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The PostgreSQL Audit Extension (pgAudit) provides detailed session and/or object audit logging via the standard PostgreSQL logging facility.
The goal of the pgAudit is to provide PostgreSQL users with capability to produce audit logs often required to comply with government, financial, or ISO certifications.
An audit is an official inspection of an individual's or organization's accounts, typically by an independent body. The information gathered by pgAudit is properly called an audit trail or audit log. The term audit log is used in this documentation.
Basic statement logging can be provided by the standard logging facility withlog_statement = all
. This is acceptable for monitoring and other usages but does not provide the level of detail generally required for an audit. It is not enough to have a list of all the operations performed against the database. It must also be possible to find particular statements that are of interest to an auditor. The standard logging facility shows what the user requested, while pgAudit focuses on the details of what happened while the database was satisfying the request.
For example, an auditor may want to verify that a particular table was created inside a documented maintenance window. This might seem like a simple job for grep, but what if you are presented with something like this (intentionally obfuscated) example:
DO $$BEGIN EXECUTE 'CREATE TABLE import' || 'ant_table (id INT)';END $$;
Standard logging will give you this:
LOG: statement: DO $$BEGIN EXECUTE 'CREATE TABLE import' || 'ant_table (id INT)';END $$;
It appears that finding the table of interest may require some knowledge of the code in cases where tables are created dynamically. This is not ideal since it would be preferable to just search on the table name. This is where pgAudit comes in. For the same input, it will produce this output in the log:
AUDIT: SESSION,33,1,FUNCTION,DO,,,"DO $$BEGIN EXECUTE 'CREATE TABLE import' || 'ant_table (id INT)';END $$;"AUDIT: SESSION,33,2,DDL,CREATE TABLE,TABLE,public.important_table,CREATE TABLE important_table (id INT)
Not only is theDO
block logged, but substatement 2 contains the full text of theCREATE TABLE
with the statement type, object type, and full-qualified name to make searches easy.
When loggingSELECT
andDML
statements, pgAudit can be configured to log a separate entry for each relation referenced in a statement. No parsing is required to find all statements that touch a particular table. In fact, the goal is that the statement text is provided primarily for deep forensics and should not be required for an audit.
Depending on settings, it is possible for pgAudit to generate an enormous volume of logging. Be careful to determine exactly what needs to be audit logged in your environment to avoid logging too much.
For example, when working in an OLAP environment it would probably not be wise to audit log inserts into a large fact table. The size of the log file will likely be many times the actual data size of the inserts because the log file is expressed as text. Since logs are generally stored with the OS this may lead to disk space being exhausted very quickly. In cases where it is not possible to limit audit logging to certain tables, be sure to assess the performance impact while testing and allocate plenty of space on the log volume. This may also be true for OLTP environments. Even if the insert volume is not as high, the performance impact of audit logging may still noticeably affect latency.
To limit the number of relations audit logged forSELECT
andDML
statements, consider using object audit logging (seeObject Auditing). Object audit logging allows selection of the relations to be logged allowing for reduction of the overall log volume. However, when new relations are added they must be explicitly added to object audit logging. A programmatic solution where specified tables are excluded from logging and all others are included may be a good option in this case.
pgAudit was developed to support PostgreSQL 9.5 or greater.
In order to support new functionality introduced in each PostgreSQL release, pgAudit maintains a separate branch for each PostgreSQL major version (currently PostgreSQL 9.5 - 11) which will be maintained in a manner similar to the PostgreSQL project.
Aside from bug fixes, no further development is planned for stable branches. New development, if any, will be strictly for next unreleased major version of PostgreSQL.
pgAudit versions relate to PostgreSQL major versions as follows:
pgAudit v1.5.X is intended to support PostgreSQL 13.
pgAudit v1.4.X is intended to support PostgreSQL 12.
pgAudit v1.3.X is intended to support PostgreSQL 11.
pgAudit v1.2.X is intended to support PostgreSQL 10.
pgAudit v1.1.X is intended to support PostgreSQL 9.6.
pgAudit v1.0.X is intended to support PostgreSQL 9.5.
pgAudit can be compiled against an installed copy of PostgreSQL with development packages usingPGXS
.
The following instructions are for RHEL 7.
Clone the pgAudit extension:
git clone https://github.com/pgaudit/pgaudit.git
Change to pgAudit directory:
cd pgaudit
CheckoutREL_13_STABLE
branch (note that the stable branch may not exist for unreleased versions of PostgreSQL):
git checkout REL_13_STABLE
Build and install pgAudit:
make install USE_PGXS=1 PG_CONFIG=/usr/pgsql-13/bin/pg_config
Instructions for testing and development may be found intest
.
