[PATCH] Fix audit operators

Darrel Goeddel initiated a discussion on IRC regarding the possibility
of audit_comparator() returning -EINVAL signaling an invalid operator.

It is possible when creating the rule to assure that the operator is one
of the 6 sane values.  Here's a snip from include/linux/audit.h  Note
that 0 (nonsense) and 7 (all operators) are not valid values for an
operator.

...

/* These are the supported operators.
 *      4  2  1
 *      =  >  <
 *      -------
 *      0  0  0         0       nonsense
 *      0  0  1         1       <
 *      0  1  0         2       >
 *      0  1  1         3       !=
 *      1  0  0         4       =
 *      1  0  1         5       <=
 *      1  1  0         6       >=
 *      1  1  1         7       all operators
 */
...

Furthermore, prior to adding these extended operators, flagging the
AUDIT_NEGATE bit implied !=, and otherwise == was assumed.

The following code forces the operator to be != if the AUDIT_NEGATE bit
was flipped on.  And if no operator was specified, == is assumed.  The
only invalid condition is if the AUDIT_NEGATE bit is off and all of the
AUDIT_EQUAL, AUDIT_LESS_THAN, and AUDIT_GREATER_THAN bits are
on--clearly a nonsensical operator.

Now that this is handled at rule insertion time, the default -EINVAL
return of audit_comparator() is eliminated such that the function can
only return 1 or 0.

If this is acceptable, let's get this applied to the current tree.

:-Dustin

--

Signed-off-by: Al Viro <viro@zeniv.linux.org.uk>
(cherry picked from 9bf0a8e137040f87d1b563336d4194e38fb2ba1a commit)
1 file changed