xref: /freebsd/share/man/man7/security.7 (revision 3494f7c0)
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29.Dd October 5, 2023
30.Dt SECURITY 7
31.Os
32.Sh NAME
33.Nm security
34.Nd introduction to security under FreeBSD
35.Sh DESCRIPTION
36Security is a function that begins and ends with the system administrator.
37While all
38.Bx
39multi-user systems have some inherent security, the job of building and
40maintaining additional security mechanisms to keep users
41.Dq honest
42is probably
43one of the single largest undertakings of the sysadmin.
44Machines are
45only as secure as you make them, and security concerns are ever competing
46with the human necessity for convenience.
47.Ux
48systems,
49in general, are capable of running a huge number of simultaneous processes
50and many of these processes operate as servers \(em meaning that external
51entities can connect and talk to them.
52As yesterday's mini-computers and mainframes
53become today's desktops, and as computers become networked and internetworked,
54security becomes an ever bigger issue.
55.Pp
56Security is best implemented through a layered onion approach.
57In a nutshell,
58what you want to do is to create as many layers of security as are convenient
59and then carefully monitor the system for intrusions.
60.Pp
61System security also pertains to dealing with various forms of attacks,
62including attacks that attempt to crash or otherwise make a system unusable
63but do not attempt to break root.
64Security concerns can be split up into
65several categories:
66.Bl -enum -offset indent
67.It
68Denial of Service attacks (DoS)
69.It
70User account compromises
71.It
72Root compromise through accessible servers
73.It
74Root compromise via user accounts
75.It
76Backdoor creation
77.El
78.Pp
79A denial of service attack is an action that deprives the machine of needed
80resources.
81Typically, DoS attacks are brute-force mechanisms that attempt
82to crash or otherwise make a machine unusable by overwhelming its servers or
83network stack.
84Some DoS attacks try to take advantages of bugs in the
85networking stack to crash a machine with a single packet.
86The latter can
87only be fixed by applying a bug fix to the kernel.
88Attacks on servers can
89often be fixed by properly specifying options to limit the load the servers
90incur on the system under adverse conditions.
91Brute-force network attacks are harder to deal with.
92A spoofed-packet attack, for example, is
93nearly impossible to stop short of cutting your system off from the Internet.
94It may not be able to take your machine down, but it can fill up your Internet
95pipe.
96.Pp
97A user account compromise is even more common than a DoS attack.
98Some
99sysadmins still run
100.Nm telnetd
101and
102.Xr ftpd 8
103servers on their machines.
104These servers, by default, do not operate over encrypted
105connections.
106The result is that if you have any moderate-sized user base,
107one or more of your users logging into your system from a remote location
108(which is the most common and convenient way to log in to a system)
109will have his or her password sniffed.
110The attentive system administrator will analyze
111his remote access logs looking for suspicious source addresses
112even for successful logins.
113.Pp
114One must always assume that once an attacker has access to a user account,
115the attacker can break root.
116However, the reality is that in a well secured
117and maintained system, access to a user account does not necessarily give the
118attacker access to root.
119The distinction is important because without access
120to root the attacker cannot generally hide his tracks and may, at best, be
121able to do nothing more than mess with the user's files or crash the machine.
122User account compromises are very common because users tend not to take the
123precautions that sysadmins take.
124.Pp
125System administrators must keep in mind that there are potentially many ways
126to break root on a machine.
127The attacker may know the root password,
128the attacker
129may find a bug in a root-run server and be able to break root over a network
130connection to that server, or the attacker may know of a bug in an SUID-root
131program that allows the attacker to break root once he has broken into a
132user's account.
133If an attacker has found a way to break root on a machine,
134the attacker may not have a need to install a backdoor.
135Many of the root holes found and closed to date involve a considerable amount
136of work by the attacker to clean up after himself, so most attackers do install
137backdoors.
138This gives you a convenient way to detect the attacker.
139Making
140it impossible for an attacker to install a backdoor may actually be detrimental
141to your security because it will not close off the hole the attacker used to
142break in originally.
143.Pp
144Security remedies should always be implemented with a multi-layered
145.Dq onion peel
146approach and can be categorized as follows:
147.Bl -enum -offset indent
148.It
149Securing root and staff accounts
150.It
151Securing root \(em root-run servers and SUID/SGID binaries
152.It
153Securing user accounts
154.It
155Securing the password file
156.It
157Securing the kernel core, raw devices, and file systems
158.It
159Quick detection of inappropriate changes made to the system
160.It
161Paranoia
162.El
163.Sh SECURING THE ROOT ACCOUNT AND SECURING STAFF ACCOUNTS
164Do not bother securing staff accounts if you have not secured the root
165account.
