Bpflock | eBPF Driven Security For Locking And Auditing Linux Machines

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bpflock - eBPF driven security for locking and auditing Linux machines.

Note: bpflock is currently in experimental stage, it may break, options and security semantics may change, some BPF programs will be updated to use Cilium ebpf library.

Sections

1. Introduction

bpflock uses eBPF to strength Linux security. By restricting access to a various range of Linux features, bpflock is able to reduce the attack surface and block some well known attack techniques.

Only programs like container managers, systemd and other containers/programs that run in the host pid and network namespaces are allowed access to full Linux features, containers and applications that run on their own namespace will be restricted. If bpflock bpf programs run under the restricted profile then all programs/containers including privileged ones will have their access denied.

bpflock protects Linux machines by taking advantage of multiple security features including Linux Security Modules + BPF.

Architecture and Security design notes:

  • bpflock is not a mandatory access control labeling solution, and it does not intent to replace AppArmor, SELinux, and other MAC solutions. bpflock uses a simple declarative security profile.
  • bpflock offers multiple small bpf programs that can be reused in multiple contexts from Cloud Native deployments to Linux IoT devices.
  • bpflock is able to restrict root from accessing certain Linux features, however it does not protect against evil root.

2. Functionality Overview

2.1 Security features

bpflock offer multiple security protections that can be classified as:

2.2 Semantics

bpflock keeps the security semantics simple. It support three global profiles to broadly cover the security sepctrum, and restrict access to specific Linux features.

  • profile: this is the global profile that can be applied per bpf program, it takes one of the followings:
    • allow|none|privileged : they are the same, they define the least secure profile. In this profile access is logged and allowed for all processes. Useful to log security events.
    • baseline : restrictive profile where access is denied for all processes, except privileged applications and containers that run in the host namespaces, or per cgroup allowed profiles in the bpflock_cgroupmap bpf map.
    • restricted : heavily restricted profile where access is denied for all processes.
  • Allowed or blocked operations/commands:Under the allow|privileged or baseline profiles, a list of allowed or blocked commands can be specified and will be applied.
    • --protection-allow : comma-separated list of allowed operations. Valid under baseline profile, this is useful for applications that are too specific and perform privileged operations. It will reduce the use of the allow | privileged profile, so instead of using the privileged profile, we can specify the baseline one and add a set of allowed commands to offer a case-by-case definition for such applications.
    • --protection-block : comma-separated list of blocked operations. Valid under allow|privileged and baseline profiles, it allows to restrict access to some features without using the full restricted profile that might break some specific applications. Using baseline or privileged profiles opens the gate to access most Linux features, but with the --protection-block option some of this access can be blocked.

For bpf security examples check bpflock configuration examples

3. Deployment

3.1 Prerequisites

bpflock needs the following:

  • Linux kernel version >= 5.13 with the following configuration:
CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL=y
CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO=y
CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF=y
CONFIG_KPROBES=y
CONFIG_LSM="...,bpf"
CONFIG_BPF_LSM=y
  • Obviously a BTF enabled kernel.

Enable BPF LSM support

If your kernel was compiled with CONFIG_BPF_LSM=y check the /boot/config-* to confirm, but when running bpflock it fails with:

must have a kernel with 'CONFIG_BPF_LSM=y' 'CONFIG_LSM=\"...,bpf\"'"

Then to enable BPF LSM as an example on Ubuntu:

  1. Open the /etc/default/grub file as privileged of course.
  2. Append the following to the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX variable and save.
"lsm=lockdown,capability,yama,apparmor,bpf"

or

GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="lsm=lockdown,capability,yama,apparmor,bpf"
  1. Update grub config with:

sudo update-grub2

  1. Reboot into your kernel.

3.2 Docker deployment

To run using the default allow or privileged profile (the least secure profile):

docker run --name bpflock -it --rm --cgroupns=host \ ā€“pid=host --privileged \ -v /sys/kernel/:/sys/kernel/ \ -v /sys/fs/bpf:/sys/fs/bpf linuxlock/bpflock

