BART(1M)BART(1M)NAMEbart - basic audit reporting tool
SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/bart create [ -n] [-R root_directory]
[-r rules_file | -]
/usr/bin/bart create [-n] [-R root_directory] -I
[file_name]...
/usr/bin/bart compare [-i attribute ] [-p]
[-r rules_file | -] control-manifest test-manifest
DESCRIPTIONbart(1M) is a tool that performs a file-level check of the software
contents of a system.
You can also specify the files to track and the types of discrepancies
to flag by means of a rules file, bart_rules. See bart_rules(4).
The bart utility performs two basic functions:
bart create
The manifest generator tool takes a file-level snapshot
of a system. The output is a catalog of file attributes
referred to as a manifest. See bart_manifest(4).
You can specify that the list of files be cataloged in
three ways. Use bart create with no options, specify
the files by name on the command line, or create a
rules file with directives that specify which the files
to monitor. See bart_rules(4).
By default, the manifest generator catalogs all
attributes of all files in the root (/) file system.
File systems mounted on the root file system are cata‐
loged only if they are of the same type as the root
file system.
For example, /, /usr, and /opt are separate UFS file
systems. /usr and /opt are mounted on /. Therefore,
all three file systems are cataloged. However, /tmp,
also mounted on /, is not cataloged because it is a
TMPFS file system. Mounted CD-ROMs are not cataloged
since they are HSFS file systems.
bart compare
The report tool compares two manifests. The output is a
list of per-file attribute discrepancies. These dis‐
crepancies are the differences between two manifests: a
control manifest and a test manifest.
A discrepancy is a change to any attribute for a given
file cataloged by both manifests. A new file or a
deleted file in a manifest is reported as a discrep‐
ancy.
The reporting mechanism provides two types of output:
verbose and programmatic. Verbose output is localized
and presented on multiple lines, while programmatic
output is more easily parsable by other programs. See
OUTPUT.
By default, the report tool generates verbose output
where all discrepancies are reported except for modi‐
fied directory timestamps (dirmtime attribute).
To ensure consistent and accurate comparison results,
control-manifest and test-manifest must be built with
the same rules file.
Use the rules file to ignore specified files or subtrees when you gen‐
erate a manifest or compare two manifests. Users can compare manifests
from different perspectives by re-running the bart compare command with
different rules files.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-i attribute ...
Specify the file attributes to be ignored glob‐
ally. Specify attributes as a comma separated
list.
This option produces the same behavior as supply‐
ing the file attributes to a global IGNORE keyword
in the rules file. See bart_rules(4).
-I [file_name...]
Specify the input list of files. The file list can
be specified at the command line or read from
standard input.
-n
Prevent computation of content signatures for all
regular files in the file list.
-p
Display manifest comparison output in ``program‐
matic mode,'' which is suitable for programmatic
parsing. The output is not localized.
-r rules_file
Use rules_file to specify which files and directo‐
ries to catalog, and to define which file
attribute discrepancies to flag. If rules_file is
-, then the rules are read from standard input.
See bart_rules(4) for the definition of the syn‐
tax.
-R root_directory
Specify the root directory for the manifest. All
paths specified by the rules, and all paths
reported in the manifest, are relative to
root_directory.
Note -
The root file system of any non-global zones
must not be referenced with the -R option. Doing
so might damage the global zone's file system,
might compromise the security of the global
zone, and might damage the non-global zone's
file system. See zones(5).
OPERANDSbart allows quoting of operands. This is particularly important for
white-space appearing in subtree and subtree modifier specifications.
The following operands are supported:
control-manifest
Specify the manifest created by bart create on the
control system.
test-manifest
Specify the manifest created by bart create on the
test system.
OUTPUT
The bart create and bart compare commands write output to standard out‐
put, and write error messages to standard error.
The bart create command generates a system manifest. See bart_mani‐
fest(4).
When the bart compare command compares two system manifests, it gener‐
ates a list of file differences. By default, the comparison output is
localized. However, if the -p option is specified, the output is gen‐
erated in a form that is suitable for programmatic manipulation.
Default Format
filename
attribute control:xxxx test:yyyy
filename
Name of the file that differs between control-manifest and
test-manifest. For file names that contain embedded white‐
space or newline characters, see bart_manifest(4).
attribute
The name of the file attribute that differs between the
manifests that are compared. xxxx is the attribute value
from control-manifest, and yyyy is the attribute value
from test-manifest. When discrepancies for multiple
attributes occur for the same file, each difference is
noted on a separate line.