166Most systems have a password assigned to the root account.
167The
168first thing you do is assume that the password is
169.Em always
170compromised.
171This does not mean that you should remove the password.
172The
173password is almost always necessary for console access to the machine.
174What it does mean is that you should not make it possible to use the password
175outside of the console or possibly even with a
176.Xr su 1
177utility.
178For example, make sure that your PTYs are specified as being
179.Dq Li insecure
180in the
181.Pa /etc/ttys
182file
183so that direct root logins via
184.Xr telnet 1
185are disallowed.
186If using
187other login services such as
188.Xr sshd 8 ,
189make sure that direct root logins are
190disabled there as well.
191Consider every access method \(em services such as
192.Xr ftp 1
193often fall through the cracks.
194Direct root logins should only be allowed
195via the system console.
196.Pp
197Of course, as a sysadmin you have to be able to get to root, so we open up
198a few holes.
199But we make sure these holes require additional password
200verification to operate.
201One way to make root accessible is to add appropriate
202staff accounts to the
203.Dq Li wheel
204group (in
205.Pa /etc/group ) .
206The staff members placed in the
207.Li wheel
208group are allowed to
209.Xr su 1
210to root.
211You should never give staff
212members native
213.Li wheel
214access by putting them in the
215.Li wheel
216group in their password entry.
217Staff accounts should be placed in a
218.Dq Li staff
219group, and then added to the
220.Li wheel
221group via the
222.Pa /etc/group
223file.
224Only those staff members who actually need to have root access
225should be placed in the
226.Li wheel
227group.
228It is also possible, when using an
229authentication method such as Kerberos, to use Kerberos's
230.Pa .k5login
231file in the root account to allow a
232.Xr ksu 1
233to root without having to place anyone at all in the
234.Li wheel
235group.
236This
237may be the better solution since the
238.Li wheel
239mechanism still allows an
240intruder to break root if the intruder has gotten hold of your password
241file and can break into a staff account.
242While having the
243.Li wheel
244mechanism
245is better than having nothing at all, it is not necessarily the safest
246option.
247.Pp
248An indirect way to secure the root account is to secure your staff accounts
249by using an alternative login access method and *'ing out the crypted password
250for the staff accounts.
251This way an intruder may be able to steal the password
252file but will not be able to break into any staff accounts or root, even if
253root has a crypted password associated with it (assuming, of course, that
254you have limited root access to the console).
255Staff members
256get into their staff accounts through a secure login mechanism such as
257.Xr kerberos 8
258or
259.Xr ssh 1
260using a private/public
261key pair.
262When you use something like Kerberos you generally must secure
263the machines which run the Kerberos servers and your desktop workstation.
264When you use a public/private key pair with SSH, you must generally secure
265the machine you are logging in
266.Em from
267(typically your workstation),
268but you can
269also add an additional layer of protection to the key pair by password
270protecting the keypair when you create it with
271.Xr ssh-keygen 1 .
272Being able
273to star-out the passwords for staff accounts also guarantees that staff
274members can only log in through secure access methods that you have set up.
275You can
276thus force all staff members to use secure, encrypted connections for
277all their sessions which closes an important hole used by many intruders: that
278of sniffing the network from an unrelated, less secure machine.
279.Pp
280The more indirect security mechanisms also assume that you are logging in
281from a more restrictive server to a less restrictive server.
282For example,
283if your main box is running all sorts of servers, your workstation should not
284be running any.
285In order for your workstation to be reasonably secure
286you should run as few servers as possible, up to and including no servers
287at all, and you should run a password-protected screen blanker.
288Of course, given physical access to
289a workstation, an attacker can break any sort of security you put on it.
290This is definitely a problem that you should consider but you should also
291consider the fact that the vast majority of break-ins occur remotely, over
292a network, from people who do not have physical access to your workstation or
293servers.
294.Pp
295Using something like Kerberos also gives you the ability to disable or
296change the password for a staff account in one place and have it immediately
297affect all the machines the staff member may have an account on.
298If a staff
299member's account gets compromised, the ability to instantly change his
300password on all machines should not be underrated.
301With discrete passwords, changing a password on N machines can be a mess.
302You can also impose
303re-passwording restrictions with Kerberos: not only can a Kerberos ticket
304be made to timeout after a while, but the Kerberos system can require that
305the user choose a new password after a certain period of time
306(say, once a month).
307.Sh SECURING ROOT \(em ROOT-RUN SERVERS AND SUID/SGID BINARIES
308The prudent sysadmin only runs the servers he needs to, no more, no less.
309Be aware that third party servers are often the most bug-prone.