Fileless Binary Execution

To log and restict fileless binary execution run with:

docker run --name bpflock -it --rm --cgroupns=host --pid=host --privileged \ -e ā€œBPFLOCK_FILELESSLOCK_PROFILE=restrictedā€ \ -v /sys/kernel/:/sys/kernel/ \ -v /sys/fs/bpf:/sys/fs/bpf linuxlock/bpflock

When running under restricted profile, the container logs will display:

time="2022-02-04T14:54:33Z" level=info msg="event=syscall_execve tgid=1833 pid=1833 ppid=1671 uid=1000 cgroupid=8821 comm=loader pcomm=bash filename=./loader retval=0" bpfprog=execsnoop subsys=bpf

time="2022-02-04T14:54:33Z" level=info msg="event=lsm_bprm_creds_from_file tgid=1833 pid=1833 ppid=1671 uid=1000 cgroupid=8821 comm=loader pcomm=bash filename=memfd:memfd-test retval=-1 reason=denied (restricted)" bpfprog=filelesslock subsys=bpf

time="2022-02-04T14:54:33Z" level=info msg="event=syscall_execve tgid=1833 pid=1833 ppid=0 uid=1000 cgroupid=8821 comm= pcomm= filename=/proc/self/fd/3 retval=-1" bpfprog=execsnoop subsys=bpf

Running under the restricted profile may break things, this is why the default profile is allow.

Kernel Modules Protection

To apply Kernel Modules Protection run with environment variable BPFLOCK_KMODLOCK_PROFILE=baseline or BPFLOCK_KMODLOCK_PROFILE=restricted:

docker run --name bpflock -it --rm --cgroupns=host --pid=host --privileged \ -e ā€œBPFLOCK_KMODLOCK_PROFILE=restrictedā€ \ -v /sys/kernel/:/sys/kernel/ \ -v /sys/fs/bpf:/sys/fs/bpf linuxlock/bpflock

Example:

$ sudo unshare -p -n -f # modprobe xfs modprobe: ERROR: could not insert ā€˜xfsā€™: Operation not permitted

time="2022-02-07T06:50:25+01:00" level=info msg="event=syscall_execve tgid=52323 pid=52323 ppid=52288 uid=0 cgroupid=7014 comm=modprobe pcomm=bash filename=/usr/sbin/modprobe retval=0" bpfprog=execsnoop subsys=bpf

time="2022-02-07T06:50:25+01:00" level=info msg="event=lsm_kernel_read_file operation=loading module tgid=52323 pid=52323 ppid=52288 uid=0 cgroupid=7014 comm=modprobe pcomm=bash filename=xfs.ko retval=-1 reason=denied (restricted)" bpfprog=kmodlock subsys=bpf

Kernel Image Lock-down

To apply Kernel Image Lock-down run with environment variable BPFLOCK_KIMGLOCK_PROFILE=baseline:

docker run --name bpflock -it --rm --cgroupns=host --pid=host --privileged \ -e ā€œBPFLOCK_KIMGLOCK_PROFILE=baselineā€ \ -v /sys/kernel/:/sys/kernel/ \ -v /sys/fs/bpf:/sys/fs/bpf linuxlock/bpflock

$ sudo unshare -f -p -n bash # head -c 1 /dev/mem head: cannot open ā€˜/dev/memā€™ for reading: Operation not permitted

time="2022-02-07T06:57:22+01:00" level=info msg="event=syscall_execve tgid=52428 pid=52428 ppid=52288 uid=0 cgroupid=7014 comm=head pcomm=bash filename=/usr/bin/head retval=0" bpfprog=execsnoop subsys=bpf

time="2022-02-07T06:57:22+01:00" level=info msg="event=lsm_locked_down operation=/dev/mem,kmem,port tgid=52428 pid=52428 ppid=52288 uid=0 cgroupid=7014 comm=head pcomm=bash retval=-1 reason=denied (baseline)" bpfprog=kimglock subsys=bpf

