f6d2f1c200
rather than as a macro using the .sy request, so we may drop the unsafe (-U) mode.
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.\"
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.\" $FreeBSD$
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.\"
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.if n .ftr C R
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.ig TL
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.ds CH "
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.nr PI 2n
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.nr PS 12
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.nr LL 15c
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.nr PO 3c
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.nr FM 3.5c
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.po 3c
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.TL
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Jails: Confining the omnipotent root.
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.FS
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This paper was presented at the 2nd International System Administration and Networking Conference "SANE 2000" May 22-25, 2000 in Maastricht, The Netherlands and is published in the proceedings.
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.FE
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.AU
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Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@FreeBSD.org>
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.AU
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Robert N. M. Watson <rwatson@FreeBSD.org>
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.AI
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The FreeBSD Project
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.FS
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This work was sponsored by \fChttp://www.servetheweb.com/\fP and
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donated to the FreeBSD Project for inclusion in the FreeBSD
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OS. FreeBSD 4.0-RELEASE was the first release including this
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code.
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Follow-on work was sponsored by Safeport Network Services,
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\fChttp://www.safeport.com/\fP
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.FE
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.AB
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The traditional UNIX security model is simple but inexpressive.
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Adding fine-grained access control improves the expressiveness,
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but often dramatically increases both the cost of system management
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and implementation complexity.
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In environments with a more complex management model, with delegation
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of some management functions to parties under varying degrees of trust,
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the base UNIX model and most natural
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extensions are inappropriate at best.
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Where multiple mutually un-trusting parties are introduced,
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``inappropriate'' rapidly transitions to ``nightmarish'', especially
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with regards to data integrity and privacy protection.
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.PP
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The FreeBSD ``Jail'' facility provides the ability to partition
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the operating system environment, while maintaining the simplicity
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of the UNIX ``root'' model.
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In Jail, users with privilege find that the scope of their requests
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is limited to the jail, allowing system administrators to delegate
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management capabilities for each virtual machine
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environment.
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Creating virtual machines in this manner has many potential uses; the
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most popular thus far has been for providing virtual machine services
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in Internet Service Provider environments.
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.AE
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.NH
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Introduction
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.PP
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The UNIX access control mechanism is designed for an environment with two
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types of users: those with, and without administrative privilege.
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Within this framework, every attempt is made to provide an open
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system, allowing easy sharing of files and inter-process communication.
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As a member of the UNIX family, FreeBSD inherits these
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security properties.
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Users of FreeBSD in non-traditional UNIX environments must balance
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their need for strong application support, high network performance
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and functionality, and low total cost of ownership with the need
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for alternative security models that are difficult or impossible to
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implement with the UNIX security mechanisms.
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.PP
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One such consideration is the desire to delegate some (but not all)
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administrative functions to untrusted or less trusted parties, and
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simultaneously impose system-wide mandatory policies on process
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interaction and sharing.
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Attempting to create such an environment in the current-day FreeBSD
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security environment is both difficult and costly: in many cases,
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the burden of implementing these policies falls on user
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applications, which means an increase in the size and complexity
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of the code base, in turn translating to higher development
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and maintenance cost, as well as less overall flexibility.
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.PP
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This abstract risk becomes more clear when applied to a practical,
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real-world example:
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many web service providers turn to the FreeBSD
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operating system to host customer web sites, as it provides a
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high-performance, network-centric server environment.
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However, these providers have a number of concerns on their plate, both in
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terms of protecting the integrity and confidentiality of their own
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files and services from their customers, as well as protecting the files
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and services of one customer from (accidental or
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intentional) access by any other customer.
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At the same time, a provider would like to provide
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substantial autonomy to customers, allowing them to install and
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maintain their own software, and to manage their own services,
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such as web servers and other content-related daemon programs.
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.PP
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This problem space points strongly in the direction of a partitioning
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|
solution, in which customer processes and storage are isolated from those of
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other customers, both in terms of accidental disclosure of data or process
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information, but also in terms of the ability to modify files or processes
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outside of a compartment.