310For example,
311running an old version of
312.Xr imapd 8
313or
314.Xr popper 8 Pq Pa ports/mail/popper
315is like giving a universal root
316ticket out to the entire world.
317Never run a server that you have not checked
318out carefully.
319Many servers do not need to be run as root.
320For example,
321the
322.Xr talkd 8 ,
323.Xr comsat 8 ,
324and
325.Xr fingerd 8
326daemons can be run in special user
327.Dq sandboxes .
328A sandbox is not perfect unless you go to a large amount of trouble, but the
329onion approach to security still stands: if someone is able to break in
330through a server running in a sandbox, they still have to break out of the
331sandbox.
332The more layers the attacker must break through, the lower the
333likelihood of his success.
334Root holes have historically been found in
335virtually every server ever run as root, including basic system servers.
336If you are running a machine through which people only log in via
337.Xr sshd 8
338and never log in via
339.Nm telnetd
340then turn off this service!
341.Pp
342.Fx
343now defaults to running
344.Xr talkd 8 ,
345.Xr comsat 8 ,
346and
347.Xr fingerd 8
348in a sandbox.
349Depending on whether you
350are installing a new system or upgrading an existing system, the special
351user accounts used by these sandboxes may not be installed.
352The prudent
353sysadmin would research and implement sandboxes for servers whenever possible.
354.Pp
355There are a number of other servers that typically do not run in sandboxes:
356.Xr sendmail 8 ,
357.Xr popper 8 ,
358.Xr imapd 8 ,
359.Xr ftpd 8 ,
360and others.
361There are alternatives to
362some of these, but installing them may require more work than you are willing
363to put
364(the convenience factor strikes again).
365You may have to run these
366servers as root and rely on other mechanisms to detect break-ins that might
367occur through them.
368.Pp
369The other big potential root hole in a system are the SUID-root and SGID
370binaries installed on the system.
371Most of these binaries, such as
372.Xr su 1 ,
373reside in
374.Pa /bin , /sbin , /usr/bin ,
375or
376.Pa /usr/sbin .
377While nothing is 100% safe,
378the system-default SUID and SGID binaries can be considered reasonably safe.
379Still, root holes are occasionally found in these binaries.
380A root hole
381was found in Xlib in 1998 that made
382.Xr xterm 1 Pq Pa ports/x11/xterm
383(which is typically SUID)
384vulnerable.
385It is better to be safe than sorry and the prudent sysadmin will restrict SUID
386binaries that only staff should run to a special group that only staff can
387access, and get rid of
388.Pq Dq Li "chmod 000"
389any SUID binaries that nobody uses.
390A server with no display generally does not need an
391.Xr xterm 1 Pq Pa ports/x11/xterm
392binary.
393SGID binaries can be almost as dangerous.
394If an intruder can break an SGID-kmem binary the
395intruder might be able to read
396.Pa /dev/kmem
397and thus read the crypted password
398file, potentially compromising any passworded account.
399Alternatively an
400intruder who breaks group
401.Dq Li kmem
402can monitor keystrokes sent through PTYs,
403including PTYs used by users who log in through secure methods.
404An intruder
405that breaks the
406.Dq Li tty
407group can write to almost any user's TTY.
408If a user
409is running a terminal
410program or emulator with a keyboard-simulation feature, the intruder can
411potentially
412generate a data stream that causes the user's terminal to echo a command, which
413is then run as that user.
414.Sh SECURING USER ACCOUNTS
415User accounts are usually the most difficult to secure.
416While you can impose
417draconian access restrictions on your staff and *-out their passwords, you
418may not be able to do so with any general user accounts you might have.
419If
420you do have sufficient control then you may win out and be able to secure the
421user accounts properly.
422If not, you simply have to be more vigilant in your
423monitoring of those accounts.
424Use of SSH and Kerberos for user accounts is
425more problematic due to the extra administration and technical support
426required, but still a very good solution compared to a crypted password
427file.
428.Sh SECURING THE PASSWORD FILE
429The only sure fire way is to *-out as many passwords as you can and
430use SSH or Kerberos for access to those accounts.
431Even though the
432crypted password file
433.Pq Pa /etc/spwd.db
434can only be read by root, it may
435be possible for an intruder to obtain read access to that file even if the
436attacker cannot obtain root-write access.
437.Pp
438Your security scripts should always check for and report changes to
439the password file
440(see
441.Sx CHECKING FILE INTEGRITY
442below).
443.Sh SECURING THE KERNEL CORE, RAW DEVICES, AND FILE SYSTEMS
444If an attacker breaks root he can do just about anything, but there
445are certain conveniences.
446For example, most modern kernels have a packet sniffing device driver built in.
447Under
448.Fx
449it is called
450the
451.Xr bpf 4
452device.
