Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

Many people still do not know what Autrace is? The information you need to know about Autrace will be shared by TipsMake in the article below.

Picture 1 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

Many people still do not know what Autrace is? The information you need to know about Autrace will be shared by TipsMake  in the article below. 

What is Autrace? 

Autrace  is a utility that allows running a process and saving the process's audit information in the file /var/www/audit/audit.log by adding audit rules.

To work, you first need to delete all existing audit rules.

Syntax for using autrace

# autrace -r program program-args

If you have any audit rules, autrace will show errors, for example:

On CentOS

# autrace /usr/bin/df

On Debian:

# autrace /bin/df

Picture 2 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

 

First you need to delete all audit rules using the following command:

# auditctl –D

The system will then run autrace with the program you want. In the example here, we are watching how the df command executes, showing the filesystem usage status.

On CentOS :

# autrace /usr/bin/df -h

Picture 3 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

 

On Debian :

# autrace /bin/df -h

Picture 4 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

 

From the screenshot above, you can find all the log entries to play around with, explore from the log file using the ausearch function as follows.

On Centos:

# ausearch -i -p 2658

In there:

-i : Enables interpretation of numeric values ​​into text

-p : Enter the process ID to search

Picture 5 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

 

On Debian:

# ausearch -i -p 6796

Picture 6 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

 

To output a detailed report, you can build a command that combines ausearch and aureport as follows

On Centos

# ausearch -p 2678 --raw | aureport -i –f

In there:

--raw : Tell ausearch to send all raw input to aureport

-f : Allows reporting on files as well as af_unix sockets

-i : Enables interpretation of numeric values ​​into text

Picture 7 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

 

On Debian

# ausearch -p 6796 --raw | aureport -i –f

Picture 8 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

 

And you can also use the following command to limit the syscalls to be grouped together, which is necessary for analyzing the resource usage of the df process.

On Centos

# autrace -r /usr/bin/df -h

On Debian

# autrace -r /bin/df -h

If you've ausearched a program in the past week, that means there's a lot of information going into the audit logs. To generate a report that only records events that happened today, you can use ausearch's -ts flag to specify the exact time to start searching for information:

On Centos

# ausearch -ts today -p 2768 --raw | aureport -i –f

On Debian

# ausearch -ts today -p 6796 --raw | aureport -i -f

Picture 9 of Autrace - Tool to check, count and monitor Linux processes

 

That's all the basics you can use to control, monitor and track a Linux process using autrace. For more details, you can read the man pages.

According to TipsMake share

Update 12 February 2025
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