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Configure Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) to audit sign-in events

This article provides a sample process for configuring Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) to audit SSH, Telnet, and terminal sign-in events on an unmodified Ubuntu 20.04 or 18.04 installation.

PAM configurations may vary between devices and Linux distributions.

For more information, see Login collector (event-based collector).

Note

Defender for IoT plans to retire the micro agent on August 1, 2025.

Prerequisites

Before you get started, make sure that you have a Defender for IoT Micro Agent.

Configuring PAM requires technical knowledge.

For more information, see Tutorial: Install the Defender for IoT micro agent.

Modify PAM configuration to report sign-in and sign-out events

This procedure provides a sample process for configuring the collection of successful sign-in events.

Our example is based on an unmodified Ubuntu 20.04 or 18.04 installation, and the steps in this process may differ for your system.

  1. Locate the following files:

    • /etc/pam.d/sshd
    • /etc/pam.d/login
  2. Append the following lines to the end of each file:

    // report login
    session [default=ignore] pam_exec.so type=open_session /usr/libexec/defender_iot_micro_agent/pam/pam_audit.sh 0
    
    // report logout
    session [default=ignore] pam_exec.so type=close_session /usr/libexec/defender_iot_micro_agent/pam/pam_audit.sh 1
    

Modify the PAM configuration to report sign-in failures

This procedure provides a sample process for configuring the collection of failed sign-in attempts.

This example in this procedure is based on an unmodified Ubuntu 18.04 or 20.04 installation. The files and commands listed below may differ per configuration or as a result of modifications.

  1. Locate the /etc/pam.d/common-auth file and look for the following lines:

    # here are the per-package modules (the "Primary" block)
    auth    [success=1 default=ignore]  pam_unix.so nullok_secure
    # here's the fallback if no module succeeds
    auth    requisite           pam_deny.so
    

    This section authenticates via the pam_unix.so module. In case of authentication failure, this section continues to the pam_deny.so module to prevent access.

  2. Replace the indicated lines of code with the following:

    # here are the per-package modules (the "Primary" block)
    auth	[success=1 default=ignore]	pam_unix.so nullok_secure
    auth	[success=1 default=ignore]	pam_exec.so quiet /usr/libexec/defender_iot_micro_agent/pam/pam_audit.sh 2
    auth	[success=1 default=ignore]	pam_echo.so
    # here's the fallback if no module succeeds
    auth	requisite			pam_deny.so
    

    In this modified section, PAM skips one module to the pam_echo.so module, and then skips the pam_deny.so module and authenticates successfully.

    In case of failure, PAM continues to report the sign-in failure to the agent log file, and then skips one module to the pam_deny.so module, which blocks access.

Validate your configuration

This procedure describes how to verify that you've configured PAM correctly to audit sign-in events.

  1. Sign in to the device using SSH, and then sign-out.

  2. Sign in to the device using SSH, using incorrect credentials to create a failed sign-in event.

  3. Access your device and run the following command:

    cat /var/lib/defender_iot_micro_agent/pam.log
    
  4. Verify that lines similar to the following are logged, for a successful sign-in (open_session), sign-out (close_session), and a sign-in failure (auth):

    2021-10-31T18:10:31+02:00,16356631,2589842,open_session,sshd,user,192.168.0.101,ssh,0
    2021-10-31T18:26:19+02:00,16356719,199164,close_session,sshd, user,192.168.0.201,ssh,1
    2021-10-28T17:44:13+03:00,163543223,3572596,auth,sshd,user,143.24.20.36,ssh,2
    
  5. Repeat the verification procedure with Telnet and terminal connections.

Next steps

For more information, see Micro agent event collection.