453An intruder will commonly attempt to run a packet sniffer
454on a compromised machine.
455You do not need to give the intruder the
456capability and most systems should not have the
457.Xr bpf 4
458device compiled in.
459.Pp
460But even if you turn off the
461.Xr bpf 4
462device, you still have
463.Pa /dev/mem
464and
465.Pa /dev/kmem
466to worry about.
467For that matter,
468the intruder can still write to raw disk devices.
469Also, there is another kernel feature called the module loader,
470.Xr kldload 8 .
471An enterprising intruder can use a KLD module to install
472his own
473.Xr bpf 4
474device or other sniffing device on a running kernel.
475To avoid these problems you have to run
476the kernel at a higher security level, at least level 1.
477The security level can be set with a
478.Xr sysctl 8
479on the
480.Va kern.securelevel
481variable.
482Once you have
483set the security level to 1, write access to raw devices will be denied and
484special
485.Xr chflags 1
486flags, such as
487.Cm schg ,
488will be enforced.
489You must also ensure
490that the
491.Cm schg
492flag is set on critical startup binaries, directories, and
493script files \(em everything that gets run
494up to the point where the security level is set.
495This might be overdoing it, and upgrading the system is much more
496difficult when you operate at a higher security level.
497You may compromise and
498run the system at a higher security level but not set the
499.Cm schg
500flag for every
501system file and directory under the sun.
502Another possibility is to simply
503mount
504.Pa /
505and
506.Pa /usr
507read-only.
508It should be noted that being too draconian in
509what you attempt to protect may prevent the all-important detection of an
510intrusion.
511.Pp
512The kernel runs with five different security levels.
513Any super-user process can raise the level, but no process
514can lower it.
515The security levels are:
516.Bl -tag -width flag
517.It Ic -1
518Permanently insecure mode \- always run the system in insecure mode.
519This is the default initial value.
520.It Ic 0
521Insecure mode \- immutable and append-only flags may be turned off.
522All devices may be read or written subject to their permissions.
523.It Ic 1
524Secure mode \- the system immutable and system append-only flags may not
525be turned off;
526disks for mounted file systems,
527.Pa /dev/mem
528and
529.Pa /dev/kmem
530may not be opened for writing;
531.Pa /dev/io
532(if your platform has it) may not be opened at all;
533kernel modules (see
534.Xr kld 4 )
535may not be loaded or unloaded.
536The kernel debugger may not be entered using the
537.Va debug.kdb.enter
538sysctl unless a
539.Xr MAC 9
540policy grants access, for example using
541.Xr mac_ddb 4 .
542A panic or trap cannot be forced using the
543.Va debug.kdb.panic ,
544.Va debug.kdb.panic_str
545and other sysctl's.
546.It Ic 2
547Highly secure mode \- same as secure mode, plus disks may not be
548opened for writing (except by
549.Xr mount 2 )
550whether mounted or not.
551This level precludes tampering with file systems by unmounting them,
552but also inhibits running
553.Xr newfs 8
554while the system is multi-user.
555.Pp
556In addition, kernel time changes are restricted to less than or equal to one
557second.
558Attempts to change the time by more than this will log the message
559.Dq Time adjustment clamped to +1 second .
560.It Ic 3
561Network secure mode \- same as highly secure mode, plus
562IP packet filter rules (see
563.Xr ipfw 8 ,
564.Xr ipfirewall 4
565and
566.Xr pfctl 8 )
567cannot be changed and
568.Xr dummynet 4
569or
570.Xr pf 4
571configuration cannot be adjusted.
572.El
573.Pp
574The security level can be configured with variables documented in
575.Xr rc.conf 5 .
576.Sh CHECKING FILE INTEGRITY: BINARIES, CONFIG FILES, ETC
577When it comes right down to it, you can only protect your core system
578configuration and control files so much before the convenience factor
579rears its ugly head.
580For example, using
581.Xr chflags 1
582to set the
583.Cm schg
584bit on most of the files in
585.Pa /
586and
587.Pa /usr
588is probably counterproductive because
589while it may protect the files, it also closes a detection window.
590The
591last layer of your security onion is perhaps the most important \(em detection.
592The rest of your security is pretty much useless (or, worse, presents you with
593a false sense of safety) if you cannot detect potential incursions.
594Half
595the job of the onion is to slow down the attacker rather than stop him
596in order to give the detection layer a chance to catch him in
597the act.
598.Pp
599The best way to detect an incursion is to look for modified, missing, or
600unexpected files.
601The best
602way to look for modified files is from another (often centralized)
603limited-access system.
604Writing your security scripts on the extra-secure limited-access system
605makes them mostly invisible to potential attackers, and this is important.
