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diff --git a/doc/capability.notes b/doc/capability.notes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b1e5245 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/capability.notes @@ -0,0 +1,58 @@ +Overview +-------- + +As of Linux 2.2.0, the power of the superuser has been partitioned +into a set of discrete capabilities (in other places, these +capabilities are know as privileges). + +The contents of the libcap package are a library and a number of +simple programs that are intended to show how an application/daemon +can be protected (with wrappers) or rewritten to take advantage of +this fine grained approach to constraining the danger to your system +from programs running as 'root'. + +Notes on securing your system +----------------------------- + +Adopting a role approach to system security: + +changing all of the system binaries and directories to be owned by +some user that cannot log on. You might like to create a user with +the name 'system' who's account is locked with a '*' password. This +user can be made the owner of all of the system directories on your +system and critical system binaries too. + +Why is this a good idea? In a simple case, the CAP_FUSER capabilty is +required for the superuser to delete files owned by a non-root user in +a 'sticky-bit' protected non-root owned directory. Thus, the sticky +bit can help you protect the /lib/ directory from an compromized +daemon where the directory and the files it contains are owned by the +system user. It can be protected by using a wrapper like execcap to +ensure that the daemon is not running with the CAP_FUSER capability... + + +Limiting the damage: + +If your daemon only needs to be setuid-root in order to bind to a low +numbered port. You should restrict it to only having access to the +CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE capability. Coupled with not having any files on +the system owned by root, it becomes significantly harder for such a +daemon to damage your system. + +Note, you should think of this kind of trick as making things harder +for a potential attacker to exploit a hole in a daemon of this +type. Being able to bind to any privileged port is still a formidable +privilege and can lead to difficult but 'interesting' man in the +middle attacks -- hijack the telnet port for example and masquerade as +the login program... Collecting passwords for another day. + + +The /proc/ filesystem: + +This Linux-specific directory tree holds most of the state of the +system in a form that can sometimes be manipulated by file +read/writes. Take care to ensure that the filesystem is not mounted +with uid=0, since root (with no capabilities) would still be able to +read sensitive files in the /proc/ tree - kcore for example. + +[Patch is available for 2.2.1 - I just wrote it!] |