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Here is my /etc/aide/aide.conf file:

# AIDE conf

# The daily cron job depends on these paths
database=file:/var/lib/aide/aide.db
database_out=file:/var/lib/aide/aide.db.new
database_new=file:/var/lib/aide/aide.db.new
gzip_dbout=yes

# Set to no to disable summarize_changes option.
summarize_changes=yes

# Set to no to disable grouping of files in report.
grouped=yes

# if you want to sacrifice security for speed, remove some of these
# checksums. Whirlpool is broken on sparc and sparc64 (see #429180,
# #420547, #152203).
#Checksums = sha256+sha512+rmd160+haval+gost+crc32+tiger
Checksums = crc32

# check permissions, owner, group and file type
OwnerMode = p+u+g

# Check size and block count
Size = s+b

# Files that stay static
InodeData = OwnerMode+n+i+Size
StaticFile = m+c+Checksums

# Files that stay static but are copied to a ram disk on startup
# (causing different inode)
RamdiskData = InodeData-i

# Check everything
Full = InodeData+StaticFile

# Files that change their mtimes or ctimes but not their contents
VarTime = InodeData+Checksums

# Files that are recreated regularly but do not change their contents
VarInode = VarTime-i

# Files that change their contents during system operation
VarFile = OwnerMode+n

# Directories that change their contents during system operation
VarDir = OwnerMode+n

# Directories that are recreated regularly and change their contents
VarDirInode = OwnerMode+n

# Directories that change their mtimes or ctimes but not their contents
VarDirTime = InodeData

# Logs are special: they are continously written to, may be compressed
# have their file name changed in different, mutually incompatibly ways
# and apprear and vanish at will. Handling this is a a complex and error-
# prone issue.
#
# This is best broken down in a number of small tasks:
#
#
# (A)
# While a live log is being written to, it doesn't change its mode and
# inode and its size only increases.
#
# (B)
# When a live log is rotated for the first time, it should not change
# its mode, may change its inode, and its size decreases. The size
# decrease may not be noticed by aide if the file had size x at the last
# aide run, was rotated in the mean time and was written to so that it
# had a size > x at the next aide run.
#
# (C)
# When a log is compressed, this looks to aide like the uncompressed
# file vanished (or was replaced by another file) and the compressed
# file appeared out of the blue. There is (currently) no way to
# associate the (gone) uncompressed file's contents with the (new)
# compressed file's contents
#
# (D)
# The actual log rotation may rename foo.{x}.bar to foo.{x+1}.bar without
# changing the other properties of the file
#
# (E)
# If only a given number of log generations is to be kept, foo.{y}.bar may
# vanish, but usually only when no foo.{z}.bar exists for z>y.
#
# (F)
# The set of files foo.{x}.bar to foo.{y}.bar is called a "log series"
# in aide terms, with the lowest x being called the "LoSerMember" element
# and the highest y being called the "HiSerMember" element, and the z
# with x<z<y simple called "SerMember". The Lo and Hi members need to
# be special cased in aide configuration.
#
#
# This is an example of the normal life of a log named foo in a logrotate
# configuration using a configuration at it is commonly used in Debian
# (from old to new):
#     1 logrotate deletes HiSerMember foo.{y}.gz
#     2 logrotate rotates SerMember foo.{z-1}.gz to foo.{z}.gz for all
#       z with 3<z<=y. This includes rotation of foo.{y-1}.gz to
#       foo.{y}.gz and foo.2.gz to foo.3.gz
#     3 logrotate compresses foo.1 to foo.2.gz, creating LoSerMember foo.2.gz
#     4 logrotate rotates foo to foo.1 (a simple rename)
#     5 logrotate creates new, empty foo
#     6 foo daemon logs to foo - foo grows in size
#
# we need the following rules:
# /var/log/foo$ Log
# /var/log/foo$ FreqRotLog
#    this takes care of the growing live log (step 7). The "Log" rule
#    is appropriate for logs that are not rotated daily as rotation
#    might be reported (if the file size has decreased since the last
#    aide run). For daily rotated logs, the "FreqRotLog" may be more
#    appropriate.
# /var/log/foo\.1$ LowLog
#    this takes care of step 5.
# /var/log/foo\.2\.gz$ LoSerMemberLog
#    this allows yet unknown new files to appear with a \.2\.gz extension,
#    covering step 3.
# /var/log/foo\.[3..y-1]\.gz$ SerMemberLog
#    this watches the log files as they wander through the Series,
#    changing only their file name but not their contents or metadata,
#    covering step 2.
#    Please note that [3..y-1] needs to be a manually crafted regexp covering
#    all numbers between 3 and y-1.
# /var/log/foo\.y\.gz$ HiSerMemberLog
#    finally, the last element of the Series is allowed to vanish without
#    being reported, covering step 1.
#
# Please note that these example rules need to be adapted to the logrotate
# configuration for the log. Compression may be disabled or lead to a different
# extension, the dateext option may be used, old logs might be held in a
# different place, a log series does not necessarily need to be compressed etc.
#
# Please note that savelog rotates the live log to .0 and not to .1 as it
# is logrotates (changeable) default.