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Delegation of management functions within the system must
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be possible, but not at the cost of system-wide requirements, including
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integrity and privacy protection between partitions.
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.PP
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However, UNIX-style access control makes it notoriously difficult to
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compartmentalise functionality.
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While mechanisms such as chroot(2) provide a modest
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level compartmentalisation, it is well known
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that these mechanisms have serious shortcomings, both in terms of the
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scope of their functionality, and effectiveness at what they provide \s-2[CHROOT]\s+2.
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.PP
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In the case of the chroot(2) call, a process's visibility of
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the file system name-space is limited to a single subtree.
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However, the compartmentalisation does not extend to the process
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or networking spaces and therefore both observation of and interference
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with processes outside their compartment is possible.
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.PP
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To this end, we describe the new FreeBSD ``Jail'' facility, which
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provides a strong partitioning solution, leveraging existing
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mechanisms, such as chroot(2), to what effectively amounts to a
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virtual machine environment. Processes in a jail are provided
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full access to the files that they may manipulate, processes they
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may influence, and network services they can make use of, and neither
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access nor visibility of files, processes or network services outside
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their partition.
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.PP
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Unlike other fine-grained security solutions, Jail does not
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substantially increase the policy management requirements for the
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system administrator, as each Jail is a virtual FreeBSD environment
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permitting local policy to be independently managed, with much the
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same properties as the main system itself, making Jail easy to use
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for the administrator, and far more compatible with applications.
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.NH
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Traditional UNIX Security, or, ``God, root, what difference?" \s-2[UF]\s+2.
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.PP
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The traditional UNIX access model assigns numeric uids to each user of the
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system. In turn, each process ``owned'' by a user will be tagged with that
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user's uid in an unforgeable manner. The uids serve two purposes: first,
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they determine how discretionary access control mechanisms will be applied, and
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second, they are used to determine whether special privileges are accorded.
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.PP
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In the case of discretionary access controls, the primary object protected is
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a file. The uid (and related gids indicating group membership) are mapped to
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a set of rights for each object, courtesy the UNIX file mode, in effect acting
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as a limited form of access control list. Jail is, in general, not concerned
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with modifying the semantics of discretionary access control mechanisms,
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although there are important implications from a management perspective.
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.PP
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For the purposes of determining whether special privileges are accorded to a
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process, the check is simple: ``is the numeric uid equal to 0 ?''.
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If so, the
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process is acting with ``super-user privileges'', and all access checks are
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granted, in effect allowing the process the ability to do whatever it wants
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to \**.
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.FS
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\&... no matter how patently stupid it may be.
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.FE
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.PP
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For the purposes of human convenience, uid 0 is canonically allocated
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to the ``root'' user \s-2[ROOT]\s+2.
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For the purposes of jail, this behaviour is extremely relevant: many of
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these privileged operations can be used to manage system hardware and
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configuration, file system name-space, and special network operations.
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.PP
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Many limitations to this model are immediately clear: the root user is a
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single, concentrated source of privilege that is exposed to many pieces of
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software, and as such an immediate target for attacks. In the event of a
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compromise of the root capability set, the attacker has complete control over
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the system. Even without an attacker, the risks of a single administrative
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account are serious: delegating a narrow scope of capability to an
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inexperienced administrator is difficult, as the granularity of delegation is
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that of all system management abilities. These features make the omnipotent
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root account a sharp, efficient and extremely dangerous tool.
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.PP
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The BSD family of operating systems have implemented the ``securelevel''
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mechanism which allows the administrator to block certain configuration
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and management functions from being performed by root,
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until the system is restarted and brought up into single-user mode.
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While this does provide some amount of protection in the case of a root
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compromise of the machine, it does nothing to address the need for
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delegation of certain root abilities.
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.NH
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Other Solutions to the Root Problem
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.PP
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Many operating systems attempt to address these limitations by providing
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fine-grained access controls for system resources \s-2[BIBA]\s+2.
