1SLAPO-ACCESSLOG(5) File Formats Manual SLAPO-ACCESSLOG(5)
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6 slapo-accesslog - Access Logging overlay to slapd
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9 /etc/openldap/slapd.conf
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12 The Access Logging overlay can be used to record all accesses to a
13 given backend database on another database. This allows all of the
14 activity on a given database to be reviewed using arbitrary LDAP
15 queries, instead of just logging to local flat text files. Configura‐
16 tion options are available for selecting a subset of operation types to
17 log, and to automatically prune older log records from the logging
18 database. Log records are stored with audit schema (see below) to
19 assure their readability whether viewed as LDIF or in raw form.
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22 These slapd.conf options apply to the Access Logging overlay. They
23 should appear after the overlay directive.
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25 logdb <suffix>
26 Specify the suffix of a database to be used for storing the log
27 records. The specified database must be defined elsewhere in
28 the configuration. The access controls on the log database
29 should prevent general access. The suffix entry of the log data‐
30 base will be created automatically by this overlay. The log
31 entries will be generated as the immediate children of the suf‐
32 fix entry.
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34 logops <operations>
35 Specify which types of operations to log. The valid operation
36 types are abandon, add, bind, compare, delete, extended, modify,
37 modrdn, search, and unbind. Aliases for common sets of opera‐
38 tions are also available:
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40 writes add, delete, modify, modrdn
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42 reads compare, search
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44 session
45 abandon, bind, unbind
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47 all all operations
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49 logbase <operations> <baseDN>
50 Specify a set of operations that will only be logged if they
51 occur under a specific subtree of the database. The operation
52 types are as above for the logops setting, and delimited by a
53 '|' character.
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55 logold <filter>
56 Specify a filter for matching against Deleted and Modified
57 entries. If the entry matches the filter, the old contents of
58 the entry will be logged along with the current request.
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60 logoldattr <attr> ...
61 Specify a list of attributes whose old contents are always
62 logged in Modify and ModRDN requests. Usually only the contents
63 of attributes that were actually modified will be logged; by
64 default no old attributes are logged for ModRDN requests.
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66 logpurge <age> <interval>
67 Specify the maximum age for log entries to be retained in the
68 database, and how often to scan the database for old entries.
69 Both the age and interval are specified as a time span in days,
70 hours, minutes, and seconds. The time format is [ddd+]hh:mm[:ss]
71 i.e., the days and seconds components are optional but hours and
72 minutes are required. Except for days, which can be up to 5 dig‐
73 its, each numeric field must be exactly two digits. For example
74 logpurge 2+00:00 1+00:00
75 would specify that the log database should be scanned every day
76 for old entries, and entries older than two days should be
77 deleted. When using a log database that supports ordered index‐
78 ing on generalizedTime attributes, specifying an eq index on the
79 reqStart attribute will greatly benefit the performance of the
80 purge operation.
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82 logsuccess TRUE | FALSE
83 If set to TRUE then log records will only be generated for suc‐
84 cessful requests, i.e., requests that produce a result code of 0
85 (LDAP_SUCCESS). If FALSE, log records are generated for all
86 requests whether they succeed or not. The default is FALSE.
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90 database bdb
91 suffix dc=example,dc=com
92 ...
93 overlay accesslog
94 logdb cn=log
95 logops writes reads
96 logbase search|compare ou=testing,dc=example,dc=com
97 logold (objectclass=person)
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99 database bdb
100 suffix cn=log
101 ...
102 index reqStart eq
103 access to *
104 by dn.base="cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com" read
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108 The accesslog overlay utilizes the "audit" schema described herein.
109 This schema is specifically designed for accesslog auditing and is not
110 intended to be used otherwise. It is also noted that the schema
111 described here is a work in progress, and hence subject to change with‐
112 out notice. The schema is loaded automatically by the overlay.
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114 The schema includes a number of object classes and associated attribute
115 types as described below.
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117 There is a basic auditObject class from which two additional classes,
118 auditReadObject and auditWriteObject are derived. Object classes for
119 each type of LDAP operation are further derived from these classes.
