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Special Forums Cybersecurity How do i find all the commands entered by root on any terminal Post 302249595 by Reboot on Tuesday 21st of October 2008 04:47:17 PM
Old 10-21-2008
Hi.. Smiling Dragon You are right...... Smilie
It would be a bit tough to distinguish one session from another when two people logged in as root at the same time....Smilie

So, for that I have a solution......
First make Sure that you have sufficient space in / then do following :

1. Make a directory /record.
2. Put following entries in /.bashrc file:
x=`tty | cut -c 6- |tr '[/]' '[.]'`
if [ ! -d /record ] ; then
mkdir -p /record
fi
if [ ! -f /record/$x ] ; then
touch /record/$x
fi
echo >> /record/$x
echo " *********************************** " >> /record/$x
echo >> /record/$x
script -a /record/$x

Now, when anyone will log in to the system each time you are going to get his commands recorded to /record/pts.# file along with time and date of login. Where "#" is the terminal number given by tty command.The commands will get appended to this file (not over written).

So, you will have to monitor these files in /record directory regularlly so as to limit their size and growth.
No doubt you will have to set default shell as Bash.

Hope this will help..... Smilie

Cheers.... Smilie......Smilie

Last edited by Reboot; 10-21-2008 at 05:56 PM..
 

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SETUID(1)                                                     General Commands Manual                                                    SETUID(1)

NAME
setuid - run a command with a different uid. SYNOPSIS
setuid username|uid command [ args ] DESCRIPTION
Setuid changes user id, then executes the specified command. Unlike some versions of su(1), this program doesn't ever ask for a password when executed with effective uid=root. This program doesn't change the environment; it only changes the uid and then uses execvp() to find the command in the path, and execute it. (If the command is a script, execvp() passes the command name to /bin/sh for processing.) For example, setuid some_user $SHELL can be used to start a shell running as another user. Setuid is useful inside scripts that are being run by a setuid-root user -- such as a script invoked with super, so that the script can execute some commands using the uid of the original user, instead of root. This allows unsafe commands (such as editors and pagers) to be used in a non-root mode inside a super script. For example, an operator with permission to modify a certain protected_file could use a super command that simply does: cp protected_file temp_file setuid $ORIG_USER ${EDITOR:-/bin/vi} temp_file cp temp_file protected_file (Note: don't use this example directly. If the temp_file can somehow be replaced by another user, as might be the case if it's kept in a temporary directory, there will be a race condition in the time between editing the temporary file and copying it back to the protected file.) AUTHOR
Will Deich local SETUID(1)
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