/*
- * Queue of audit records ready for delivery to disk.  We insert new
- * records at the tail, and remove records from the head.  Also,
- * a count of the number of records used for checking queue depth.
- * In addition, a counter of records that we have allocated but are
- * not yet in the queue, which is needed to estimate the total
- * size of the combined set of records outstanding in the system.
- */
-static TAILQ_HEAD(, kaudit_record)	audit_q;
-static int				audit_q_len;
-static int				audit_pre_q_len;
-
-/*
- * Condition variable to signal to the worker that it has work to do:
- * either new records are in the queue, or a log replacement is taking
- * place.
- */
-static struct cv			audit_cv;
-
-/*
- * Worker thread that will schedule disk I/O, etc.
- */  
-static struct proc			*audit_thread;
-
-/*
- * When an audit log is rotated, the actual rotation must be performed
- * by the audit worker thread, as it may have outstanding writes on the
- * current audit log.  audit_replacement_vp holds the vnode replacing
- * the current vnode.  We can't let more than one replacement occur
- * at a time, so if more than one thread requests a replacement, only
- * one can have the replacement "in progress" at any given moment.  If
- * a thread tries to replace the audit vnode and discovers a replacement
- * is already in progress (i.e., audit_replacement_flag != 0), then it
- * will sleep on audit_replacement_cv waiting its turn to perform a
- * replacement.  When a replacement is completed, this cv is signalled
- * by the worker thread so a waiting thread can start another replacement.
- * We also store a credential to perform audit log write operations with.
- *
- * The current credential and vnode are thread-local to audit_worker.
- */
-static struct cv			audit_replacement_cv;
-
-static int				audit_replacement_flag;
-static struct vnode			*audit_replacement_vp;
-static struct ucred			*audit_replacement_cred;
-
-/*
- * Condition variable to signal to the worker that it has work to do:
- * either new records are in the queue, or a log replacement is taking
- * place.
- */
-static struct cv			audit_commit_cv;
-
-/* 
- * Condition variable for  auditing threads wait on when in fail-stop mode. 
- * Threads wait on this CV forever (and ever), never seeing the light of 
- * day again.
- */
-static struct cv			audit_fail_cv;
-
-/*
- * Flags related to Kernel->user-space communication.
- */
-static int			audit_file_rotate_wait;
-
-/*
- * Are we currently "failing stop" due to out of disk space?
- */
-static int			 audit_in_failure;
-
-/*
- * Perform a deep free of an audit record (core record and referenced objects)
- */
-static void
-audit_record_free(struct kaudit_record *ar)
-{
-
-	if (ar->k_ar.ar_arg_upath1 != NULL) {
-		free(ar->k_ar.ar_arg_upath1, M_AUDIT);
-	}
-	if (ar->k_ar.ar_arg_upath2 != NULL) {
-		free(ar->k_ar.ar_arg_upath2, M_AUDIT);
-	}
-	if (ar->k_ar.ar_arg_kpath1 != NULL) {
-		free(ar->k_ar.ar_arg_kpath1, M_AUDIT);
-	}
-	if (ar->k_ar.ar_arg_kpath2 != NULL) {
-		free(ar->k_ar.ar_arg_kpath2, M_AUDIT);
-	}
-	if (ar->k_ar.ar_arg_text != NULL) {
-		free(ar->k_ar.ar_arg_text, M_AUDIT);
-	}
-	if (ar->k_udata != NULL) {
-		free(ar->k_udata, M_AUDIT);
-	}
-	free(ar, M_AUDIT);
-}
-
-/*
- * XXXAUDIT: Should adjust comments below to make it clear that we get to
- * this point only if we believe we have storage, so not having space here
- * is a violation of invariants derived from administrative procedures.
- * I.e., someone else has written to the audit partition, leaving less space
- * than we accounted for.