BPF Protection

To apply bpf restriction run with environment variable BPFLOCK_BPFRESTRICT_PROFILE=baseline or BPFLOCK_BPFRESTRICT_PROFILE=restricted:

docker run --name bpflock -it --rm --cgroupns=host --pid=host --privileged \ -e ā€œBPFLOCK_BPFRESTRICT_PROFILE=baselineā€ \ -v /sys/kernel/:/sys/kernel/ \ -v /sys/fs/bpf:/sys/fs/bpf linuxlock/bpflock

Example running in a different pid and network namespaces and using bpftool:

$ sudo unshare -f -p -n bash # bpftool prog Error: canā€™t get next program: Operation not permitted

time="2022-02-04T15:40:56Z" level=info msg="event=lsm_bpf tgid=2378 pid=2378 ppid=2364 uid=0 cgroupid=9458 comm=bpftool pcomm=bash filename= retval=-1 reason=baseline" bpfprog=bpfrestrict subsys=bpf

time="2022-02-04T15:40:56Z" level=info msg="event=lsm_bpf tgid=2378 pid=2378 ppid=2364 uid=0 cgroupid=9458 comm=bpftool pcomm=bash filename= retval=-1 reason=baseline" bpfprog=bpfrestrict subsys=bpf

Running with the -e "BPFLOCK_BPFRESTRICT_PROFILE=restricted" profile will deny bpf for all:

time="2022-02-04T15:44:13Z" level=info msg="event=syscall_execve tgid=2500 pid=2500 ppid=2499 uid=0 cgroupid=9458 comm=bpftool pcomm=sudo filename=./tools/amd64/bpftool retval=0" bpfprog=execsnoop subsys=bpf

time="2022-02-04T15:44:13Z" level=info msg="event=lsm_bpf tgid=2500 pid=2500 ppid=2499 uid=0 cgroupid=9458 comm=bpftool pcomm=sudo filename= retval=-1 reason=denied (restricted)" bpfprog=bpfrestrict subsys=bpf

time="2022-02-04T15:44:13Z" level=info msg="event=lsm_bpf tgid=2500 pid=2500 ppid=2499 uid=0 cgroupid=9458 comm=bpftool pcomm=sudo filename= retval=-1 reason=denied (restricted)" bpfprog=bpfrestrict subsys=bpf

3.3 Configuration and Environment file

Passing configuration as bind mounts can be achieved using the following command.

Assuming bpflock.yaml and bpf.d profiles configs are in current directory inside bpflock directory, then we can just use:

ls bpflock/ bpf.d bpflock.d bpflock.yaml

docker run --name bpflock -it --rm --cgroupns=host --pid=host --privileged \ -v $(pwd)/bpflock/:/etc/bpflock \ -v /sys/kernel/:/sys/kernel/ \ -v /sys/fs/bpf:/sys/fs/bpf linuxlock/bpflock

Passing environment variables can also be done with files using --env-file. All parameters can be passed as environment variables using the BPFLOCK_$VARIABLE_NAME=VALUE format.

Example run with environment variables in a file:

docker run --name bpflock -it --rm --cgroupns=host --pid=host --privileged \ ā€“env-file bpflock.env.list \ -v /sys/kernel/:/sys/kernel/ \ -v /sys/fs/bpf:/sys/fs/bpf linuxlock/bpflock

4. Documentation

Documentation files can be found here.

5. Build

bpflock uses docker BuildKit to build and Golang to make some checks and run tests. bpflock is built inside Ubuntu container that downloads the standard golang package.

Run the following to build the bpflock docker container:

git submodule update --init --recursive make

Bpf programs are built using libbpf. The docker image used is Ubuntu.

If you want to only build the bpf programs directly without using docker, then on Ubuntu:

sudo apt install -y pkg-config bison binutils-dev build-essential \ flex libc6-dev clang-12 libllvm12 llvm-12-dev libclang-12-dev \ zlib1g-dev libelf-dev libfl-dev gcc-multilib zlib1g-dev \ libcap-dev libiberty-dev libbfd-dev

Then run:

make bpf-programs

In this case the generated programs will be inside the ./bpf/build/ā€¦ directory.

Credits

bpflock uses lot of resources including source code from the Cilium and bcc projects.

License

The bpflock user space components are licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. The BPF code where it is noted is licensed under the General Public License, Version 2.0.

GitHub:

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