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For a process to entirely disable Yama ptrace restrictions, it can use the special PR_SET_PTRACER_ANY pid to indicate that any otherwise allowed process may ptrace it. This is stronger than calling PR_SET_PTRACER with pid "1" because it includes processes in external pid namespaces. This is currently needed by the Chrome renderer, since its crash handler (Breakpad) runs external to the renderer's pid namespace. Signed-off-by: Kees Cook <keescook@chromium.org> Signed-off-by: James Morris <jmorris@namei.org>
66 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
66 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
Yama is a Linux Security Module that collects a number of system-wide DAC
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security protections that are not handled by the core kernel itself. To
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select it at boot time, specify "security=yama" (though this will disable
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any other LSM).
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Yama is controlled through sysctl in /proc/sys/kernel/yama:
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- ptrace_scope
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==============================================================
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ptrace_scope:
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As Linux grows in popularity, it will become a larger target for
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malware. One particularly troubling weakness of the Linux process
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interfaces is that a single user is able to examine the memory and
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running state of any of their processes. For example, if one application
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(e.g. Pidgin) was compromised, it would be possible for an attacker to
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attach to other running processes (e.g. Firefox, SSH sessions, GPG agent,
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etc) to extract additional credentials and continue to expand the scope
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of their attack without resorting to user-assisted phishing.
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This is not a theoretical problem. SSH session hijacking
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(http://www.storm.net.nz/projects/7) and arbitrary code injection
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(http://c-skills.blogspot.com/2007/05/injectso.html) attacks already
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exist and remain possible if ptrace is allowed to operate as before.
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Since ptrace is not commonly used by non-developers and non-admins, system
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builders should be allowed the option to disable this debugging system.
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For a solution, some applications use prctl(PR_SET_DUMPABLE, ...) to
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specifically disallow such ptrace attachment (e.g. ssh-agent), but many
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do not. A more general solution is to only allow ptrace directly from a
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parent to a child process (i.e. direct "gdb EXE" and "strace EXE" still
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work), or with CAP_SYS_PTRACE (i.e. "gdb --pid=PID", and "strace -p PID"
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still work as root).
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For software that has defined application-specific relationships
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between a debugging process and its inferior (crash handlers, etc),
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prctl(PR_SET_PTRACER, pid, ...) can be used. An inferior can declare which
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other process (and its descendents) are allowed to call PTRACE_ATTACH
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against it. Only one such declared debugging process can exists for
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each inferior at a time. For example, this is used by KDE, Chromium, and
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Firefox's crash handlers, and by Wine for allowing only Wine processes
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to ptrace each other. If a process wishes to entirely disable these ptrace
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restrictions, it can call prctl(PR_SET_PTRACER, PR_SET_PTRACER_ANY, ...)
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so that any otherwise allowed process (even those in external pid namespaces)
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may attach.
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The sysctl settings are:
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0 - classic ptrace permissions: a process can PTRACE_ATTACH to any other
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process running under the same uid, as long as it is dumpable (i.e.
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did not transition uids, start privileged, or have called
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prctl(PR_SET_DUMPABLE...) already).
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1 - restricted ptrace: a process must have a predefined relationship
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with the inferior it wants to call PTRACE_ATTACH on. By default,
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this relationship is that of only its descendants when the above
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classic criteria is also met. To change the relationship, an
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inferior can call prctl(PR_SET_PTRACER, debugger, ...) to declare
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an allowed debugger PID to call PTRACE_ATTACH on the inferior.
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The original children-only logic was based on the restrictions in grsecurity.
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==============================================================
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