- */
-static int
-audit_record_write(struct vnode *vp, struct kaudit_record *ar, 
-    struct ucred *cred, struct thread *td)
-{
-	int ret;
-	long temp;
-	struct au_record *bsm;
-	struct vattr vattr;
-	struct statfs *mnt_stat = &vp->v_mount->mnt_stat;
-	int vfslocked;
-
-	vfslocked = VFS_LOCK_GIANT(vp->v_mount);
-
-	/*
-	 * First, gather statistics on the audit log file and file system
-	 * so that we know how we're doing on space.  In both cases,
-	 * if we're unable to perform the operation, we drop the record
-	 * and return.  However, this is arguably an assertion failure.
-	 * XXX Need a FreeBSD equivalent.
-	 */
-	ret = VFS_STATFS(vp->v_mount, mnt_stat, td);
-	if (ret)
-		goto out;
-
-	ret = VOP_GETATTR(vp, &vattr, cred, td);
-	if (ret)
-		goto out;
-
-	/* update the global stats struct */
-	audit_fstat.af_currsz = vattr.va_size; 
-
-	/*
-	 * XXX Need to decide what to do if the trigger to the audit daemon
-	 * fails.
-	 */
-
-	/* 
-	 * If we fall below minimum free blocks (hard limit), tell the audit
-	 * daemon to force a rotation off of the file system. We also stop
-	 * writing, which means this audit record is probably lost.
-	 * If we fall below the minimum percent free blocks (soft limit), 
-	 * then kindly suggest to the audit daemon to do something.
-	 */
-	if (mnt_stat->f_bfree < AUDIT_HARD_LIMIT_FREE_BLOCKS) {
-		send_trigger(AUDIT_TRIGGER_NO_SPACE);
-		/* Hopefully userspace did something about all the previous
-		 * triggers that were sent prior to this critical condition.
-		 * If fail-stop is set, then we're done; goodnight Gracie.
-		 */
-		if (audit_fail_stop)
-			panic("Audit log space exhausted and fail-stop set.");
-		else {
-			audit_suspended = 1;
-			ret = ENOSPC;
-			goto out;
-		}
-	} else
-		/* 
-		 * Send a message to the audit daemon that disk space 
-		 * is getting low.
-		 *
-		 * XXXAUDIT: Check math and block size calculation here.
-		 */
-		if (audit_qctrl.aq_minfree != 0) {
-			temp = mnt_stat->f_blocks / (100 / 
-			    audit_qctrl.aq_minfree);
-			if (mnt_stat->f_bfree < temp)
-				send_trigger(AUDIT_TRIGGER_LOW_SPACE);
-		}
-
-	/* Check if the current log file is full; if so, call for
-	 * a log rotate. This is not an exact comparison; we may
-	 * write some records over the limit. If that's not
-	 * acceptable, then add a fudge factor here.
-	 */
-	if ((audit_fstat.af_filesz != 0) &&
-	    (audit_file_rotate_wait == 0) && 
-	    (vattr.va_size >= audit_fstat.af_filesz)) {
-		audit_file_rotate_wait = 1;
-		send_trigger(AUDIT_TRIGGER_OPEN_NEW);
-	}
-
-	/*
-	 * If the estimated amount of audit data in the audit event queue
-	 * (plus records allocated but not yet queued) has reached the
-	 * amount of free space on the disk, then we need to go into an
-	 * audit fail stop state, in which we do not permit the
-	 * allocation/committing of any new audit records.  We continue to
-	 * process packets but don't allow any activities that might
-	 * generate new records.  In the future, we might want to detect
-	 * when space is available again and allow operation to continue,
-	 * but this behavior is sufficient to meet fail stop requirements
-	 * in CAPP.
-	 */
-	if (audit_fail_stop &&
-	    (unsigned long)
-	    ((audit_q_len + audit_pre_q_len + 1) * MAX_AUDIT_RECORD_SIZE) /
-	    mnt_stat->f_bsize >= (unsigned long)(mnt_stat->f_bfree)) {
-		printf(
-    "audit_worker: free space below size of audit queue, failing stop\n");
-		audit_in_failure = 1;
-	}
-
-	/* 
-	 * If there is a user audit record attached to the kernel record,
-	 * then write the user record.
