19.6. Examining Tripwire Reports
The /usr/sbin/twprint command is used to view
encrypted Tripwire reports and databases.
19.6.1. Viewing Tripwire Reports
The twprint -m r command will display the contents of
a Tripwire report in clear text. You must, however, tell
twprint which report file to display.
A twprint command for printing Tripwire reports looks
similar to the following:
/usr/sbin/twprint -m r --twrfile /var/lib/tripwire/report/<name>.twr |
The -m r option in the command directs
twprint to decode a Tripwire report. The
--twrfile option directs twprint to
use a specific Tripwire report file.
The name of the Tripwire report that you want to see includes the name of
the host that Tripwire checked to generate the report, plus the creation
date and time. You can review previously saved reports at any time. Simply
type ls /var/lib/tripwire/report to see a list of
Tripwire reports.
Tripwire reports can be rather lengthy, depending upon the number of
violations found or errors generated. A sample report starts off like
this:
Tripwire(R) 2.3.0 Integrity Check Report
Report generated by: root
Report created on: Fri Jan 12 04:04:42 2001
Database last updated on: Tue Jan 9 16:19:34 2001
=======================================================================
Report Summary:
=======================================================================
Host name: some.host.com
Host IP address: 10.0.0.1
Host ID: None
Policy file used: /etc/tripwire/tw.pol
Configuration file used: /etc/tripwire/tw.cfg
Database file used: /var/lib/tripwire/some.host.com.twd
Command line used: /usr/sbin/tripwire --check
=======================================================================
Rule Summary:
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Section: Unix File System
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Rule Name Severity Level Added Removed Modified
--------- -------------- ----- ------- --------
Invariant Directories 69 0 0 0
Temporary directories 33 0 0 0
* Tripwire Data Files 100 1 0 0
Critical devices 100 0 0 0
User binaries 69 0 0 0
Tripwire Binaries 100 0 0 0 |
19.6.2. View Tripwire Databases
You can also use twprint to view the entire database
or information about selected files in the Tripwire database. This is
useful for seeing just how much information Tripwire is tracking on your
system.
To view the entire Tripwire database, type this command:
/usr/sbin/twprint -m d --print-dbfile | less |
This command will generate a large amount of output, with the first few
lines appearing similar to this:
Tripwire(R) 2.3.0 Database
Database generated by: root
Database generated on: Tue Jan 9 13:56:42 2001
Database last updated on: Tue Jan 9 16:19:34 2001
=================================================================
Database Summary:
=================================================================
Host name: some.host.com
Host IP address: 10.0.0.1
Host ID: None
Policy file used: /etc/tripwire/tw.pol
Configuration file used: /etc/tripwire/tw.cfg
Database file used: /var/lib/tripwire/some.host.com.twd
Command line used: /usr/sbin/tripwire --init
=================================================================
Object Summary:
=================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------
# Section: Unix File System
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Mode UID Size Modify Time
------ ---------- ---------- ----------
/
drwxr-xr-x root (0) XXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
/bin
drwxr-xr-x root (0) 4096 Mon Jan 8 08:20:45 2001
/bin/arch
-rwxr-xr-x root (0) 2844 Tue Dec 12 05:51:35 2000
/bin/ash
-rwxr-xr-x root (0) 64860 Thu Dec 7 22:35:05 2000
/bin/ash.static
-rwxr-xr-x root (0) 405576 Thu Dec 7 22:35:05 2000 |
To see information about a particular file that Tripwire is tracking,
such as /etc/hosts, use the following command:
/usr/sbin/twprint -m d --print-dbfile /etc/hosts |
The result will look similar to this:
Object name: /etc/hosts
Property: Value:
------------- -----------
Object Type Regular File
Device Number 773
Inode Number 216991
Mode -rw-r--r--
Num Links 1
UID root (0)
GID root (0) |
See man page for twprint for more options.