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These efforts vary in
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degrees of success, but almost all suffer from at least three serious
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limitations:
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.PP
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First, increasing the granularity of security controls increases the
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complexity of the administration process, in turn increasing both the
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opportunity for incorrect configuration, as well as the demand on
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administrator time and resources. In many cases, the increased complexity
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results in significant frustration for the administrator, which may result
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in two
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disastrous types of policy: ``all doors open as it's too much trouble'', and
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``trust that the system is secure, when in fact it isn't''.
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.PP
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The extent of the trouble is best illustrated by the fact that an entire
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niche industry has emerged providing tools to manage fine grained security
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controls \s-2[UAS]\s+2.
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.PP
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Second, usefully segregating capabilities and assigning them to running code
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and users is very difficult. Many privileged operations in UNIX seem
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independent, but are in fact closely related, and the handing out of one
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privilege may, in effect, be transitive to the many others. For example, in
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some trusted operating systems, a system capability may be assigned to a
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running process to allow it to read any file, for the purposes of backup.
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However, this capability is, in effect, equivalent to the ability to switch to
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any other account, as the ability to access any file provides access to system
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keying material, which in turn provides the ability to authenticate as any
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user. Similarly, many operating systems attempt to segregate management
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capabilities from auditing capabilities. In a number of these operating
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systems, however, ``management capabilities'' permit the administrator to
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assign ``auditing capabilities'' to itself, or another account, circumventing
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the segregation of capability.
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.PP
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Finally, introducing new security features often involves introducing new
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security management APIs. When fine-grained capabilities are introduced to
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replace the setuid mechanism in UNIX-like operating systems, applications that
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previously did an ``appropriateness check'' to see if they were running as
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root before executing must now be changed to know that they need not run as
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root. In the case of applications running with privilege and executing other
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programs, there is now a new set of privileges that must be voluntarily given
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up before executing another program. These change can introduce significant
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incompatibility for existing applications, and make life more difficult for
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application developers who may not be aware of differing security semantics on
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different systems \s-2[POSIX1e]\s+2.
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.NH
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The Jail Partitioning Solution
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.PP
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Jail neatly side-steps the majority of these problems through partitioning.
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Rather
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than introduce additional fine-grained access control mechanism, we partition
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a FreeBSD environment (processes, file system, network resources) into a
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management environment, and optionally subset Jail environments. In doing so,
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we simultaneously maintain the existing UNIX security model, allowing
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multiple users and a privileged root user in each jail, while
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limiting the scope of root's activities to his jail.
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Consequently the administrator of a
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FreeBSD machine can partition the machine into separate jails, and provide
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access to the super-user account in each of these without losing control of
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the over-all environment.
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.PP
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A process in a partition is referred to as ``in jail''. When a FreeBSD
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system is booted up after a fresh install, no processes will be in jail.
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When
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a process is placed in a jail, it, and any descendents of the process created
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after the jail creation, will be in that jail. A process may be in only one
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jail, and after creation, it can not leave the jail.
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Jails are created when a
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privileged process calls the jail(2) syscall, with a description of the jail as an
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argument to the call. Each call to jail(2) creates a new jail; the only way
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for a new process to enter the jail is by inheriting access to the jail from
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another process already in that jail.
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Processes may never
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leave the jail they created, or were created in.
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.KF
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.if t .PSPIC jail01.eps 4i
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.ce 1
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Fig. 1 \(em Schematic diagram of machine with two configured jails
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.sp
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.KE
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.PP
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Membership in a jail involves a number of restrictions: access to the file
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name-space is restricted in the style of chroot(2), the ability to bind network
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resources is limited to a specific IP address, the ability to manipulate
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system resources and perform privileged operations is sharply curtailed, and
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the ability to interact with other processes is limited to only processes
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inside the same jail.
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.PP
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Jail takes advantage of the existing chroot(2) behaviour to limit access to the
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file system name-space for jailed processes. When a jail is created, it is
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bound to a particular file system root.