-	 */
-	/* XXX Need to decide a few things here: IF the user audit 
-	 * record is written, but the write of the kernel record fails,
-	 * what to do? Should the kernel record come before or after the
-	 * user record? For now, we write the user record first, and
-	 * we ignore errors.
-	 */
-	if (ar->k_ar_commit & AR_COMMIT_USER) {
-		ret = vn_rdwr(UIO_WRITE, vp, (void *)ar->k_udata, ar->k_ulen,
-		          (off_t)0, UIO_SYSSPACE, IO_APPEND|IO_UNIT, cred, NULL,
-			  NULL, td); 
-		if (ret)
-			goto out;
-	}
-
-	/* 
-	 * Convert the internal kernel record to BSM format and write it
-	 * out if everything's OK.
-	 */
-	if (!(ar->k_ar_commit & AR_COMMIT_KERNEL)) {
-		ret = 0;
-		goto out;
-	}
-
-	/*
-	 * XXXAUDIT: Should we actually allow this conversion to fail?  With
-	 * sleeping memory allocation and invariants checks, perhaps not.
-	 */
-	ret = kaudit_to_bsm(ar, &bsm);
-	if (ret == BSM_NOAUDIT) {
-		ret = 0;
-		goto out;
-	}
-
-	/*
-	 * XXX: We drop the record on BSM conversion failure, but really
-	 * this is an assertion failure.
-	 */
-	if (ret == BSM_FAILURE) {
-		AUDIT_PRINTF(("BSM conversion failure\n"));
-		ret = EINVAL;
-		goto out;
-	}
-	
-	/*
-	 * XXX
-	 * We should break the write functionality away from the BSM record
-	 * generation and have the BSM generation done before this function
-	 * is called. This function will then take the BSM record as a
-	 * parameter.
-	 */
-	ret = (vn_rdwr(UIO_WRITE, vp, (void *)bsm->data, bsm->len,
-	    (off_t)0, UIO_SYSSPACE, IO_APPEND|IO_UNIT, cred, NULL, NULL, td));
-
-	kau_free(bsm);
-
-out:
-	/*
-	 * When we're done processing the current record, we have to
-	 * check to see if we're in a failure mode, and if so, whether
-	 * this was the last record left to be drained.  If we're done
-	 * draining, then we fsync the vnode and panic.
-	 */
-	if (audit_in_failure &&
-	    audit_q_len == 0 && audit_pre_q_len == 0) {
-		VOP_LOCK(vp, LK_DRAIN | LK_INTERLOCK, td);
-		(void)VOP_FSYNC(vp, MNT_WAIT, td);
-		VOP_UNLOCK(vp, 0, td);
-		panic("Audit store overflow; record queue drained.");
-	}
-
-	VFS_UNLOCK_GIANT(vfslocked);
-
-	return (ret);
-}
-
-/*
- * The audit_worker thread is responsible for watching the event queue,
- * dequeueing records, converting them to BSM format, and committing them to
- * disk.  In order to minimize lock thrashing, records are dequeued in sets
- * to a thread-local work queue.  In addition, the audit_work performs the
- * actual exchange of audit log vnode pointer, as audit_vp is a thread-local
- * variable.
- */
-static void
-audit_worker(void *arg)
-{
-	int do_replacement_signal, error;
-	TAILQ_HEAD(, kaudit_record) ar_worklist;
-	struct kaudit_record *ar;
-	struct vnode *audit_vp, *old_vp;
-	int vfslocked;
-
-	struct ucred *audit_cred, *old_cred;
-	struct thread *audit_td;
-
-	AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_worker starting\n"));
-
-	/*
-	 * These are thread-local variables requiring no synchronization.
-	 */
-	TAILQ_INIT(&ar_worklist);
-	audit_cred = NULL;
-	audit_td = curthread;
-	audit_vp = NULL;
-
-	mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-	while (1) {
-		/*
-		 * First priority: replace the audit log target if requested.