120 This object class hierarchy is designed to allow flexible yet efficient
121 searches of the log based on either a specific operation type's class,
122 or on more general classifications. The definition of the auditObject
123 class is as follows:
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125 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.1
126 NAME 'auditObject'
127 DESC 'OpenLDAP request auditing'
128 SUP top STRUCTURAL
129 MUST ( reqStart $ reqType $ reqSession )
130 MAY ( reqDN $ reqAuthzID $ reqControls $ reqRespControls $
131 reqEnd $ reqResult $ reqMessage $ reqReferral ) )
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133 Note that all of the OIDs used in the logging schema currently reside
134 under the OpenLDAP Experimental branch. It is anticipated that they
135 will migrate to a Standard branch in the future.
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137 An overview of the attributes follows: reqStart and reqEnd provide the
138 start and end time of the operation, respectively. They use general‐
139 izedTime syntax. The reqStart attribute is also used as the RDN for
140 each log entry.
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142 The reqType attribute is a simple string containing the type of opera‐
143 tion being logged, e.g. add, delete, search, etc. For extended opera‐
144 tions, the type also includes the OID of the extended operation, e.g.
145 extended(1.1.1.1)
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147 The reqSession attribute is an implementation-specific identifier that
148 is common to all the operations associated with the same LDAP session.
149 Currently this is slapd's internal connection ID, stored in decimal.
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151 The reqDN attribute is the distinguishedName of the target of the oper‐
152 ation. E.g., for a Bind request, this is the Bind DN. For an Add
153 request, this is the DN of the entry being added. For a Search request,
154 this is the base DN of the search.
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156 The reqAuthzID attribute is the distinguishedName of the user that per‐
157 formed the operation. This will usually be the same name as was estab‐
158 lished at the start of a session by a Bind request (if any) but may be
159 altered in various circumstances.
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161 The reqControls and reqRespControls attributes carry any controls sent
162 by the client on the request and returned by the server in the
163 response, respectively. The attribute values are just uninterpreted
164 octet strings.
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166 The reqResult attribute is the numeric LDAP result code of the opera‐
167 tion, indicating either success or a particular LDAP error code. An
168 error code may be accompanied by a text error message which will be
169 recorded in the reqMessage attribute.
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171 The reqReferral attribute carries any referrals that were returned with
172 the result of the request.
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174 Operation-specific classes are defined with additional attributes to
175 carry all of the relevant parameters associated with the operation:
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177
178 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.4
179 NAME 'auditAbandon'
180 DESC 'Abandon operation'
181 SUP auditObject STRUCTURAL
182 MUST reqId )
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184 For the Abandon operation the reqId attribute contains the message ID
185 of the request that was abandoned.
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187
188 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.5
189 NAME 'auditAdd'
190 DESC 'Add operation'
191 SUP auditWriteObject STRUCTURAL
192 MUST reqMod )
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194 The Add class inherits from the auditWriteObject class. The Add and
195 Modify classes are very similar. The reqMod attribute carries all of
196 the attributes of the original entry being added. (Or in the case of a
197 Modify operation, all of the modifications being performed.) The values
198 are formatted as
199 attribute:<+|-|=|#> [ value]
200 Where '+' indicates an Add of a value, '-' for Delete, '=' for Replace,
201 and '#' for Increment. In an Add operation, all of the reqMod values
202 will have the '+' designator.
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204 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.6
205 NAME 'auditBind'
206 DESC 'Bind operation'
207 SUP auditObject STRUCTURAL
208 MUST ( reqVersion $ reqMethod ) )
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210 The Bind class includes the reqVersion attribute which contains the
211 LDAP protocol version specified in the Bind as well as the reqMethod
212 attribute which contains the Bind Method used in the Bind. This will be
213 the string SIMPLE for LDAP Simple Binds or SASL(<mech>) for SASL Binds.
214 Note that unless configured as a global overlay, only Simple Binds
215 using DNs that reside in the current database will be logged.
