## ## Samba-EventLog-HOWTO.txt ## Brian Moran <bmoran@centeris.com> ## ## Feature Introduced in Samba 3.0.21 ## Samba and Eventlogs =================== Samba servers now support event logs -- this means that if Samba is configured correctly, the usual administration tools like event viewer will work against a Samba server. To minimally configure Samba to publish event logs, the eventlogs to list must be specified in smb.conf, and eventlog entries must be written to those eventlogs. Optionally, a message file can be registered for each of the eventlog 'sources' to pretty-print the eventlog messages in the eventlog viewer. Configuring smb.conf ==================== To specify the list of eventlogs the eventlog list command is used. An example which will show four eventlogs is eventlog list = Application System Security SyslogLinux When Samba initially starts, it looks to see if the eventlog directory, and a particular log exists; if not, the directory and file are created under LOCK_DIR Writing EventLog Records ======================== The eventlogadm command is used to write records into a particular eventlog. Eventlogadm expects records to be on STDIN in the following format LEN: 0 RS1: 1699505740 RCN: 0 TMG: 1128631322 TMW: 1128631322 EID: 1000 ETP: INFO ECT: 0 RS2: 0 CRN: 0 USL: 0 SRC: cron SRN: dmlinux STR: (root) CMD ( rm -f /var/spool/cron/lastrun/cron.hourly) DAT: These fields closely mirror the eventlog structures used by the APIs. The definitions of the fields are - LEN: <integer> The length field is calculated by the eventlogadm program based on the rest of the information in the record. Zero works well here. - RS1: 1699505740 A "magic number", the primary purpose of which seems to be to be able to find eventlog records in a sea of binary data - TMG: <integer> The time the eventlog record was generated; format is the number of seconds since 00:00:00 January 1, 1970, UTC - TMW: <integer> The time the eventlog record was written; format is the number of seconds since 00:00:00 January 1, 1970, UTC - EID: <integer> The eventlog ID -- used as a index to a message string in a message DLSamba and Eventlogs - ETP: <string> The event type -- one of INFO, ERROR, WARNING, AUDIT SUCCESS, AUDIT FAILURE - ECT: <integer> The event category; this depends on the message file -- primarily used as a means of filtering in the eventlog viewer - RS2: 0 Another reserved field - CRN: 0 Yet another reserved field - USL: <integer> Typically would contain the length of the SID of the user object associated with this event. This is not supported now, so leave this zero. - SRC: <string> The source name associated with the event log, e.g. "cron" or "smbd". If a message file is used with an event log, there will be a registry entry for associating this source name with a message file DLL - SRN: <string> The name of the machine on which the eventlog was generated. This is typically the host name - STR: <string> The text associated with the eventlog. Note that there may be more than one strings in a record - DAT: <string> Eventlog records can have binary information associated with them. DAT only supports ASCII strings however Typically, one would set up a program to gather events, format them into records, and pipe them into eventlogadm for a particular eventlog: # tail -f /var/log/messages |\ my_program_to_parse_into_eventlog_records |\ eventlogadm SyslogLinux Note that individual records are separated on the input by one or more blank lines. In this manner, eventlogadm will just wait for more input, writing to the underlying log files as necessary. Deciphering EventLog entries on the Client ========================================== To set up an eventlog source (which is used by the eventlog viewer program to pretty-print eventlog records), create a message file DLL, then use the eventlogadm program to write the appropriate eventlog registry entries: # eventlogadm -o addsource Application MyApplication \ %SystemRoot%/system32/MyApplication.dll This will add the key [HKLM/System/CurrentControlSet/services/Eventlog/Application/MyApplication] and to that key add value "MyApplication/EventLogMessageFile" with a string of %SystemRoot%/system32/MyApplication.dll If there happens to be a share called [C$] on your samba server, and in that share there's a Windows/system32/MyApplication.dll file, it will be read by the eventlog viewer application when displaying eventlog records to pretty-print your eventlog entries.