twconfig - Tripwire configuration file reference
The configuration file stores system-specific information,
including the location of Tripwire data files, and the settings used
to send email notification. The configuration file settings are generated
during the installation process, but can be changed by the system
administrator at any time. The configuration file is signed with the site
key, and the site passphrase is required to edit the file.
During installation, a signed Tripwire configuration file
tw.cfg will be created in the /etc/tripwire directory, and a
plain text copy of this configuration file twcfg.txt will be created
in the same directory.
The configuration file is modified using the
twadmin --create-cfgfile command. With this command, the user
can designate an existing plain text file as the current configuration file.
Using the current site key and passphrase, the new configuration file is
cryptographically signed and saved with this command.
The Tripwire configuration file is structured as a list of
keyword-value pairs, and may also contain comments and variable definitions.
Any lines with "#" in the first column are treated as
comments.
The general syntax for variable definition is:
keyword = value
For example:
ROOT = /usr/tripwire
EDITOR = /usr/local/bin/jove
Variable substitution on the right hand side is permitted using
the syntax:
$( varname )
For example:
DBFILE = $(ROOT)/db/$(HOSTNAME).twd
Variable names are case-sensitive, and may contain all
alphanumeric characters, underscores, the characters "+-@:", and
the period. Two variables are predefined in the configuration file, and may
not be changed. HOSTNAME is the unqualified hostname
that Tripwire is running on, and DATE is a
string representation of the date and time.
The following variables must be set in order for Tripwire
to operate. The values listed below are assigned during installation.
POLFILE Default = /etc/tripwire/tw.pol
DBFILE Default = /var/lib/tripwire/$(HOSTNAME).twd
REPORTFILE Default = /var/lib/tripwire/report/$(HOSTNAME)-$(DATE).twr
SITEKEYFILE Default = /etc/tripwire/site.key
LOCALKEYFILE Default = /etc/tripwire/$(HOSTNAME)-local.key
The following variables are not required to run Tripwire,
but some of the program's functionality will be lost without them. The
values assigned during installation are listed.
- EDITOR
- Specifies an editor to be used in interactive modes. If EDITOR is
not defined, and no editor is specified on the command line, using
interactive modes will cause an error.
Initial value: /bin/vi
- TEMPDIRECTORY
- This variable can be set to the location to which tripwire should write
its temporary files. By default it is /tmp, which due to the default
permissions can be very insecure. It is recommended that you use this
configuration variable to provide tripwire with a secure place to write
temporary files. The directory used should have its permissions set such
that only the owning process can read/write to it, i.e. "chmod
700".
Initial value: /tmp
- GLOBALEMAIL
- This variable is set to a list of email addresses separated by either a
comma ",", or semi-colon ";". If a report would have
normally been sent out, it will also be send to this list of recipients.
Initial value: none
- LATEPROMPTING
- Prompt for passphrase as late as possible to minimize the amount of time
that the passphrase is stored in memory. If the value is true
(case-sensitive), then late prompting is turned on. With any other value,
or if the variable is removed from the configuration file, late prompting
is turned off.
Initial value: false
- LOOSEDIRECTORYCHECKING
- When a file is added or removed from a directory, Tripwire reports
both the changes to the file itself, and the modification to the directory
(size, num links, etc.). This can create redundant entries in
Tripwire reports. With loose directory checking, Tripwire will not
check directories for any properties that would change when a file was
added or deleted. This includes: size, number of links, access time,
change time, modification time, number of blocks, growing file, and all
hashes.