The following attributes are supported:
acl
ACL attributes for the file. For a file with
ACL attributes, this field contains the output
from acltotext().
all
All attributes.
contents
Checksum value of the file. This attribute is
only specified for regular files. If you turn
off context checking or if checksums cannot be
computed, the value of this field is -.
dest
Destination of a symbolic link.
devnode
Value of the device node. This attribute is
for character device files and block device
files only.
dirmtime
Modification time in seconds since 00:00:00
UTC, January 1, 1970 for directories.
gid
Numerical group ID of the owner of this entry.
lnmtime
Creation time for links.
mode
Octal number that represents the permissions
of the file.
mtime
Modification time in seconds since 00:00:00
UTC, January 1, 1970 for files.
size
File size in bytes.
type
Type of file.
uid
Numerical user ID of the owner of this entry.
The following default output shows the attribute differences for the
/etc/passwd file. The output indicates that the size, mtime, and con‐
tents attributes have changed.
/etc/passwd:
size control:74 test:81
mtime control:3c165879 test:3c165979
contents control:daca28ae0de97afd7a6b91fde8d57afa
test:84b2b32c4165887355317207b48a6ec7
Programmatic Format
filename attribute control-val test-val [attribute control-val test-val]*
filename
Same as filename in the default format.
attribute control-val test-val
A description of the file attributes that differ between the con‐
trol and test manifests for each file. Each entry includes the
attribute value from each manifest. See bart_manifest(4) for the
definition of the attributes.
Each line of the programmatic output describes all attribute differ‐
ences for a single file.
The following programmatic output shows the attribute differences for
the /etc/passwd file. The output indicates that the size, mtime, and
contents attributes have changed.
/etc/passwd size 74 81 mtime 3c165879 3c165979
contents daca28ae0de97afd7a6b91fde8d57afa 84b2b32c4165887355317207b48a6ec7
EXIT STATUS
Manifest Generator
The manifest generator returns the following exit values:
0
Success
1
Non-fatal error when processing files; for example, permission
problems
>1
Fatal error; for example, invalid command-line options
Report Tool
The report tool returns the following exit values:
0
No discrepancies reported
1
Discrepancies found
>1
Fatal error executing comparison
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Creating a Default Manifest Without Computing Checksums
The following command line creates a default manifest, which consists
of all files in the / file system. The -n option prevents computation
of checksums, which causes the manifest to be generated more quickly.
bart create -n
Example 2 Creating a Manifest for a Specified Subtree
The following command line creates a manifest that contains all files
in the /home/nickiso subtree.
bart create -R /home/nickiso
Example 3 Creating a Manifest by Using Standard Input
The following command line uses output from the find(1) command to gen‐
erate the list of files to be cataloged. The find output is used as
input to the bart create command that specifies the -I option.
find /home/nickiso -print | bart create -I
Example 4 Creating a Manifest by Using a Rules File
The following command line uses a rules file, rules, to specify the
files to be cataloged.
bart create -r rules
Example 5 Comparing Two Manifests and Generating Programmatic Output
The following command line compares two manifests and produces output
suitable for parsing by a program.
bart compare -p manifest1 manifest2
Example 6 Comparing Two Manifests and Specifying Attributes to Ignore
The following command line compares two manifests. The dirmtime, lnm‐
time, and mtime attributes are not compared.
bart compare -i dirmtime,lnmtime,mtime manifest1 manifest2
Example 7 Comparing Two Manifests by Using a Rules File
The following command line uses a rules file, rules, to compare two
manifests.
bart compare -r rules manifest1 manifest2
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌────────────────────┬─────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├────────────────────┼─────────────────┤
│Interface Stability │ Evolving │
└────────────────────┴─────────────────┘
SEE ALSOcksum(1), digest(1), find(1), bart_manifest(4), bart_rules(4),
attributes(5)NOTES
The file attributes of certain system libraries can be temporarily
altered by the system as it boots. To avoid triggering false warnings,
you should compare manifests only if they were both created with the
system in the same state; that is, if both were created in single-user
or both in multi-user.
Oct 26, 2005 BART(1M)