606In order to take maximum advantage you generally have to give the
607limited-access box significant access to the other machines in the business,
608usually either by doing a read-only NFS export of the other machines to the
609limited-access box, or by setting up SSH keypairs to allow the limit-access
610box to SSH to the other machines.
611Except for its network traffic, NFS is
612the least visible method \(em allowing you to monitor the file systems on each
613client box virtually undetected.
614If your
615limited-access server is connected to the client boxes through a switch,
616the NFS method is often the better choice.
617If your limited-access server
618is connected to the client boxes through a hub or through several layers
619of routing, the NFS method may be too insecure (network-wise) and using SSH
620may be the better choice even with the audit-trail tracks that SSH lays.
621.Pp
622Once you give a limit-access box at least read access to the client systems
623it is supposed to monitor, you must write scripts to do the actual
624monitoring.
625Given an NFS mount, you can write scripts out of simple system
626utilities such as
627.Xr find 1
628and
629.Xr md5 1 .
630It is best to physically
631.Xr md5 1
632the client-box files boxes at least once a
633day, and to test control files such as those found in
634.Pa /etc
635and
636.Pa /usr/local/etc
637even more often.
638When mismatches are found relative to the base MD5
639information the limited-access machine knows is valid, it should scream at
640a sysadmin to go check it out.
641A good security script will also check for
642inappropriate SUID binaries and for new or deleted files on system partitions
643such as
644.Pa /
645and
646.Pa /usr .
647.Pp
648When using SSH rather than NFS, writing the security script is much more
649difficult.
650You essentially have to
651.Xr scp 1
652the scripts to the client box in order to run them, making them visible, and
653for safety you also need to
654.Xr scp 1
655the binaries (such as
656.Xr find 1 )
657that those scripts use.
658The
659.Xr sshd 8
660daemon on the client box may already be compromised.
661All in all,
662using SSH may be necessary when running over unsecure links, but it is also a
663lot harder to deal with.
664.Pp
665A good security script will also check for changes to user and staff members
666access configuration files:
667.Pa .rhosts , .shosts , .ssh/authorized_keys
668and so forth, files that might fall outside the purview of the MD5 check.
669.Pp
670If you have a huge amount of user disk space it may take too long to run
671through every file on those partitions.
672In this case, setting mount
673flags to disallow SUID binaries on those partitions is a good
674idea.
675The
676.Cm nosuid
677option
678(see
679.Xr mount 8 )
680is what you want to look into.
681I would scan them anyway at least once a
682week, since the object of this layer is to detect a break-in whether or
683not the break-in is effective.
684.Pp
685Process accounting
686(see
687.Xr accton 8 )
688is a relatively low-overhead feature of
689the operating system which I recommend using as a post-break-in evaluation
690mechanism.
691It is especially useful in tracking down how an intruder has
692actually broken into a system, assuming the file is still intact after
693the break-in occurs.
694.Pp
695Finally, security scripts should process the log files and the logs themselves
696should be generated in as secure a manner as possible \(em remote syslog can be
697very useful.
698An intruder tries to cover his tracks, and log files are critical
699to the sysadmin trying to track down the time and method of the initial
700break-in.
701One way to keep a permanent record of the log files is to run
702the system console to a serial port and collect the information on a
703continuing basis through a secure machine monitoring the consoles.
704.Sh PARANOIA
705A little paranoia never hurts.
706As a rule, a sysadmin can add any number
707of security features as long as they do not affect convenience, and
708can add security features that do affect convenience with some added
709thought.
710Even more importantly, a security administrator should mix it up
711a bit \(em if you use recommendations such as those given by this manual
712page verbatim, you give away your methodologies to the prospective
713attacker who also has access to this manual page.
714.Sh SPECIAL SECTION ON DoS ATTACKS
715This section covers Denial of Service attacks.
716A DoS attack is typically a packet attack.
717While there is not much you can do about modern spoofed
718packet attacks that saturate your network, you can generally limit the damage
719by ensuring that the attacks cannot take down your servers.
720.Bl -enum -offset indent
721.It
722Limiting server forks
723.It
724Limiting springboard attacks (ICMP response attacks, ping broadcast, etc.)
725.It
726Kernel Route Cache
727.El
728.Pp
729A common DoS attack is against a forking server that attempts to cause the
730server to eat processes, file descriptors, and memory until the machine
731dies.
732The
733.Xr inetd 8
734server
735has several options to limit this sort of attack.
736It should be noted that while it is possible to prevent a machine from going
737down it is not generally possible to prevent a service from being disrupted
738by the attack.
739Read the
740.Xr inetd 8
741manual page carefully and pay specific attention
742to the
743.Fl c , C ,
744and
745.Fl R
746options.
