open-vault/website/source/docs/audit/index.html.md

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docs Audit Backends docs-audit Audit backends are mountable backends that log requests and responses in Vault.

Audit Backends

Audit backends are the components in Vault that keep a detailed log of all requests and response to Vault. Because every operation with Vault is an API request/response, the audit log contains every interaction with Vault, including errors.

Vault ships with multiple audit backends, depending on the location you want the logs sent to. Multiple audit backends can be enabled and Vault will send the audit logs to both. This allows you to not only have a redundant copy, but also a second copy in case the first is tampered with.

Sensitive Information

The audit logs contain the full request and response objects for every interaction with Vault. The data in the request and the data in the response (including secrets and authentication tokens) will be hashed without a salt using SHA1.

The purpose of the hash is so that secrets aren't in plaintext within your audit logs. However, you're still able to check the value of secrets by SHA-ing it yourself.

Enabling/Disabling Audit Backends

When a Vault server is first initialized, no auditing is enabled. Audit backends must be enabled by a root user using vault audit-enable.

When enabling an audit backend, options can be passed to it to configure it. For example, the command below enables the file audit backend:

$ vault audit-enable file path=/var/log/vault_audit.log
...

In the command above, we passed the "path" parameter to specify the path where the audit log will be written to. Each audit backend has its own set of parameters. See the documentation to the left for more details.

When an audit backend is disabled, it will stop receiving logs immediately. The existing logs that it did store are untouched.

Blocked Audit Backends

If there are any audit backends enabled, Vault requires that at least one be able to persist the log before completing a Vault request.

If you have only one audit backend enabled, and it is blocking (network block, etc.), then Vault will be unresponsive. Vault will not complete any requests until the audit backend can write.

If you have more than one audit backend, then Vault will complete the request as long as one audit backend persists the log.

Vault will not respond to requests if audit backends are blocked because audit logs are critically important and ignoring blocked requests opens an avenue for attack. Be absolutely certain that your audit backends cannot block.