Solaris Trusted Extensions Administrator's Procedures

Audit Management by Role in Trusted Extensions

Auditing in Trusted Extensions requires the same planning as in the Solaris OS. For details about planning, see Chapter 29, Planning for Solaris Auditing, in System Administration Guide: Security Services.

Role Setup for Audit Administration

In Trusted Extensions, auditing is the responsibility of two roles. The System Administrator role sets up the disks and the network of audit storage. The Security Administrator role decides what is to be audited, and specifies the information in the audit configuration files. As in the Solaris OS, you create the roles in software. The rights profiles for these two roles are provided. The initial setup team created the Security Administrator role during initial configuration. For details, see Create the Security Administrator Role in Trusted Extensions.


Note –

A system only records the security-relevant events that the audit configuration files configure the system to record (that is, by preselection). Therefore, any subsequent audit review can only consider the events that have been recorded. As a result of misconfiguration, attempts to breach the security of the system can go undetected, or the administrator is unable to detect the user who is responsible for an attempted breach of security. Administrators must regularly analyze audit trails to check for breaches of security.


Audit Tasks in Trusted Extensions

The procedures to configure and manage auditing in Trusted Extensions differ slightly from Solaris procedures:

Audit Tasks of the Security Administrator

The following tasks are security-relevant, and are therefore the responsibility of the security administrator. Follow the Solaris instructions, but use the Trusted Extensions administrative tools.

Task 

For Solaris Instructions 

Trusted Extensions Instructions 

Configure audit files. 

Configuring Audit Files (Task Map) in System Administration Guide: Security Services

Use the trusted editor. For details, see How to Edit Administrative Files in Trusted Extensions.

(Optional) Change default audit policy. 

How to Configure Audit Policy in System Administration Guide: Security Services

Use the trusted editor. 

Disable and re-enable auditing. 

How to Disable the Audit Service in System Administration Guide: Security Services

Auditing is enabled by default. 

Manage auditing. 

Solaris Auditing (Task Map) in System Administration Guide: Security Services

Use the trusted editor. 

Ignore per-zone audit tasks. 

Audit Tasks of the System Administrator

The following tasks are the responsibility of the system administrator. Follow the Solaris instructions, but use the Trusted Extensions administrative tools.

Task 

For Solaris Instructions 

Trusted Extensions Instructions 

Create audit partitions and an audit administration server, export audit partitions, and mount audit partitions. 

Create an audit_warn alias.

Configuring and Enabling the Audit Service (Tasks) in System Administration Guide: Security Services

Perform all administration in the global zone. 

Use the trusted editor. 

Copy or loopback mount customized audit files to labeled zones. 

Configuring the Audit Service in Zones (Tasks) in System Administration Guide: Security Services

Copy the files to the first labeled zone, then copy the zone. 

Or, loopback mount or copy the files to every labeled zone after the zones are created. 

(Optional) Distribute audit configuration files. 

No instructions 

See How to Copy Files From Portable Media in Trusted Extensions

Manage auditing. 

Solaris Auditing (Task Map) in System Administration Guide: Security Services

Ignore per-zone audit tasks. 

Select audit records by label.

How to Select Audit Events From the Audit Trail in System Administration Guide: Security Services

To select records by label, use the auditreduce command with the -l option.