747Note that spoofed-IP attacks will circumvent
748the
749.Fl C
750option to
751.Xr inetd 8 ,
752so typically a combination of options must be used.
753Some standalone servers have self-fork-limitation parameters.
754.Pp
755The
756.Xr sendmail 8
757daemon has its
758.Fl OMaxDaemonChildren
759option which tends to work much
760better than trying to use
761.Xr sendmail 8 Ns 's
762load limiting options due to the
763load lag.
764You should specify a
765.Va MaxDaemonChildren
766parameter when you start
767.Xr sendmail 8
768high enough to handle your expected load but not so high that the
769computer cannot handle that number of
770.Nm sendmail Ns 's
771without falling on its face.
772It is also prudent to run
773.Xr sendmail 8
774in
775.Dq queued
776mode
777.Pq Fl ODeliveryMode=queued
778and to run the daemon
779.Pq Dq Nm sendmail Fl bd
780separate from the queue-runs
781.Pq Dq Nm sendmail Fl q15m .
782If you still want real-time delivery you can run the queue
783at a much lower interval, such as
784.Fl q1m ,
785but be sure to specify a reasonable
786.Va MaxDaemonChildren
787option for that
788.Xr sendmail 8
789to prevent cascade failures.
790.Pp
791The
792.Xr syslogd 8
793daemon can be attacked directly and it is strongly recommended that you use
794the
795.Fl s
796option whenever possible, and the
797.Fl a
798option otherwise.
799.Pp
800You should also be fairly careful
801with connect-back services such as tcpwrapper's reverse-identd, which can
802be attacked directly.
803You generally do not want to use the reverse-ident
804feature of tcpwrappers for this reason.
805.Pp
806It is a very good idea to protect internal services from external access
807by firewalling them off at your border routers.
808The idea here is to prevent
809saturation attacks from outside your LAN, not so much to protect internal
810services from network-based root compromise.
811Always configure an exclusive
812firewall, i.e.,
813.So
814firewall everything
815.Em except
816ports A, B, C, D, and M-Z
817.Sc .
818This
819way you can firewall off all of your low ports except for certain specific
820services such as
821.Xr talkd 8 ,
822.Xr sendmail 8 ,
823and other internet-accessible services.
824If you try to configure the firewall the other
825way \(em as an inclusive or permissive firewall, there is a good chance that you
826will forget to
827.Dq close
828a couple of services or that you will add a new internal
829service and forget to update the firewall.
830You can still open up the
831high-numbered port range on the firewall to allow permissive-like operation
832without compromising your low ports.
833Also take note that
834.Fx
835allows you to
836control the range of port numbers used for dynamic binding via the various
837.Va net.inet.ip.portrange
838sysctl's
839.Pq Dq Li "sysctl net.inet.ip.portrange" ,
840which can also
841ease the complexity of your firewall's configuration.
842I usually use a normal
843first/last range of 4000 to 5000, and a hiport range of 49152 to 65535, then
844block everything under 4000 off in my firewall
845(except for certain specific
846internet-accessible ports, of course).
847.Pp
848Another common DoS attack is called a springboard attack \(em to attack a server
849in a manner that causes the server to generate responses which then overload
850the server, the local network, or some other machine.
851The most common attack
852of this nature is the ICMP PING BROADCAST attack.
853The attacker spoofs ping
854packets sent to your LAN's broadcast address with the source IP address set
855to the actual machine they wish to attack.
856If your border routers are not
857configured to stomp on ping's to broadcast addresses, your LAN winds up
858generating sufficient responses to the spoofed source address to saturate the
859victim, especially when the attacker uses the same trick on several dozen
860broadcast addresses over several dozen different networks at once.
861Broadcast attacks of over a hundred and twenty megabits have been measured.
862A second common springboard attack is against the ICMP error reporting system.
863By
864constructing packets that generate ICMP error responses, an attacker can
865saturate a server's incoming network and cause the server to saturate its
866outgoing network with ICMP responses.
867This type of attack can also crash the
868server by running it out of
869.Vt mbuf Ns 's ,
870especially if the server cannot drain the
871ICMP responses it generates fast enough.
872The
873.Fx
874kernel has a new kernel
875compile option called
876.Dv ICMP_BANDLIM
877which limits the effectiveness of these
878sorts of attacks.
879The last major class of springboard attacks is related to
880certain internal
881.Xr inetd 8
882services such as the UDP echo service.
883An attacker
884simply spoofs a UDP packet with the source address being server A's echo port,
885and the destination address being server B's echo port, where server A and B
886are both on your LAN.
887The two servers then bounce this one packet back and
888forth between each other.
