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Special Forums Cybersecurity How do i find all the commands entered by root on any terminal Post 302249114 by Smiling Dragon on Monday 20th of October 2008 04:34:20 PM
Old 10-20-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by Reboot
Smilie You can set the default login shell as Bash. Smilie
This shell is having the tool known as History. Smilie
Anyone logged with this shell if execute any command then that command will get stored and appended to /.bash_history file.
You can make a script which will mail you the contents of /.bash_history
at your will and you will have all commands executed by root with
you...... Smilie
Ah, but what happens if you have two people logged in as root at the same time? It would be a bit tough to distinguish one session from another...

I suppose you could use 'script "/some/log/dir`who am i | awk '{ print $1 }'`-`date`"' ...

As for moving the users over to another access model, set up the 'new way' and show the users. You can reassure them that they will retain their su rights to root for now to give them a chance to evaluate the new method. Watch the sulog file and contact the person each time they use su to ask what they tried to do via sudo but couldn't. You can then fix whatever it was (or remind them that the access will be taken away and they should be finidng all the issues before it's too late).
Once you have all the problems cleared up, change the password to something only you know.

If you meet resistance, talk to your risk team and show them the very big risk involved in having more than one person able to do work as root without being able to trace who did what. Risk guys hate being unable to trace things back to a single person.
 

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sulog(4)							   File Formats 							  sulog(4)

NAME
sulog - su command log file SYNOPSIS
/var/adm/sulog DESCRIPTION
The sulog file is a record of all attempts by users on the system to execute the su(1M) command. Each time su(1M) is executed, an entry is added to the sulog file. Each entry in the sulog file is a single line of the form: SU date time result port user-newuser where date The month and date su(1M) was executed. date is displayed in the form mm/dd where mm is the month number and dd is the day number in the month. time The time su(1M) was executed. time is displayed in the form HH/MM where HH is the hour number (24 hour system) and MM is the minute number. result The result of the su(1M) command. A ` + ' sign is displayed in this field if the su attempt was successful; otherwise a ` - ' sign is displayed. port The name of the terminal device from which su(1M) was executed. user The user id of the user executing the su(1M) command. newuser The user id being switched to with su(1M). EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample sulog file. Here is a sample sulog file: SU 02/25 09:29 + console root-sys SU 02/25 09:32 + pts/3 user1-root SU 03/02 08:03 + pts/5 user1-root SU 03/03 08:19 + pts/5 user1-root SU 03/09 14:24 - pts/5 guest3-root SU 03/09 14:24 - pts/5 guest3-root SU 03/14 08:31 + pts/4 user1-root FILES
/var/adm/sulog su log file /etc/default/su contains the default location of sulog SEE ALSO
su(1M) SunOS 5.10 6 Jun 1994 sulog(4)
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