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Processes are unable to manipulate files that they cannot address,
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and as such the integrity and confidentiality of files outside of the jail
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file system root are protected. Traditional mechanisms for breaking out of
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chroot(2) have been blocked.
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In the expected and documented configuration, each jail is provided
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with its exclusive file system root, and standard FreeBSD directory layout,
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but this is not mandated by the implementation.
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.PP
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Each jail is bound to a single IP address: processes within the jail may not
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make use of any other IP address for outgoing or incoming connections; this
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includes the ability to restrict what network services a particular jail may
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offer. As FreeBSD distinguishes attempts to bind all IP addresses from
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attempts to bind a particular address, bind requests for all IP addresses are
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redirected to the individual Jail address. Some network functionality
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associated with privileged calls are wholesale disabled due to the nature of the
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functionality offered, in particular facilities which would allow ``spoofing''
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of IP numbers or disruptive traffic to be generated have been disabled.
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.PP
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Processes running without root privileges will notice few, if any differences
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between a jailed environment or un-jailed environment. Processes running with
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root privileges will find that many restrictions apply to the privileged calls
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they may make. Some calls will now return an access error \(em for example, an
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attempt to create a device node will now fail. Others will have a more
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limited scope than normal \(em attempts to bind a reserved port number on all
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available addresses will result in binding only the address associated with
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the jail. Other calls will succeed as normal: root may read a file owned by
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any uid, as long as it is accessible through the jail file system name-space.
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.PP
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Processes within the jail will find that they are unable to interact or
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even verify the existence of
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processes outside the jail \(em processes within the jail are
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prevented from delivering signals to processes outside the jail, as well as
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connecting to those processes with debuggers, or even see them in the
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sysctl or process file system monitoring mechanisms. Jail does not prevent,
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nor is it intended to prevent, the use of covert channels or communications
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mechanisms via accepted interfaces \(em for example, two processes may communicate
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via sockets over the IP network interface. Nor does it attempt to provide
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scheduling services based on the partition; however, it does prevent calls
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that interfere with normal process operation.
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.PP
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As a result of these attempts to retain the standard FreeBSD API and
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framework, almost all applications will run unaffected. Standard system
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services such as Telnet, FTP, and SSH all behave normally, as do most third
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party applications, including the popular Apache web server.
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.NH
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Jail Implementation
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.PP
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Processes running with root privileges in the jail find that there are serious
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restrictions on what it is capable of doing \(em in particular, activities that
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would extend outside of the jail:
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.IP "" 5n
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\(bu Modifying the running kernel by direct access and loading kernel
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modules is prohibited.
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.IP
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\(bu Modifying any of the network configuration, interfaces, addresses, and
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routing table is prohibited.
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.IP
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\(bu Mounting and unmounting file systems is prohibited.
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.IP
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\(bu Creating device nodes is prohibited.
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.IP
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\(bu Accessing raw, divert, or routing sockets is prohibited.
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.IP
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\(bu Modifying kernel runtime parameters, such as most sysctl settings, is
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prohibited.
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.IP
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\(bu Changing securelevel-related file flags is prohibited.
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.IP
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\(bu Accessing network resources not associated with the jail is prohibited.
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.PP
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Other privileged activities are permitted as long as they are limited to the
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scope of the jail:
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.IP "" 5n
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\(bu Signalling any process within the jail is permitted.
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.IP
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\(bu Changing the ownership and mode of any file within the jail is permitted, as
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long as the file flags permit this.
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.IP
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\(bu Deleting any file within the jail is permitted, as long as the file flags
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permit this.
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.IP
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\(bu Binding reserved TCP and UDP port numbers on the jails IP address is
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permitted. (Attempts to bind TCP and UDP ports using INADDR_ANY will be
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redirected to the jails IP address.)
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.IP
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\(bu Functions which operate on the uid/gid space are all permitted since they
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act as labels for filesystem objects of proceses
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which are partitioned off by other mechanisms.