889The attacker can overload both servers and their
890LANs simply by injecting a few packets in this manner.
891Similar problems
892exist with the internal chargen port.
893A competent sysadmin will turn off all
894of these
895.Xr inetd 8 Ns -internal
896test services.
897.Sh ACCESS ISSUES WITH KERBEROS AND SSH
898There are a few issues with both Kerberos and SSH that need to be addressed
899if you intend to use them.
900Kerberos5 is an excellent authentication
901protocol but the kerberized
902.Xr telnet 1
903suck rocks.
904There are bugs that make them unsuitable for dealing with binary streams.
905Also, by default
906Kerberos does not encrypt a session unless you use the
907.Fl x
908option.
909SSH encrypts everything by default.
910.Pp
911SSH works quite well in every respect except when it is set up to
912forward encryption keys.
913What this means is that if you have a secure workstation holding
914keys that give you access to the rest of the system, and you
915.Xr ssh 1
916to an
917unsecure machine, your keys become exposed.
918The actual keys themselves are
919not exposed, but
920.Xr ssh 1
921installs a forwarding port for the duration of your
922login and if an attacker has broken root on the unsecure machine he can utilize
923that port to use your keys to gain access to any other machine that your
924keys unlock.
925.Pp
926We recommend that you use SSH in combination with Kerberos whenever possible
927for staff logins.
928SSH can be compiled with Kerberos support.
929This reduces
930your reliance on potentially exposable SSH keys while at the same time
931protecting passwords via Kerberos.
932SSH keys
933should only be used for automated tasks from secure machines (something
934that Kerberos is unsuited to).
935We also recommend that you either turn off
936key-forwarding in the SSH configuration, or that you make use of the
937.Va from Ns = Ns Ar IP/DOMAIN
938option that SSH allows in its
939.Pa authorized_keys
940file to make the key only usable to entities logging in from specific
941machines.
942.Sh KNOBS AND TWEAKS
943.Fx
944provides several knobs and tweak handles that make some introspection
945information access more restricted.
946Some people consider this as improving system security, so the knobs are
947briefly listed there, together with controls which enable some mitigations
948of the hardware state leaks.
949.Pp
950Hardware mitigation sysctl knobs described below have been moved under
951.Pa machdep.mitigations ,
952with backwards-compatibility shims to accept the existing names.
953A future change will rationalize the sense of the individual sysctls
954(so that enabled / true always indicates that the mitigation is active).
955For that reason the previous names remain the canonical way to set the
956mitigations, and are documented here.
957Backwards compatibility shims for the interim sysctls under
958.Pa machdep.mitigations
959will not be added.
960.Bl -tag -width security.bsd.unprivileged_proc_debug
961.It Dv security.bsd.see_other_uids
962Controls visibility and reachability of subjects (e.g., processes) and objects
963(e.g., sockets) owned by a different uid.
964The knob directly affects the
965.Dv kern.proc
966sysctls filtering of data, which results in restricted output from
967utilities like
968.Xr ps 1 .
969.It Dv security.bsd.see_other_gids
970Same, for subjects and objects owned by a different gid.
971.It Dv security.bsd.see_jail_proc
972Same, for subjects and objects belonging to a different jail, including
973sub-jails.
974.It Dv security.bsd.conservative_signals
975When enabled, unprivileged users are only allowed to send job control
976and usual termination signals like
977.Dv SIGKILL ,
978.Dv SIGINT ,
979and
980.Dv SIGTERM ,
981to the processes executing programs with changed uids.
982.It Dv security.bsd.unprivileged_proc_debug
983Controls availability of the process debugging facilities to non-root users.
984See also
985.Xr proccontrol 1
986mode
987.Dv trace .
988.It Dv vm.pmap.pti
989Tunable, amd64-only.
990Enables mode of operation of virtual memory system where usermode page
991tables are sanitized to prevent so-called Meltdown information leak on
992some Intel CPUs.
993By default, the system detects whether the CPU needs the workaround,
994and enables it automatically.
995See also
996.Xr proccontrol 1
997mode
998.Dv kpti .
999.It Dv machdep.mitigations.flush_rsb_ctxsw
1000amd64.
1001Controls Return Stack Buffer flush on context switch, to prevent
1002cross-process ret2spec attacks.
1003Only needed, and only enabled by default, if the machine
1004supports SMEP, otherwise IBRS would do necessary flushing on kernel
1005entry anyway.
1006.It Dv hw.mds_disable
1007amd64 and i386.
1008Controls Microarchitectural Data Sampling hardware information leak
1009mitigation.
1010.It Dv hw.spec_store_bypass_disable
1011amd64 and i386.
1012Controls Speculative Store Bypass hardware information leak mitigation.