-		 * Accessing the vnode here requires dropping the audit_mtx;
-		 * in case another replacement was scheduled while the mutex
-		 * was released, we loop.
-		 *
-		 * XXX It could well be we should drain existing records
-		 * first to ensure that the timestamps and ordering
-		 * are right.
-		 */
-		do_replacement_signal = 0;
-		while (audit_replacement_flag != 0) {
-			old_cred = audit_cred;
-			old_vp = audit_vp;
-			audit_cred = audit_replacement_cred;
-			audit_vp = audit_replacement_vp;
-			audit_replacement_cred = NULL;
-			audit_replacement_vp = NULL;
-			audit_replacement_flag = 0;
-
-			audit_enabled = (audit_vp != NULL);
-
-			/*
-			 * XXX: What to do about write failures here?
-			 */
-			if (old_vp != NULL) {
-				AUDIT_PRINTF(("Closing old audit file\n"));
-				mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-				vfslocked = VFS_LOCK_GIANT(old_vp->v_mount);
-				vn_close(old_vp, AUDIT_CLOSE_FLAGS, old_cred,
-				    audit_td);
-				VFS_UNLOCK_GIANT(vfslocked);
-				crfree(old_cred);
-				mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-				old_cred = NULL;
-				old_vp = NULL;
-				AUDIT_PRINTF(("Audit file closed\n"));
-			}
-			if (audit_vp != NULL) {
-				AUDIT_PRINTF(("Opening new audit file\n"));
-			}
-			do_replacement_signal = 1;
-		}
-		/*
-		 * Signal that replacement have occurred to wake up and
-		 * start any other replacements started in parallel.  We can
-		 * continue about our business in the mean time.  We
-		 * broadcast so that both new replacements can be inserted,
-		 * but also so that the source(s) of replacement can return
-		 * successfully.
-		 */
-		if (do_replacement_signal)
-			cv_broadcast(&audit_replacement_cv);
-
-		/*
-		 * Next, check to see if we have any records to drain into
-		 * the vnode.  If not, go back to waiting for an event.
-		 */
-		if (TAILQ_EMPTY(&audit_q)) {
-			AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_worker waiting\n"));
-			cv_wait(&audit_cv, &audit_mtx);
-			AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_worker woken up\n"));
-	AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_worker: new vp = %p; value of flag %d\n",
-	    audit_replacement_vp, audit_replacement_flag));
-			continue;
-		}
-
-		/*
-		 * If we have records, but there's no active vnode to
-		 * write to, drain the record queue.  Generally, we
-		 * prevent the unnecessary allocation of records
-		 * elsewhere, but we need to allow for races between
-		 * conditional allocation and queueing.  Go back to
-		 * waiting when we're done.
-		 *
-		 * XXX: We go out of our way to avoid calling 
-		 * audit_record_free().
-		 * with the audit_mtx held, to avoid a lock order reversal
-		 * as free() may grab Giant.  This should be fixed at
-		 * some point.
-		 */
-		if (audit_vp == NULL) {
-			while ((ar = TAILQ_FIRST(&audit_q))) {
-				TAILQ_REMOVE(&audit_q, ar, k_q);
-				audit_q_len--;
-				if (audit_q_len <= audit_qctrl.aq_lowater)
-					cv_broadcast(&audit_commit_cv);
-
-				TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&ar_worklist, ar, k_q);
-			}
-			mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-			while ((ar = TAILQ_FIRST(&ar_worklist))) {
-				TAILQ_REMOVE(&ar_worklist, ar, k_q);
-				audit_record_free(ar);
-			}
-			mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-			continue;
-		}
-
-		/*
-		 * We have both records to write and an active vnode
-		 * to write to.  Dequeue a record, and start the write.
-		 * Eventually, it might make sense to dequeue several
-		 * records and perform our own clustering, if the lower
-		 * layers aren't doing it automatically enough.
