xref: /freebsd/share/man/man4/mac.4 (revision a0ee8cc6)
1.\" Copyright (c) 2003 Networks Associates Technology, Inc.
2.\" All rights reserved.
3.\"
4.\" This software was developed for the FreeBSD Project by Chris Costello
5.\" at Safeport Network Services and Network Associates Labs, the
6.\" Security Research Division of Network Associates, Inc. under
7.\" DARPA/SPAWAR contract N66001-01-C-8035 ("CBOSS"), as part of the
8.\" DARPA CHATS research program.
9.\"
10.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
11.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
12.\" are met:
13.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
14.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
15.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
16.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
17.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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31.\" $FreeBSD$
32.\"
33.Dd July 25, 2015
34.Dt MAC 4
35.Os
36.Sh NAME
37.Nm mac
38.Nd Mandatory Access Control
39.Sh SYNOPSIS
40.Cd "options MAC"
41.Sh DESCRIPTION
42.Ss Introduction
43The Mandatory Access Control, or MAC, framework allows administrators to
44finely control system security by providing for a loadable security policy
45architecture.
46It is important to note that due to its nature, MAC security policies may
47only restrict access relative to one another and the base system policy;
48they cannot override traditional
49.Ux
50security provisions such as file permissions and superuser checks.
51.Pp
52Currently, the following MAC policy modules are shipped with
53.Fx :
54.Bl -column ".Xr mac_seeotheruids 4" "low-watermark mac policy" ".Em Labeling" "boot only"
55.It Sy Name Ta Sy Description Ta Sy Labeling Ta Sy "Load time"
56.It Xr mac_biba 4 Ta "Biba integrity policy" Ta yes Ta boot only
57.It Xr mac_bsdextended 4 Ta "File system firewall" Ta no Ta any time
58.It Xr mac_ifoff 4 Ta "Interface silencing" Ta no Ta any time
59.It Xr mac_lomac 4 Ta "Low-Watermark MAC policy" Ta yes Ta boot only
60.It Xr mac_mls 4 Ta "Confidentiality policy" Ta yes Ta boot only
61.It Xr mac_none 4 Ta "Sample no-op policy" Ta no Ta any time
62.It Xr mac_partition 4 Ta "Process partition policy" Ta yes Ta any time
63.It Xr mac_portacl 4 Ta "Port bind(2) access control" Ta no Ta any time
64.It Xr mac_seeotheruids 4 Ta "See-other-UIDs policy" Ta no Ta any time
65.It Xr mac_test 4 Ta "MAC testing policy" Ta no Ta any time
66.El
67.Ss MAC Labels
68Each system subject (processes, sockets, etc.) and each system object
69(file system objects, sockets, etc.) can carry with it a MAC label.
70MAC labels contain data in an arbitrary format
71taken into consideration in making access control decisions
72for a given operation.
73Most MAC labels on system subjects and objects
74can be modified directly or indirectly by the system
75administrator.
76The format for a given policy's label may vary depending on the type
77of object or subject being labeled.
78More information on the format for MAC labels can be found in the
79.Xr maclabel 7
80man page.
81.Ss MAC Support for UFS2 File Systems
82By default, file system enforcement of labeled MAC policies relies on
83a single file system label
84(see
85.Sx "MAC Labels" )
86in order to make access control decisions for all the files in a particular
87file system.
88With some policies, this configuration may not allow administrators to take
89full advantage of features.
90In order to enable support for labeling files on an individual basis
91for a particular file system,
92the
93.Dq multilabel
94flag must be enabled on the file system.
95To set the
96.Dq multilabel
97flag, drop to single-user mode and unmount the file system,
98then execute the following command:
99.Pp
100.Dl "tunefs -l enable" Ar filesystem
101.Pp
102where
103.Ar filesystem
104is either the mount point
105(in
106.Xr fstab 5 )
107or the special file
108(in
109.Pa /dev )
110corresponding to the file system on which to enable multilabel support.
111.Ss Policy Enforcement
112Policy enforcement is divided into the following areas of the system:
113.Bl -ohang
114.It Sy "File System"
115File system mounts, modifying directories, modifying files, etc.
