A simple auditing tool for console1984
.
Add it to your Gemfile
:
gem 'audits1984'
Create tables to store audits in the database:
rails audits1984:install:migrations
rails db:migrate
Mount the engine in your routes.rb
:
mount Audits1984::Engine => "/console"
By default, the library controllers will inherit from the host application's ApplicationController
. To authenticate auditors, you need to implement a method #find_current_auditor
in your ApplicationController
. This method must return a record representing the auditing user. It can be any model but it has to respond to #name
.
For example, Imagine all the staff in your company can audit console sessions:
def find_current_auditor
Current.user if Current.user&.staff?
end
The main screen lists the registered console sessions. It includes a form to filter sessions by date, and also to only show that contains sensitive accesses.
You can click on a session to see its commands and choose whether it was an appropiate console usage or not.
After making a decision on the session, you will be redirected to the next pending session, based on the filter configured in the main screen.
That is. I said it was simple.
These config options are namespaced in config.audits1984
:
Name | Description |
---|---|
auditor_class | The name of the auditor class. By default it's ::User. |
auditor_name_attribute | The attribute on the auditor class that returns the auditor's name. By default it's :name . |
base_controller_class | The host application base class that will be the parent of audit1984 controllers. By default it's ::ApplicationController . |