-		 *
-		 * XXX: We go out of our way to avoid calling
-		 * audit_record_free()
-		 * with the audit_mtx held, to avoid a lock order reversal
-		 * as free() may grab Giant.  This should be fixed at
-		 * some point.
-		 *
-		 * XXXAUDIT: free() no longer grabs Giant.
-		 */
-		while ((ar = TAILQ_FIRST(&audit_q))) {
-			TAILQ_REMOVE(&audit_q, ar, k_q);
-			audit_q_len--;
-			if (audit_q_len <= audit_qctrl.aq_lowater)
-				cv_broadcast(&audit_commit_cv);
-
-			TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&ar_worklist, ar, k_q);
-		}
-
-		mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-		while ((ar = TAILQ_FIRST(&ar_worklist))) {
-			TAILQ_REMOVE(&ar_worklist, ar, k_q);
-			if (audit_vp != NULL) {
-				error = audit_record_write(audit_vp, ar, 
-				    audit_cred, audit_td);
-				if (error && audit_panic_on_write_fail)
-					panic("audit_worker: write error %d\n",
-					    error);
-				else if (error)
-					printf("audit_worker: write error %d\n",
-					    error);
-			}
-			audit_record_free(ar);
-		}
-		mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-	}
-}
-
-/*
- * Initialize the Audit subsystem: configuration state, work queue,
- * synchronization primitives, worker thread, and trigger device node.  Also
- * call into the BSM assembly code to initialize it.
- */
-static void
-audit_init(void)
-{
-	int error;
-
-	printf("Security auditing service present\n");
-	TAILQ_INIT(&audit_q);
-	audit_q_len = 0;
-	audit_pre_q_len = 0;
-	audit_enabled = 0;
-	audit_suspended = 0;
-	audit_replacement_cred = NULL;
-	audit_replacement_flag = 0;
-	audit_file_rotate_wait = 0;
-	audit_replacement_vp = NULL;
-	audit_fstat.af_filesz = 0;	/* '0' means unset, unbounded */
-	audit_fstat.af_currsz = 0; 
-	audit_qctrl.aq_hiwater = AQ_HIWATER;
-	audit_qctrl.aq_lowater = AQ_LOWATER;
-	audit_qctrl.aq_bufsz = AQ_BUFSZ;
-	audit_qctrl.aq_minfree = AU_FS_MINFREE;
-
-	mtx_init(&audit_mtx, "audit_mtx", NULL, MTX_DEF);
-	cv_init(&audit_cv, "audit_cv");
-	cv_init(&audit_replacement_cv, "audit_replacement_cv");
-	cv_init(&audit_commit_cv, "audit_commit_cv");
-	cv_init(&audit_fail_cv, "audit_fail_cv");
-
-	/* Initialize the BSM audit subsystem. */
-	kau_init();
-
-	audit_trigger_init();
-
-	/* Register shutdown handler. */
-	EVENTHANDLER_REGISTER(shutdown_pre_sync, audit_shutdown, NULL,
-	    SHUTDOWN_PRI_FIRST);
-
-	error = kthread_create(audit_worker, NULL, &audit_thread, RFHIGHPID,
-	    0, "audit_worker");
-	if (error != 0)
-		panic("audit_init: kthread_create returned %d", error);
-}
-
-SYSINIT(audit_init, SI_SUB_AUDIT, SI_ORDER_FIRST, audit_init, NULL)
-
-/*
- * audit_rotate_vnode() is called by a user or kernel thread to configure or
- * de-configure auditing on a vnode.  The arguments are the replacement
- * credential and vnode to substitute for the current credential and vnode,
- * if any.  If either is set to NULL, both should be NULL, and this is used
- * to indicate that audit is being disabled.  The real work is done in the
- * audit_worker thread, but audit_rotate_vnode() waits synchronously for that
- * to complete.
- *
- * The vnode should be referenced and opened by the caller.  The credential
- * should be referenced.  audit_rotate_vnode() will own both references as of
- * this call, so the caller should not release either.
