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79 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
79 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Recommendations
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---
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## Renaming of profiles
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For security reason, once loaded into the kernel, a profile cannot get fully removed. Therefore, by renaming a profile, you create a second profile with the same attachment. AppArmor will not be able to determine witch one to use leading to breakage.
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A reboot is required to fully remove the profile from the kernel.
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## Programs to not confine
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Some programs should not be confined by themselves. For example, tools such as `ls`, `rm`, `diff` or `cat` do not have profiles in this project. Let's see why.
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These are general tools that in a general context can legitimately access any file in the system. Therefore, the confinement of such tools by a global profile would at best be minimal at worst be a security theatre.
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It gets even worse. Let's say, we write a profile for `cat`. Such a profile would need access to `/etc/`. We will add the following rule:
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```sh
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/etc/{,**} rw,
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```
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However, as `/etc` can contain sensitive files, we now want to explicitly prevent access to these sensitive files. Problems:
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1. How do we know the exhaustive list of *sensitive files* in `/etc`?
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2. How do we ensure access to these sensitive files is not required?
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3. This breaks the principle of mandatory access control.
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See the [first rule of this project](index.md#project-rules) which is to only allow
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what is required. Here we allow everything and blacklist some paths.
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It creates even more issues when we want to use this profile in other profiles. Let's take the example of `diff`. Using this rule: `@{bin}/diff rPx,` this will restrict access to the very generic and not very confined `diff` profile. Whereas most of the time, we want to restrict `diff` to some specific file in our profile:
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* In `dpkg`, an internal child profile (`rCx -> diff`), allows `diff` to only access etc config files:
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!!! note ""
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[apparmor.d/apparmor.d/groups/apt/dpkg](https://github.com/roddhjav/apparmor.d/blob/accf5538bdfc1598f1cc1588a7118252884df50c/apparmor.d/groups/apt/dpkg#L123)
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``` aa linenums="123"
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profile diff {
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include <abstractions/base>
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include <abstractions/consoles>
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@{bin}/ r,
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@{bin}/pager mr,
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@{bin}/less mr,
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@{bin}/more mr,
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@{bin}/diff mr,
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owner @{HOME}/.lesshs* rw,
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# Diff changed config files
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/etc/** r,
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# For shell pwd
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/root/ r,
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}
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```
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* As it is a dependency of pass, `diff` inherits the `pass' profile and has the same access as the pass profile, so it will be allowed to diff password files because more than a generic `diff`, it is a `diff` "version" for the pass password manager:
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!!! note ""
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[apparmor.d/apparmor.d/profiles-m-r/pass](https://github.com/roddhjav/apparmor.d/blob/accf5538bdfc1598f1cc1588a7118252884df50c/apparmor.d/profiles-m-r/pass#L20
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)
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``` aa linenums="20"
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@{bin}/diff rix,
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```
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**What if I still want to protect these programs?**
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You do not protect these programs. *Protect the usage you have of these programs*. In practice, it means that you should put your terminal in a sandbox managed environment with a sandboxing tool such as Toolbox.
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!!! example "To sum up"
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1. Do not create a profile for programs such as: `rm`, `ls`, `diff`, `cd`, `cat`
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2. Do not create a profile for the shell: `bash`, `sh`, `dash`, `zsh`
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3. Use [Toolbox](https://containertoolbx.org/)
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