1013.It Dv hw.ibrs_disable
1014amd64 and i386.
1015Controls Indirect Branch Restricted Speculation hardware information leak
1016mitigation.
1017.It Dv machdep.syscall_ret_flush_l1d
1018amd64.
1019Controls force-flush of L1D cache on return from syscalls which report
1020errors other than
1021.Ev EEXIST ,
1022.Ev EAGAIN ,
1023.Ev EXDEV ,
1024.Ev ENOENT ,
1025.Ev ENOTCONN ,
1026and
1027.Ev EINPROGRESS .
1028This is mostly a paranoid setting added to prevent hypothetical exploitation
1029of unknown gadgets for unknown hardware issues.
1030The error codes exclusion list is composed of the most common errors which
1031typically occurs on normal system operation.
1032.It Dv machdep.nmi_flush_l1d_sw
1033amd64.
1034Controls force-flush of L1D cache on NMI;
1035this provides software assist for bhyve mitigation of L1 terminal fault
1036hardware information leak.
1037.It Dv hw.vmm.vmx.l1d_flush
1038amd64.
1039Controls the mitigation of L1 Terminal Fault in bhyve hypervisor.
1040.It Dv vm.pmap.allow_2m_x_ept
1041amd64.
1042Allows the use of superpages for executable mappings under the EPT
1043page table format used by hypervisors on Intel CPUs to map the guest
1044physical address space to machine physical memory.
1045May be disabled to work around a CPU Erratum called
1046Machine Check Error Avoidance on Page Size Change.
1047.It Dv machdep.mitigations.rngds.enable
1048amd64 and i386.
1049Controls mitigation of Special Register Buffer Data Sampling versus
1050optimization of the MCU access.
1051When set to zero, the mitigation is disabled, and the RDSEED and RDRAND
1052instructions do not incur serialization overhead for shared buffer accesses,
1053and do not serialize off-core memory accessses.
1054.It Dv kern.elf32.aslr.enable
1055Controls system-global Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) for
1056normal non-PIE (Position Independent Executable) 32-bit ELF binaries.
1057See also the
1058.Xr proccontrol 1
1059.Dv aslr
1060mode, also affected by the per-image control note flag.
1061.It Dv kern.elf32.aslr.pie_enable
1062Controls system-global Address Space Layout Randomization for
1063position-independent (PIE) 32-bit binaries.
1064.It Dv kern.elf32.aslr.honor_sbrk
1065Makes ASLR less aggressive and more compatible with old binaries
1066relying on the sbrk area.
1067.It Dv kern.elf32.aslr.stack
1068Enable randomization of the stack for 32-bit binaries.
1069Otherwise, the stack is mapped at a fixed location determined by the
1070process ABI.
1071.It Dv kern.elf64.aslr.enable
1072ASLR control for 64-bit ELF binaries.
1073.It Dv kern.elf64.aslr.pie_enable
1074ASLR control for 64-bit ELF PIEs.
1075.It Dv kern.elf64.aslr.honor_sbrk
1076ASLR sbrk compatibility control for 64-bit binaries.
1077.It Dv kern.elf64.aslr.stack
1078Controls stack address randomization for 64-bit binaries.
1079.It Dv kern.elf32.nxstack
1080Enables non-executable stack for 32-bit processes.
1081Enabled by default if supported by hardware and corresponding binary.
1082.It Dv kern.elf64.nxstack
1083Enables non-executable stack for 64-bit processes.
1084.It Dv kern.elf32.allow_wx
1085Enables mapping of simultaneously writable and executable pages for
108632-bit processes.
1087.It Dv kern.elf64.allow_wx
1088Enables mapping of simultaneously writable and executable pages for
108964-bit processes.
1090.El
1091.Sh SEE ALSO
1092.Xr chflags 1 ,
1093.Xr find 1 ,
1094.Xr md5 1 ,
1095.Xr netstat 1 ,
1096.Xr openssl 1 ,
1097.Xr proccontrol 1 ,
1098.Xr ps 1 ,
1099.Xr ssh 1 ,
1100.Xr xdm 1 Pq Pa ports/x11/xorg-clients ,
1101.Xr group 5 ,
1102.Xr ttys 5 ,
1103.Xr mitigations 7 ,
1104.Xr accton 8 ,
1105.Xr init 8 ,
1106.Xr sshd 8 ,
1107.Xr sysctl 8 ,
1108.Xr syslogd 8 ,
1109.Xr vipw 8
1110.Sh HISTORY
1111The
1112.Nm
1113manual page was originally written by
1114.An Matthew Dillon
1115and first appeared
1116in
1117.Fx 3.1 ,
1118December 1998.
1119