- *
- * XXXAUDIT: Review synchronize communication logic.  Really, this is a
- * message queue of depth 1.
- *
- * XXXAUDIT: Enhance the comments below to indicate that we are basically
- * acquiring ownership of the communications queue, inserting our message,
- * and waiting for an acknowledgement.
- */
-void
-audit_rotate_vnode(struct ucred *cred, struct vnode *vp)
-{
-
-	/*
-	 * If other parallel log replacements have been requested, we wait
-	 * until they've finished before continuing.
-	 */
-	mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-	while (audit_replacement_flag != 0) {
-		AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_rotate_vnode: sleeping to wait for "
-		    "flag\n"));
-		cv_wait(&audit_replacement_cv, &audit_mtx);
-		AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_rotate_vnode: woken up (flag %d)\n",
-		    audit_replacement_flag));
-	}
-	audit_replacement_cred = cred;
-	audit_replacement_flag = 1;
-	audit_replacement_vp = vp;
-
-	/*
-	 * Wake up the audit worker to perform the exchange once we
-	 * release the mutex.
-	 */
-	cv_signal(&audit_cv);
-
-	/*
-	 * Wait for the audit_worker to broadcast that a replacement has
-	 * taken place; we know that once this has happened, our vnode
-	 * has been replaced in, so we can return successfully.
-	 */
-	AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_rotate_vnode: waiting for news of "
-	    "replacement\n"));
-	cv_wait(&audit_replacement_cv, &audit_mtx);
-	AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_rotate_vnode: change acknowledged by "
-	    "audit_worker (flag " "now %d)\n", audit_replacement_flag));
-	mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-
-	audit_file_rotate_wait = 0; /* We can now request another rotation */
-}
-
-/*
- * Drain the audit queue and close the log at shutdown.  Note that this can
- * be called both from the system shutdown path and also from audit
- * configuration syscalls, so 'arg' and 'howto' are ignored.
- */
-void
-audit_shutdown(void *arg, int howto)
-{
-
-	audit_rotate_vnode(NULL, NULL);
-}
-
-/*
- * Return the current thread's audit record, if any.
- */
-__inline__ struct kaudit_record *
-currecord(void)
-{
-
-	return (curthread->td_ar);
-}
-
-/*
- * MPSAFE
- *
- * XXXAUDIT: There are a number of races present in the code below due to
- * release and re-grab of the mutex.  The code should be revised to become
- * slightly less racy.
- *
- * XXXAUDIT: Shouldn't there be logic here to sleep waiting on available
- * pre_q space, suspending the system call until there is room?
- */
-struct kaudit_record *
-audit_new(int event, struct thread *td)
-{
-	struct kaudit_record *ar;
-	int no_record;
-
-	/*
-	 * Eventually, there may be certain classes of events that
-	 * we will audit regardless of the audit state at the time
-	 * the record is created.  These events will generally
-	 * correspond to changes in the audit state.  The dummy
-	 * code below is from our first prototype, but may also
-	 * be used in the final version (with modified event numbers).
-	 */
-#if 0
-	if (event != AUDIT_EVENT_FILESTOP && event != AUDIT_EVENT_FILESTART) {
-#endif
-		mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-		no_record = (audit_suspended || !audit_enabled);
-		mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-		if (no_record)
-			return (NULL);
-#if 0
-	}
-#endif
-
-	/*
-	 * Initialize the audit record header.
-	 * XXX: We may want to fail-stop if allocation fails.
-	 * XXX: The number of outstanding uncommitted audit records is
-	 * limited by the number of concurrent threads servicing system
-	 * calls in the kernel.
-	 */
-
-	ar = malloc(sizeof(*ar), M_AUDIT, M_WAITOK);
-	if (ar == NULL)
-		return NULL;
-
-	mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-	audit_pre_q_len++;
-	mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-
-	bzero(ar, sizeof(*ar));
-	ar->k_ar.ar_magic = AUDIT_RECORD_MAGIC;
-	ar->k_ar.ar_event = event;
-	nanotime(&ar->k_ar.ar_starttime);
-
-	/*
-	 * Export the subject credential.
