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Home/ Questions/Q 8652297
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 12, 20262026-06-12T14:16:37+00:00 2026-06-12T14:16:37+00:00

We’ve got a situation where it would be advantageous to limit write access to

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We’ve got a situation where it would be advantageous to limit write access to a logging directory to a specific subset of user processes. These particular processes (say, for example, telnet and the like) have been modified by us to generate a logging record whenever a significant user action takes place (like a remote connection, etc). What we do not want is for the user to manually create these records by copying and editing existing logging records.

syslog comes close but still allows the user to generate spurious records, SELinux seems plausible but has a terrible reputation of being an unmanageable beast.

Any insight is appreciated.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-12T14:16:38+00:00Added an answer on June 12, 2026 at 2:16 pm

    Run a local logging daemon as root. Have it listen on an Unix domain socket (typically /var/run/my-logger.socket or similar).

    Write a simple logging library, where event messages are sent to the locally running daemon via the Unix domain socket. With each event, also send the process credentials via an ancillary message. See man 7 unix for details.

    When the local logging daemon receives a message, it checks for the ancillary message, and if none, discards the message. The uid and gid of the credentials tell exactly who is running the process that has sent the logging request; these are verified by the kernel itself, so they cannot be spoofed (unless you have root privileges).

    Here comes the clever bit: the daemon also checks the PID in the credentials, and based on its value, /proc/PID/exe. It is a symlink to the actual process binary being executed by the process that send the message, something the user cannot fake. To be able to fake a message, they’d have to overwrite the actual binaries with their own, and that should require root privileges.

    (There is a possible race condition: a user may craft a special program that does the same, and immediately exec()s a binary they know to be allowed. To avoid that race, you may need to have the daemon respond after checking the credentials, and the logging client send another message (with credentials), so the daemon can verify the credentials are still the same, and the /proc/PID/exe symlink has not changed. I would personally use this to check the message veracity (by the logger asking for confirmation for the event, with a random cookie, and have the requester respond with both the checksum and the cookie whether the event checksum is correct. Including the random cookie should make it impossible to stuff the confirmation in the socket queue before exec().)

    With the pid you can do also further checks. For example, you can trace the process parentage to see how the human user has connected by tracking parents till you detect a login via ssh or console. It’s a bit tedious, since you’ll need to parse /proc/PID/stat or /proc/PID/status files, and nonportable. OSX and BSDs have a sysctl call you can use to find out the parent process ID, so you can make it portable by writing a platform-specific parent_process_of(pid_t pid) function.

    This approach will make sure your logging daemon knows exactly 1) which executable the logging request came from, and 2) which user (and how connected, if you do the process tracing) ran the command.

    As the local logging daemon is running as root, it can log the events to file(s) in a root-only directory, and/or forward the messages to a remote machine.

    Obviously, this is not exactly lightweight, but assuming you have less than a dozen events per second, the logging overhead should be completely neglible.

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