Re: Is PROT_SOCK still relevant?

From: Jason Newton
Date: Wed Dec 16 2015 - 09:52:41 EST


How about changing how this mechanism works from a range of the lowest
N ports and instead have it as a user specifiable set? Towards more
proper security, this allows distros/admins to put any ports they
consider important to have security feature going well beyond the
current limit without recompiling the kernel.

It may make more sense to make this protocol specific too but I'm not
sure if that would be so simple to implement and manage.

Do we need a default list? What would the contents be if so? [0,
1024)? {22, ...}? {}?

Would there be any special considerations needed for the set
container? How about a hash table? 2^16-1 uchar bool vector?

In terms of setting/initializing - sysctl?

-Jason

On Mon, Dec 14, 2015 at 3:43 PM, Jason Newton <nevion@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 14, 2015 at 2:39 PM, One Thousand Gnomes
> <gnomes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> Perhaps lets consider this in another way if it is strongly held that
>>> this is worth while in the default configuration: can it default off
>>> in the context of selinux / other security frameworks (preferably
>>> based on their detection and/or controllably settable at runtime)?
>>> Those allow more powerful and finer grain control and don't need this
>>> to be there as they already provide auditing on what operations and
>>> port numbers should be allowed by what programs.
>>
>> That would be a regression and a very very bad one to have. The defaults
>> need to always be the same as before - or stronger and never go back
>> towards insecurity, otherwise they could make things less safe.
>
> Even if you don't think it should be default, there's still a case
> having a knob for leaving it to the auditing framework to deal with
> it, or perhaps sysctl tunable ranges like on FreeBSD. That way none
> of the workarounds mentioned have to be invoked and tuned, which
> increases maintenance and setup burden. On some systems, these
> methods may not be available, too. Android is one that comes to mind.
>
> I openly stated this issue has been brought up for me *this time* due
> to Android, but it still does keep coming up. It's on my Linux Kernel
> bucket list to get it addressed/tunable. This isn't isn't going to be
> changed and make it to where it matters for me this occurrence with
> any practical timing - but I'm trying to prevent the next occurrence
> I'll have with it - and its not in my expectations it'll be Android at
> that point.
>
>>
>>> Or how about letting port number concerns be handled by those security
>>> frameworks all together considering it is limited security?
>>
>> There are already half a dozen different ways to handle it from xinetd
>> through setcap, to systemd spawning it, to iptables.
>
> Most (all?) of those methods have sacrifices as previously noted:
> Systemd isn't everywhere still and may never be, setcap doesn't work
> with java/python and the like, iptables has significant performance
> loss when scalability is important and increased configuration
> detail... never tried with xinetd. Is one of these the sure fire way
> or should we be happy we have so many choices with each their own
> caveats?
>
> -Jason
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