-	 *
-	 * XXXAUDIT: td_ucred access is OK without proc lock, but some other
-	 * fields here may require the proc lock.
-	 */
-	cru2x(td->td_ucred, &ar->k_ar.ar_subj_cred);
-	ar->k_ar.ar_subj_ruid = td->td_ucred->cr_ruid;
-	ar->k_ar.ar_subj_rgid = td->td_ucred->cr_rgid;
-	ar->k_ar.ar_subj_egid = td->td_ucred->cr_groups[0];
-	ar->k_ar.ar_subj_auid = td->td_proc->p_au->ai_auid;
-	ar->k_ar.ar_subj_asid = td->td_proc->p_au->ai_asid;
-	ar->k_ar.ar_subj_pid = td->td_proc->p_pid;
-	ar->k_ar.ar_subj_amask = td->td_proc->p_au->ai_mask;
-	ar->k_ar.ar_subj_term = td->td_proc->p_au->ai_termid;
-
-	bcopy(td->td_proc->p_comm, ar->k_ar.ar_subj_comm, MAXCOMLEN);
-
-	return (ar);
-}
-
-/*
- * MPSAFE
- */
-void
-audit_commit(struct kaudit_record *ar, int error, int retval)
-{
-	int sorf;
-	struct au_mask *aumask;
-
-	if (ar == NULL)
-		return;
-
-	/*
-	 * Decide whether to commit the audit record by checking the
-	 * error value from the system call and using the appropriate
-	 * audit mask.
-	 *
-	 * XXXAUDIT: Synchronize access to audit_nae_mask?
-	 */
-	if (ar->k_ar.ar_subj_auid == AU_DEFAUDITID)
-		aumask = &audit_nae_mask;
-	else
-		aumask = &ar->k_ar.ar_subj_amask;
-	
-	if (error)
-		sorf = AU_PRS_FAILURE;
-	else
-		sorf = AU_PRS_SUCCESS;
-
-	switch(ar->k_ar.ar_event) {
-
-	case AUE_OPEN_RWTC:
-		/* The open syscall always writes a AUE_OPEN_RWTC event; change
-		 * it to the proper type of event based on the flags and the 
-		 * error value.
-		 */
-		ar->k_ar.ar_event = flags_and_error_to_openevent(
-		    ar->k_ar.ar_arg_fflags, error);
-		break;
-
-	case AUE_SYSCTL:
-		ar->k_ar.ar_event = ctlname_to_sysctlevent(
-		    ar->k_ar.ar_arg_ctlname, ar->k_ar.ar_valid_arg);
-		break;
-
-	case AUE_AUDITON:
-		/* Convert the auditon() command to an event */
-		ar->k_ar.ar_event = auditon_command_event(ar->k_ar.ar_arg_cmd);
-		break;
-	}
-
-	if (au_preselect(ar->k_ar.ar_event, aumask, sorf) != 0)
-		ar->k_ar_commit |= AR_COMMIT_KERNEL;
-
-	if ((ar->k_ar_commit & (AR_COMMIT_USER | AR_COMMIT_KERNEL)) == 0) {
-		mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-		audit_pre_q_len--;
-		mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-		audit_record_free(ar);
-		return;
-	}
-
-	ar->k_ar.ar_errno = error;
-	ar->k_ar.ar_retval = retval;
-
-	/*
-	 * We might want to do some system-wide post-filtering
-	 * here at some point.
-	 */
-
-	/*
-	 * Timestamp system call end.
-	 */
-	nanotime(&ar->k_ar.ar_endtime);
-
-	mtx_lock(&audit_mtx);
-
-	/*
-	 * Note: it could be that some records initiated while audit was
-	 * enabled should still be committed?