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.PP
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|
These restrictions on root access limit the scope of root processes, enabling
|
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most applications to run un-hindered, but preventing calls that might allow an
|
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application to reach beyond the jail and influence other processes or
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system-wide configuration.
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.PP
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.so implementation.ms
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.so mgt.ms
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.so future.ms
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.NH
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Conclusion
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.PP
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The jail facility provides FreeBSD with a conceptually simple security
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partitioning mechanism, allowing the delegation of administrative rights
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within virtual machine partitions.
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.PP
|
|
The implementation relies on
|
|
restricting access within the jail environment to a well-defined subset
|
|
of the overall host environment. This includes limiting interaction
|
|
between processes, and to files, network resources, and privileged
|
|
operations. Administrative overhead is reduced through avoiding
|
|
fine-grained access control mechanisms, and maintaining a consistent
|
|
administrative interface across partitions and the host environment.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The jail facility has already seen widespread deployment in particular as
|
|
a vehicle for delivering "virtual private server" services.
|
|
.PP
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|
The jail code is included in the base system as part of FreeBSD 4.0-RELEASE,
|
|
and fully documented in the jail(2) and jail(8) man-pages.
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.bp
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.SH
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Notes & References
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|
.IP \s-2[BIBA]\s+2 .5i
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|
K. J. Biba, Integrity Considerations for Secure
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Computer Systems, USAF Electronic Systems Division, 1977
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|
.IP \s-2[CHROOT]\s+2 .5i
|
|
Dr. Marshall Kirk Mckusick, private communication:
|
|
``According to the SCCS logs, the chroot call was added by Bill Joy
|
|
on March 18, 1982 approximately 1.5 years before 4.2BSD was released.
|
|
That was well before we had ftp servers of any sort (ftp did not
|
|
show up in the source tree until January 1983). My best guess as
|
|
to its purpose was to allow Bill to chroot into the /4.2BSD build
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|
directory and build a system using only the files, include files,
|
|
etc contained in that tree. That was the only use of chroot that
|
|
I remember from the early days.''
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|
.IP \s-2[LOTTERY1]\s+2 .5i
|
|
David Petrou and John Milford. Proportional-Share Scheduling:
|
|
Implementation and Evaluation in a Widely-Deployed Operating System,
|
|
December 1997.
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.nf
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|
\s-2\fChttp://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dpetrou/papers/freebsd_lottery_writeup98.ps\fP\s+2
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\s-2\fChttp://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dpetrou/code/freebsd_lottery_code.tar.gz\fP\s+2
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.IP \s-2[LOTTERY2]\s+2 .5i
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Carl A. Waldspurger and William E. Weihl. Lottery Scheduling: Flexible Proportional-Share Resource Management, Proceedings of the First Symposium on Operating Systems Design and Implementation (OSDI '94), pages 1-11, Monterey, California, November 1994.
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.nf
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\s-2\fChttp://www.research.digital.com/SRC/personal/caw/papers.html\fP\s+2
|
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.IP \s-2[POSIX1e]\s+2 .5i
|
|
Draft Standard for Information Technology \(em
|
|
Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) \(em
|
|
Part 1: System Application Program Interface (API) \(em Amendment:
|
|
Protection, Audit and Control Interfaces [C Language]
|
|
IEEE Std 1003.1e Draft 17 Editor Casey Schaufler
|
|
.IP \s-2[ROOT]\s+2 .5i
|
|
Historically other names have been used at times, Zilog for instance
|
|
called the super-user account ``zeus''.
|
|
.IP \s-2[UAS]\s+2 .5i
|
|
One such niche product is the ``UAS'' system to maintain and audit
|
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RACF configurations on MVS systems.
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.nf
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\s-2\fChttp://www.entactinfo.com/products/uas/\fP\s+2
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.IP \s-2[UF]\s+2 .5i
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|
Quote from the User-Friendly cartoon by Illiad.
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.nf
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\s-2\fChttp://www.userfriendly.org/cartoons/archives/98nov/19981111.html\fP\s+2
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