# Logs grow in size. Log rotation of these logs will be reported, so
# this should only be used for logs that are not rotated daily.
Log = OwnerMode+n+S

# Logs that are frequently rotated
FreqRotLog = Log-S

# The first instance of a rotated log: After the log has stopped being
# written to, but before rotation
LowLog = Log-S

# Rotated logs change their file name but retain all their other properties
SerMemberLog  = Full+I

# The first instance of a compressed, rotated log: After a LowLog was
# compressed.
LoSerMemberLog = SerMemberLog+ANF

# Tee last instance of a compressed, rotated log: After this name, a log
# will be removed
HiSerMemberLog = SerMemberLog+ARF

# Not-yet-compressed log created by logrotate's dateext option:
# These files appear one rotation (renamed from the live log) and are gone
# the next rotation (being compressed)
LowDELog = SerMemberLog+ANF+ARF

# Compressed log created by logrotate's dateext option: These files appear
# once and are not touched any more.
SerMemberDELog = Full+ANF

# For daemons that log to a variable file name and have the live log
# hardlinked to a static file name
LinkedLog = Log-n

CustomEtc     = OwnerMode+Checksums
CustomHome    = md5

/etc             CustomEtc    # Check checksums, permissions, user and group
/home/dtoader    CustomHome   # Check md5 only 
/root            CustomHome   # Check md5 only

!/bin/.*                      # Ignore
!/boot/.*                     # Ignore
!/cdrom/.*                    # Ignore
!/dev/.*                      # Ignore
!/home/backup500/.*           # Ignore
!/home/backup501/.*           # Ignore
!/home/dtoader/.gvfs          # Ignore
!/initrd.img                  # Ignore
!/initrd.img.old              # Ignore
!/lib/.*                      # Ignore
!/lost+found/.*               # Ignore
!/media/.*                    # Ignore
!/mnt/.*                      # Ignore
!/opt/.*                      # Ignore
!/proc/.*                     # Ignore
!/run/.*                      # Ignore
!/sbin/.*                     # Ignore
!/selinux/.*                  # Ignore
!/srv/.*                      # Ignore
!/sys/.*                      # Ignore
!/tmp/.*                      # Ignore
!/usr/.*                      # Ignore
!/var/.*                      # Ignore
!/vmlinuz                     # Ignore
!/vmlinuz.old                 # Ignore

As root I created the db files:

touch /var/lib/aide/aide.db
touch /var/lib/aide/aide.db.new

I gave execute permissions to the db files:

chmod 755 /var/lib/aide/aide.db
chmod 755 /var/lib/aide/aide.db.new

Yet, when I run aideinit, I get the following error:

aideinit

Overwrite existing /var/lib/aide/aide.db.new [Yn]? Y
Running aide --init...
Caught SIGBUS/SEGV while mmapping. File was truncated while aide was running?
Caught SIGBUS/SEGV. Exiting
AIDE --init return code 1

Running cat /var/log/aide/aide.log does not show anything. The aide.log file is empty after the run just as when it was cleared before the run.

Any clues as to what is causing this problem?

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