Settings may be modified only by a superuser. Allowing normal users to change their settings would defeat the point of an audit log.
Settings can be specified globally (inpostgresql.conf
or usingALTER SYSTEM ... SET
), at the database level (usingALTER DATABASE ... SET
), or at the role level (usingALTER ROLE ... SET
). Note that settings are not inherited through normal role inheritance andSET ROLE
will not alter a user's pgAudit settings. This is a limitation of the roles system and not inherent to pgAudit.
The pgAudit extension must be loaded inshared_preload_libraries. Otherwise, an error will be raised at load time and no audit logging will occur. In addition,CREATE EXTENSION pgaudit
must be called beforepgaudit.log
is set. If thepgaudit
extension is dropped and needs to be recreated thenpgaudit.log
must be unset first otherwise an error will be raised.
Specifies which classes of statements will be logged by session audit logging. Possible values are:
READ:
SELECT
andCOPY
when the source is a relation or a query.WRITE:
INSERT
,UPDATE
,DELETE
,TRUNCATE
, andCOPY
when the destination is a relation.FUNCTION: Function calls and
DO
blocks.ROLE: Statements related to roles and privileges:
GRANT
,REVOKE
,CREATE/ALTER/DROP ROLE
.DDL: All
DDL
that is not included in theROLE
class.MISC: Miscellaneous commands, e.g.
DISCARD
,FETCH
,CHECKPOINT
,VACUUM
,SET
.MISC_SET: Miscellaneous
SET
commands, e.g.SET ROLE
.ALL: Include all of the above.
Multiple classes can be provided using a comma-separated list and classes can be subtracted by prefacing the class with a-
sign (seeSession Audit Logging).
The default isnone
.
Specifies that session logging should be enabled in the case where all relations in a statement are in pg_catalog. Disabling this setting will reduce noise in the log from tools like psql and PgAdmin that query the catalog heavily.
The default ison
.
Specifies whether log messages will be visible to a client process such as psql. This setting should generally be left disabled but may be useful for debugging or other purposes.
Note thatpgaudit.log_level
is only enabled whenpgaudit.log_client
ison
.
The default isoff
.
Specifies the log level that will be used for log entries (seeMessage Severity Levels for valid levels) but note thatERROR
,FATAL
, andPANIC
are not allowed). This setting is used for regression testing and may also be useful to end users for testing or other purposes.
Note thatpgaudit.log_level
is only enabled whenpgaudit.log_client
ison
; otherwise the default will be used.
The default islog
.
Specifies that audit logging should include the parameters that were passed with the statement. When parameters are present they will be included inCSV
format after the statement text.
The default isoff
.
Specifies whether session audit logging should create a separate log entry for each relation (TABLE
,VIEW
, etc.) referenced in aSELECT
orDML
statement. This is a useful shortcut for exhaustive logging without using object audit logging.
The default isoff
.
Specifies whether logging will include the statement text and parameters with the first log entry for a statement/substatement combination or with every entry. Disabling this setting will result in less verbose logging but may make it more difficult to determine the statement that generated a log entry, though the statement/substatement pair along with the process id should suffice to identify the statement text logged with a previous entry.
The default isoff
.
Specifies the master role to use for object audit logging. Multiple audit roles can be defined by granting them to the master role. This allows multiple groups to be in charge of different aspects of audit logging.
There is no default.
Session audit logging provides detailed logs of all statements executed by a user in the backend.
Session logging is enabled with thepgaudit.log setting.
Enable session logging for allDML
andDDL
and log all relations inDML
statements:
set pgaudit.log = 'write, ddl';set pgaudit.log_relation = on;
Enable session logging for all commands exceptMISC
and raise audit log messages asNOTICE
:
set pgaudit.log = 'all, -misc';set pgaudit.log_level = notice;
In this example session audit logging is used for loggingDDL
andSELECT
statements. Note that the insert statement is not logged since theWRITE
class is not enabled
SQL:
set pgaudit.log = 'read, ddl';create table account( id int, name text, password text, description text);insert into account (id, name, password, description) values (1, 'user1', 'HASH1', 'blah, blah');select * from account;
Log Output:
AUDIT: SESSION,1,1,DDL,CREATE TABLE,TABLE,public.account,create table account( id int, name text, password text, description text);,<not logged>AUDIT: SESSION,2,1,READ,SELECT,,,select * from account,,<not logged>
Object audit logging logs statements that affect a particular relation. OnlySELECT
,INSERT
,UPDATE
andDELETE
commands are supported.TRUNCATE
is not included in object audit logging.