116.It Sy KLD
117Loading, unloading, and retrieving statistics on loaded kernel modules
118.It Sy Network
119Network interfaces,
120.Xr bpf 4 ,
121packet delivery and transmission,
122interface configuration
123.Xr ( ioctl 2 ,
124.Xr ifconfig 8 )
125.It Sy Pipes
126Creation of and operation on
127.Xr pipe 2
128objects
129.It Sy Processes
130Debugging
131(e.g.\&
132.Xr ktrace 2 ) ,
133process visibility
134.Pq Xr ps 1 ,
135process execution
136.Pq Xr execve 2 ,
137signalling
138.Pq Xr kill 2
139.It Sy Sockets
140Creation of and operation on
141.Xr socket 2
142objects
143.It Sy System
144Kernel environment
145.Pq Xr kenv 1 ,
146system accounting
147.Pq Xr acct 2 ,
148.Xr reboot 2 ,
149.Xr settimeofday 2 ,
150.Xr swapon 2 ,
151.Xr sysctl 3 ,
152.Xr nfsd 8 Ns
153-related operations
154.It Sy VM
155.Xr mmap 2 Ns
156-ed files
157.El
158.Ss Setting MAC Labels
159From the command line, each type of system object has its own means for setting
160and modifying its MAC policy label.
161.Bl -column "user (by login class)" "Xr setfmac 8 , Xr setfsmac 8" -offset indent
162.It Sy "Subject/Object" Ta Sy "Utility"
163.It "File system object" Ta Xr setfmac 8 , Xr setfsmac 8
164.It "Network interface" Ta Xr ifconfig 8
165.It "TTY (by login class)" Ta Xr login.conf 5
166.It "User (by login class)" Ta Xr login.conf 5
167.El
168.Pp
169Additionally, the
170.Xr su 1
171and
172.Xr setpmac 8
173utilities can be used to run a command with a different process label than
174the shell's current label.
175.Ss Programming With MAC
176MAC security enforcement itself is transparent to application
177programs, with the exception that some programs may need to be aware of
178additional
179.Xr errno 2
180returns from various system calls.
181.Pp
182The interface for retrieving, handling, and setting policy labels
183is documented in the
184.Xr mac 3
185man page.
186.\" *** XXX ***
187.\" Support for this feature is poor and should not be encouraged.
188.\"
189.\" .It Va security.mac.mmap_revocation
190.\" Revoke
191.\" .Xr mmap 2
192.\" access to files on subject relabel.
193.\" .It Va security.mac.mmap_revocation_via_cow
194.\" Revoke
195.\" .Xr mmap 2
196.\" access to files via copy-on-write semantics;
197.\" mapped regions will still appear writable, but will no longer
198.\" effect a change on the underlying vnode.
199.\" (Default: 0).
200.Sh SEE ALSO
201.Xr mac 3 ,
202.Xr mac_biba 4 ,
203.Xr mac_bsdextended 4 ,
204.Xr mac_ifoff 4 ,
205.Xr mac_lomac 4 ,
206.Xr mac_mls 4 ,
207.Xr mac_none 4 ,
208.Xr mac_partition 4 ,
209.Xr mac_portacl 4 ,
210.Xr mac_seeotheruids 4 ,
211.Xr mac_test 4 ,
212.Xr login.conf 5 ,
213.Xr maclabel 7 ,
214.Xr getfmac 8 ,
215.Xr getpmac 8 ,
216.Xr setfmac 8 ,
217.Xr setpmac 8 ,
218.Xr mac 9
219.Rs
220.%B "The FreeBSD Handbook"
221.%T "Mandatory Access Control"
222.%U http://www.FreeBSD.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/mac.html
223.Re
224.Sh HISTORY
225The
226.Nm
227implementation first appeared in
228.Fx 5.0
229and was developed by the
230.Tn TrustedBSD
231Project.
232.Sh AUTHORS
233This software was contributed to the
234.Fx
235Project by Network Associates Labs,
236the Security Research Division of Network Associates
237Inc.
238under DARPA/SPAWAR contract N66001-01-C-8035
239.Pq Dq CBOSS ,
240as part of the DARPA CHATS research program.
241.Sh BUGS
242While the MAC Framework design is intended to support the containment of
243the root user, not all attack channels are currently protected by entry
244point checks.
245As such, MAC Framework policies should not be relied on, in isolation,
246to protect against a malicious privileged user.
247