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218 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.7
219 NAME 'auditCompare'
220 DESC 'Compare operation'
221 SUP auditObject STRUCTURAL
222 MUST reqAssertion )
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224 For the Compare operation the reqAssertion attribute carries the
225 Attribute Value Assertion used in the compare request.
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228 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.8
229 NAME 'auditDelete'
230 DESC 'Delete operation'
231 SUP auditWriteObject STRUCTURAL
232 MAY reqOld )
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234 The Delete operation needs no further parameters. However, the reqOld
235 attribute may optionally be used to record the contents of the entry
236 prior to its deletion. The values are formatted as
237 attribute: value
238 The reqOld attribute is only populated if the entry being deleted
239 matches the configured logold filter.
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242 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.9
243 NAME 'auditModify'
244 DESC 'Modify operation'
245 SUP auditWriteObject STRUCTURAL
246 MAY reqOld MUST reqMod )
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248 The Modify operation contains a description of modifications in the
249 reqMod attribute, which was already described above in the Add opera‐
250 tion. It may optionally contain the previous contents of any modified
251 attributes in the reqOld attribute, using the same format as described
252 above for the Delete operation. The reqOld attribute is only populated
253 if the entry being modified matches the configured logold filter.
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255
256 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.10
257 NAME 'auditModRDN'
258 DESC 'ModRDN operation'
259 SUP auditWriteObject STRUCTURAL
260 MUST ( reqNewRDN $ reqDeleteOldRDN )
261 MAY ( reqNewSuperior $ reqOld ) )
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263 The ModRDN class uses the reqNewRDN attribute to carry the new RDN of
264 the request. The reqDeleteOldRDN attribute is a Boolean value showing
265 TRUE if the old RDN was deleted from the entry, or FALSE if the old RDN
266 was preserved. The reqNewSuperior attribute carries the DN of the new
267 parent entry if the request specified the new parent. The reqOld
268 attribute is only populated if the entry being modified matches the
269 configured logold filter and contains attributes in the logoldattr
270 list.
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273 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.11
274 NAME 'auditSearch'
275 DESC 'Search operation'
276 SUP auditReadObject STRUCTURAL
277 MUST ( reqScope $ reqDerefAliases $ reqAttrsOnly )
278 MAY ( reqFilter $ reqAttr $ reqEntries $ reqSizeLimit $
279 reqTimeLimit ) )
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281 For the Search class the reqScope attribute contains the scope of the
282 original search request, using the values specified for the LDAP URL
283 format. I.e. base, one, sub, or subord. The reqDerefAliases attribute
284 is one of never, finding, searching, or always, denoting how aliases
285 will be processed during the search. The reqAttrsOnly attribute is a
286 Boolean value showing TRUE if only attribute names were requested, or
287 FALSE if attributes and their values were requested. The reqFilter
288 attribute carries the filter used in the search request. The reqAttr
289 attribute lists the requested attributes if specific attributes were
290 requested. The reqEntries attribute is the integer count of how many
291 entries were returned by this search request. The reqSizeLimit and
292 reqTimeLimit attributes indicate what limits were requested on the
293 search operation.
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295
296 ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.12
297 NAME 'auditExtended'
298 DESC 'Extended operation'
299 SUP auditObject STRUCTURAL
300 MAY reqData )
301
302 The Extended class represents an LDAP Extended Operation. As noted
303 above, the actual OID of the operation is included in the reqType
304 attribute of the parent class. If any optional data was provided with
305 the request, it will be contained in the reqData attribute as an unin‐
306 terpreted octet string.
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310 The Access Log implemented by this overlay may be used for a variety of
311 other tasks, e.g. as a ChangeLog for a replication mechanism, as well
312 as for security/audit logging purposes.
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316 /etc/openldap/slapd.conf
317 default slapd configuration file
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320 slapd.conf(5), slapd-config(5).
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324 This module was written in 2005 by Howard Chu of Symas Corporation.
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328OpenLDAP 2.4.40 2014/09/20 SLAPO-ACCESSLOG(5)