Object audit logging is intended to be a finer-grained replacement forpgaudit.log = 'read, write'
. As such, it may not make sense to use them in conjunction but one possible scenario would be to use session logging to capture each statement and then supplement that with object logging to get more detail about specific relations.
Object-level audit logging is implemented via the roles system. Thepgaudit.role setting defines the role that will be used for audit logging. A relation (TABLE
,VIEW
, etc.) will be audit logged when the audit role has permissions for the command executed or inherits the permissions from another role. This allows you to effectively have multiple audit roles even though there is a single master role in any context.
Setpgaudit.role toauditor
and grantSELECT
andDELETE
privileges on theaccount
table. AnySELECT
orDELETE
statements on theaccount
table will now be logged:
set pgaudit.role = 'auditor';grant select, delete on public.account to auditor;
In this example object audit logging is used to illustrate how a granular approach may be taken towards logging ofSELECT
andDML
statements. Note that logging on theaccount
table is controlled by column-level permissions, while logging on theaccount_role_map
table is table-level.
SQL:
set pgaudit.role = 'auditor';create table account( id int, name text, password text, description text);grant select (password) on public.account to auditor;select id, name from account;select password from account;grant update (name, password) on public.account to auditor;update account set description = 'yada, yada';update account set password = 'HASH2';create table account_role_map( account_id int, role_id int);grant select on public.account_role_map to auditor;select account.password, account_role_map.role_id from account inner join account_role_map on account.id = account_role_map.account_id
Log Output:
AUDIT: OBJECT,1,1,READ,SELECT,TABLE,public.account,select password from account,<not logged>AUDIT: OBJECT,2,1,WRITE,UPDATE,TABLE,public.account,update account set password = 'HASH2',<not logged>AUDIT: OBJECT,3,1,READ,SELECT,TABLE,public.account,select account.password, account_role_map.role_id from account inner join account_role_map on account.id = account_role_map.account_id,<not logged>AUDIT: OBJECT,3,1,READ,SELECT,TABLE,public.account_role_map,select account.password, account_role_map.role_id from account inner join account_role_map on account.id = account_role_map.account_id,<not logged>
Audit entries are written to the standard logging facility and contain the following columns in comma-separated format. Output is compliant CSV format only if the log line prefix portion of each log entry is removed.
AUDIT_TYPE -
SESSION
orOBJECT
.STATEMENT_ID - Unique statement ID for this session. Each statement ID represents a backend call. Statement IDs are sequential even if some statements are not logged. There may be multiple entries for a statement ID when more than one relation is logged.
SUBSTATEMENT_ID - Sequential ID for each sub-statement within the main statement. For example, calling a function from a query. Sub-statement IDs are continuous even if some sub-statements are not logged. There may be multiple entries for a sub-statement ID when more than one relation is logged.
CLASS - e.g.
READ
,ROLE
(seepgaudit.log).COMMAND - e.g.
ALTER TABLE
,SELECT
.OBJECT_TYPE -
TABLE
,INDEX
,VIEW
, etc. Available forSELECT
,DML
and mostDDL
statements.OBJECT_NAME - The fully-qualified object name (e.g. public.account). Available for
SELECT
,DML
and mostDDL
statements.STATEMENT - Statement executed on the backend.
PARAMETER - If
pgaudit.log_parameter
is set then this field will contain the statement parameters as quoted CSV or<none>
if there are no parameters. Otherwise, the field is<not logged>
.
Uselog_line_prefix to add any other fields that are needed to satisfy your audit log requirements. A typical log line prefix might be'%m %u %d [%p]: '
which would provide the date/time, user name, database name, and process id for each audit log.
Object renames are logged under the name they were renamed to. For example, renaming a table will produce the following result:
ALTER TABLE test RENAME TO test2;AUDIT: SESSION,36,1,DDL,ALTER TABLE,TABLE,public.test2,ALTER TABLE test RENAME TO test2,<not logged>
It is possible to have a command logged more than once. For example, when a table is created with a primary key specified at creation time the index for the primary key will be logged independently and another audit log will be made for the index under the create entry. The multiple entries will however be contained within one statement ID.
Autovacuum and Autoanalyze are not logged.
Statements that are executed after a transaction enters an aborted state will not be audit logged. However, the statement that caused the error and any subsequent statements executed in the aborted transaction will be logged as ERRORs by the standard logging facility.
The PostgreSQL Audit Extension is based on the2ndQuadrantpgaudit project authored by Simon Riggs, Abhijit Menon-Sen, and Ian Barwick and submitted as an extension to PostgreSQL core. Additional development has been done by David Steele ofCrunchy Data.
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