-	 */
-	if (audit_suspended || !audit_enabled) {
-		audit_pre_q_len--;
-		mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-		audit_record_free(ar);
-		return;
-	}
-	
-	/*
-	 * Constrain the number of committed audit records based on
-	 * the configurable parameter.
-	 */
-	while (audit_q_len >= audit_qctrl.aq_hiwater) {
-		AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_commit: sleeping to wait for "
-		   "audit queue to drain below high water mark\n"));
-		cv_wait(&audit_commit_cv, &audit_mtx);
-		AUDIT_PRINTF(("audit_commit: woke up waiting for "
-		   "audit queue draining\n"));
-	}
-
-	TAILQ_INSERT_TAIL(&audit_q, ar, k_q);
-	audit_q_len++;
-	audit_pre_q_len--;
-	cv_signal(&audit_cv);
-	mtx_unlock(&audit_mtx);
-}
-
-/*
- * audit_syscall_enter() is called on entry to eatch system call.  It is
- * responsible for deciding whether or not to audit the call (preselection),
- * and if so, allocating a per-thread audit record.  audit_new() will fill in
- * basic thread/credential properties.
- */
-void
-audit_syscall_enter(unsigned short code, struct thread *td)
-{
-	int audit_event;
-	struct au_mask *aumask;
-
-	KASSERT(td->td_ar == NULL, ("audit_syscall_enter: td->td_ar != NULL"));
-
-	/*
-	 * In FreeBSD, each ABI has its own system call table, and hence
-	 * mapping of system call codes to audit events.  Convert the code to
-	 * an audit event identifier using the process system call table
-	 * reference.  In Darwin, there's only one, so we use the global
-	 * symbol for the system call table.
-	 *
-	 * XXXAUDIT: Should we audit that a bad system call was made, and if
-	 * so, how?
-	 */
-	if (code >= td->td_proc->p_sysent->sv_size)
-		return;
-
-	audit_event = td->td_proc->p_sysent->sv_table[code].sy_auevent;
-	if (audit_event == AUE_NULL)
-		return;
-
-	/*
-	 * Check which audit mask to use; either the kernel non-attributable
-	 * event mask or the process audit mask.
-	 */
-	if (td->td_proc->p_au->ai_auid == AU_DEFAUDITID)
-		aumask = &audit_nae_mask;
-	else
-		aumask = &td->td_proc->p_au->ai_mask;
-	
-	/*
-	 * Allocate an audit record, if preselection allows it, and store 
-	 * in the thread for later use.
-	 */
-	if (au_preselect(audit_event, aumask,
-			AU_PRS_FAILURE | AU_PRS_SUCCESS)) {
-		/*
-		 * If we're out of space and need to suspend unprivileged
-		 * processes, do that here rather than trying to allocate
-		 * another audit record.
-		 *
-		 * XXXRW: We might wish to be able to continue here in the
-		 * future, if the system recovers.  That should be possible
-		 * by means of checking the condition in a loop around
-		 * cv_wait().  It might be desirable to reevaluate whether an
-		 * audit record is still required for this event by
-		 * re-calling au_preselect().
-		 */
-		if (audit_in_failure && suser(td) != 0) {
-			cv_wait(&audit_fail_cv, &audit_mtx);
-			panic("audit_failing_stop: thread continued");
-		}
-		td->td_ar = audit_new(audit_event, td);
-	} else
-		td->td_ar = NULL;
-}
-
-/*
- * audit_syscall_exit() is called from the return of every system call, or in
- * the event of exit1(), during the execution of exit1().  It is responsible
- * for committing the audit record, if any, along with return condition.
- */
-void
-audit_syscall_exit(int error, struct thread *td)
-{
-	int retval;
-
-	/*
-	 * Commit the audit record as desired; once we pass the record
-	 * into audit_commit(), the memory is owned by the audit
-	 * subsystem.
-	 * The return value from the system call is stored on the user
-	 * thread. If there was an error, the return value is set to -1,
-	 * imitating the behavior of the cerror routine.
-	 */
-	if (error)
-		retval = -1;

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