-
- If the value for this variable is true (case-sensitive), then loose
directory checking is turned on, and these properties will be ignored for
all directories. With any other value, or if the variable is removed from
the configuration file, loose directory checking is turned off. Turning
loose directory checking on is equivalent to appending the following
propertymask to the rules for all directory inodes:
-snacmblCMSH
Initial value: false
- SYSLOGREPORTING
- If this variable is set to true, messages are sent to the syslog
for four events: database initialization, integrity check completions,
database updates, and policy updates. The syslog messages are sent from
the "user" facility at the "notice" level. For more
information, see the syslogd(1) man page and the syslog.conf
file. The following illustrates the information logged in the syslog for
each of the four events:
Jun 18 14:09:42 lighthouse tripwire[9444]: Database initialized:
/var/lib/tripwire/test.twd
Jun 18 14:10:57 lighthouse tripwire[9671]: Integrity Check Complete:
TWReport lighthouse 20000618141057 V:2 S:90 A:1 R:0 C:1
Jun 18 14:11:19 lighthouse tripwire[9672]: Database Update Complete:
/var/lib/tripwire/test.twd
Jun 18 14:18:26 lighthouse tripwire[9683]: Policy Update Complete:
/var/lib/tripwire/test.twd
The letters in the Integrity Checking log correspond to # of violations,
maximum severity level, and # of files added, deleted, and changed,
respectively. With any value other than true, or if this variable
is removed from the configuration file, syslog reporting will be turned
off.
Initial value: true
- REPORTLEVEL
- Specifies the default level of report produced by the twprint
--print-report mode. Valid values for this option are 0 to 4. The
report level specified by this option can be overridden with the
(-t or --report-level) option on the command
line. If this variable is not included in the configuration file, the
default report level is 3. Note that only reports printed using the
twprint --print-report mode are affected by this parameter;
reports displayed by other modes and other commands are not affected.
Initial value: 3
- DBPRINTLEVEL
- Specifies the default level of report produced by the twprint
‐‐print‐dbfile mode. Valid values for this
option are 0 to 2. The output level specified by this option can be
overridden with the
(‐t or ‐‐output‐level)
option on the command line. If this variable is not included in the
configuration file, the default output level is 2.
Initial value: 2
- HASH_DIRECT_IO
- Use direct i/o when hashing files. (Linux-only as of OST 2.4.3.2)
Initial value: false
- RESOLVE_IDS_TO_NAMES
- Specifies whether to resolve uid/gid values to user & group names.
Static binaries may segfault while calling getpwuid/getgrgid in certain
nsswitch.conf configurations, and setting this to false will bypass the
name resolution step and prevent the segfault.
Initial value: true
- MAILMETHOD
- Specifies the protocol to be used by Tripwire for email
notification. The only acceptable values for this field are
SMTP or SENDMAIL. Any
other value will produce an error message.
Initial value: SENDMAIL
- SMTPHOST
- Specifies the domain name or IP address of the SMTP server used for email
notification. Ignored unless MAILMETHOD is set to
SMTP.
Initial value: mail.domain.com
- SMTPPORT
- Specifies the port number used with SMTP. Ignored unless
MAILMETHOD is set to SMTP.
Initial value: 25
- MAILPROGRAM
- Specifies the program used for email reporting of rule violations if
MAILMETHOD is set to
SENDMAIL. The program must take an RFC822 style
mail header, and recipients will be listed in the "To:" field of
the mail header. Some mail programs interpret a line consisting of only a
single period character to mean end‐of‐input, and all text
after that is ignored. Since there is a small possibility that a
Tripwire report would contain such a line, the mail program
specified must be able to ignore lines that consist of a single period
(the -oi option to sendmail produces this behavior).
Initial value: /usr/lib/sendmail -oi -t
- EMAILREPORTLEVEL
- Specifies the default level of report produced by the tripwire
--check mode email report. Valid values for this option are 0 to 4.
The report level specified by this option can be overridden with the
(-t or --email-report-level) option on the
command‐line. If this variable is not included in the configuration
file, the default report level is 3.
Initial value: 3
- MAILNOVIOLATIONS
- This option controls the way that Tripwire sends email notification
if no rule violations are found during an integrity check. If
MAILNOVIOLATIONS is set to false and no
violations are found, Tripwire will not send a report. With any
other value, or if the variable is removed from the configuration file,
Tripwire will send an email message stating that no violations were
found.
-
- Mailing reports of no violations allows an administrator to distinguish
between unattended integrity checks that are failing to run and integrity
checks that are running but are not finding any violations. However,
mailing no violations reports will increase the amount of data that must
be processed.
Initial value: true
- MAILFROMADDRESS
- Specifies the value of the "From:" field in email reports.
Initial value: tripwire@hostname, where 'hostname' is the local
machine name.
This man page describes Tripwire 2.4.
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trademark of Tripwire, Inc. in the United States and other countries. All
rights reserved.