On Tue, 2009-11-24 at 11:26 -0500, Matthew Miller wrote:
One of the important features of sudo is its ability to log
elevated-access
actions to syslog.
Userhelper similarly logs actions, like so: "userhelper[26491]: running
'/usr/share/system-config-users/system-config-users ' with root privileges
on behalf of 'mattdm'".
PolicyKit serves a similar function, but doesn't seem to log anything.
In fact, the only use of syslog appears to be in polkit-agent-helper-1,
which logs in two possible situations -- when called with the wrong number
of arguments and when stdin is a tty. (Most other things it fprintfs to
stderr.)
I'm not bringing this up to complain -- I just want to make sure that I'm
not missing something (which happens more often than it should; *sigh*). If
I'm not missing something, is this something anyone is working on already or
has existing plans for?
PolicyKit itself is not running anything. It is just answering the
question of a mechanism: 'is X allowed to do foo ?'. It would make more
sense for the mechanisms that use PolicyKit to log privileged actions
that they do or deny to do.