4.5 KiB
apparmor.d
Full set of AppArmor profiles
Warning: This project is still in early development.
Description
A set of over 1000 AppArmor profiles which aims is to confine most of Linux base applications and processes.
Goals & Purpose
- Support all distribution that support AppArmor (currenlty Archlinux and Debian),
- Target both desktop and server,
- Confine all root processes (bluetooth, dbus, polkit, networkmanager, systemd...),
- Confine all Desktop environments (currently only Gnome),
- Should not break a normal usage of the confined software.
- Fully tested (Work in progress),
Note: This work is part of a bigger linux security project.
This project is based on the excellent work from Morfikov and aims to extend it to more Linux distributions and desktop environements.
Concepts
There are over 50000 Linux packages and even more applications. It is simply not possible to write an AppArmor profile for all of them. Therefore a question arises: What to confine and why?
We take inspiration from the Android/ChromeOS Security Model and we apply it to the Linux world. Modern linux security implementation usually consider a core base image with a carefully set of selected applications. Everything else should be sandboxed. Therefore, this project tries to confine all the core applications you will usually find in a Linux system: all systemd services, xwayland, network, bluetooth, your desktop environment... Non-core user applications are out of scope as they should be sandboxed using a dedicated tool (minijail, bubblewrap...).
This is fundamentally different from how AppArmor is used on Linux server as it is common to only confine the applications that face the internet and/or the users.
Installation
Requirements
- An
apparmor
based linux distribution. - A
systemd
based linux distribution. - Base profiles and abstractions shipped with AppArmor are supposed to be installed.
Archlinux
Build and install the package with:
makepkg -si
Debian
Build using standard Debian package build tools:
dpkg-buildpackage -b -d -us -ui --sign-key=<gpg-id>
Usage
Once installed and with the rules enabled, you can ensure the rules are loaded
with sudo aa-satus
, it should give something like:
apparmor module is loaded.
1042 profiles are loaded.
753 profiles are in enforce mode.
...
289 profiles are in complain mode.
...
0 profiles are in kill mode.
0 profiles are in unconfined mode.
119 processes have profiles defined.
90 processes are in enforce mode.
...
29 processes are in complain mode.
...
0 processes are unconfined but have a profile defined.
0 processes are in mixed mode.
0 processes are in kill mode.
You can also list the current processes alongside with their security profile with
ps auxZ
. Most of the process should then be confined.
Tests
A full test suite to ensure compatibility across distributions and softwares is still a work in progress.
Contribution
Feedbacks, contributors, pull requests, are all very welcome.
License
This program is based on Mikhail Morfikov's apparmor profiles project and thus has the same license (GPL2).
Copyright (C) Alexandre PUJOL & Mikhail Morfikov
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.