Adrian Ludwig | bb084c5 | 2011-09-14 12:46:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | [TOC] |
| 2 | #Android Security Overview |
| 3 | |
| 4 | ##Introduction |
| 5 | |
| 6 | Android is a modern mobile platform that was designed to be truly open. Android |
| 7 | applications make use of advanced hardware and software, as well as local and |
| 8 | served data, exposed through the platform to bring innovation and value to |
| 9 | consumers. To protect that value, the platform must offer an application |
| 10 | environment that ensures the security of users, data, applications, the device, |
| 11 | and the network. |
| 12 | |
| 13 | Securing an open platform requires a robust security architecture and rigorous |
| 14 | security programs. Android was designed with multi-layered security that |
| 15 | provides the flexibility required for an open platform, while providing |
| 16 | protection for all users of the platform. |
| 17 | |
| 18 | Android was designed with developers in mind. Security controls were designed |
| 19 | to reduce the burden on developers. Security-savvy developers can easily work |
| 20 | with and rely on flexible security controls. Developers less familiar with |
| 21 | security will be protected by safe defaults. |
| 22 | |
| 23 | Android was designed with device users in mind. Users are provided visibility |
| 24 | into how applications work, and control over those applications. This design |
| 25 | includes the expectation that attackers would attempt to perform common |
| 26 | attacks, such as social engineering attacks to convince device users to install |
| 27 | malware, and attacks on third-party applications on Android. Android was |
| 28 | designed to both reduce the probability of these attacks and greatly limit the |
| 29 | impact of the attack in the event it was successful. |
| 30 | |
| 31 | This document outlines the goals of the Android security program, describes the |
| 32 | fundamentals of the Android security architecture, and answers the most |
| 33 | pertinent questions for system architects and security analysts. This document |
| 34 | focuses on the security features of Android's core platform and does not |
| 35 | discuss security issues that are unique to specific applications, such as those |
| 36 | related to the browser or SMS application. Recommended best practices for |
| 37 | building Android devices, deploying Android devices, or developing applications |
| 38 | for Android are not the goal of this document and are provided elsewhere. |
| 39 | |
| 40 | # Background |
| 41 | |
| 42 | Android provides an open source platform and application environment for mobile |
| 43 | devices. |
| 44 | |
| 45 | The main Android platform building blocks are: |
| 46 | |
| 47 | + **Device Hardware**: Android runs on a wide range of hardware configurations |
| 48 | including smart phones, tablets, and set-top-boxes. Android is |
| 49 | processor-agnostic, but it does take advantage of some hardware-specific |
| 50 | security capabilities such as ARM v6 eXecute-Never. |
| 51 | |
| 52 | + **Android Operating System**: The core operating system is built on top of |
| 53 | the Linux kernel. All device resources, like camera functions, GPS data, |
| 54 | Bluetooth functions, telephony functions, network connections, etc. are |
| 55 | accessed through the operating system. |
| 56 | |
| 57 | + **Android Application Runtime**: Android applications are most often written |
| 58 | in the Java programming language and run in the Dalvik virtual machine. |
| 59 | However, many applications, including core Android services and applications |
| 60 | are native applications or include native libraries. Both Dalvik and native |
| 61 | applications run within the same security environment, contained within the |
| 62 | Application Sandbox. Applications get a dedicated part of the filesystem in |
| 63 | which they can write private data, including databases and raw files. |
| 64 | |
| 65 | Android applications extend the core Android operating system. There are two |
| 66 | primary sources for applications: |
| 67 | |
| 68 | + **Pre-Installed Applications**: Android includes a set of pre-installed |
| 69 | applications including phone, email, calendar, web browser, and contacts. These |
| 70 | function both as user applications and to provide key device capabilities that |
| 71 | can be accessed by other applications. Pre-installed applications may be part |
| 72 | of the open source Android platform, or they may be developed by an OEM for a |
| 73 | specific device. |
| 74 | |
| 75 | + **User-Installed Applications**: Android provides an open development |
| 76 | environment supporting any third-party application. The Android Market offers |
| 77 | users hundreds of thousands of applications. |
| 78 | |
| 79 | Google provides a set of cloud-based services that are available to any |
| 80 | compatible Android device. The primary services are: |
| 81 | |
| 82 | + **Android Market**: The Android Market is a collection of services that |
| 83 | allow users to discover, install, and purchase applications from their Android |
| 84 | device or the web. The Market makes it easy for developers to reach Android |
| 85 | users and potential customers. The Market also provides community review, |
| 86 | application [license |
| 87 | verification](http://developer.android.com/guide/publishing/licensing.html), |
| 88 | and other security services. |
| 89 | |
| 90 | + **Android Updates**: The Android update service delivers new capabilities and |
| 91 | security updates to Android devices, including updates through the web or over |
| 92 | the air (OTA). |
| 93 | |
| 94 | + **Application Services**: Frameworks that allow Android applications to use |
| 95 | cloud capabilities such as ([backing |
| 96 | up](http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/data/backup.html)) application |
| 97 | data and settings and cloud-to-device messaging |
| 98 | ([C2DM](http://code.google.com/android/c2dm/index.html)) |
| 99 | for push messaging. |
| 100 | |
| 101 | These services are not part of the Android Open Source Project and are out |
| 102 | of scope for this document. But they are relevant to the security of most |
| 103 | Android devices, so a related security document titled “Google Services for |
| 104 | Android: Security Overview” is available. |
| 105 | |
| 106 | ##Android Security Program Overview |
| 107 | |
| 108 | Early on in development, the core Android development team recognized that a |
| 109 | robust security model was required to enable a vigorous ecosystem of |
| 110 | applications and devices built on and around the Android platform and supported |
| 111 | by cloud services. As a result, through its entire development lifecycle, |
| 112 | Android has been subjected to a professional security program. The Android team |
| 113 | has had the opportunity to observe how other mobile, desktop, and server platforms |
| 114 | prevented and reacted to security issues and built a security |
| 115 | program to address weak points observed in other offerings. |
| 116 | |
| 117 | The key components of the Android Security Program include: |
| 118 | |
| 119 | + **Design Review**: The Android security process begins early in the |
| 120 | development lifecycle with the creation of a rich and configurable security |
| 121 | model and design. Each major feature of the platform is reviewed by engineering |
| 122 | and security resources, with appropriate security controls integrated into the |
| 123 | architecture of the system. |
| 124 | + **Penetration Testing and Code Review**: During the development of the |
| 125 | platform, Android-created and open-source components are subject to vigorous |
| 126 | security reviews. These reviews are performed by the Android Security Team, |
| 127 | Google’s Information Security Engineering team, and independent security |
| 128 | consultants. The goal of these reviews is to identify weaknesses and possible |
| 129 | vulnerabilities well before the platform is open-sourced, and to simulate the |
| 130 | types of analysis that will be performed by external security experts upon |
| 131 | release. |
| 132 | + **Open Source and Community Review**: The Android Open Source Project enables |
| 133 | broad security review by any interested party. Android also uses open source |
| 134 | technologies that have undergone significant external security review, |
| 135 | such as the Linux kernel. The Android Market provides a forum for users and companies |
| 136 | to provide information about specific applications directly to users. |
| 137 | + **Incident Response**: Even with all of these precautions, security issues |
| 138 | may occur after shipping, which is why the Android project has created a |
| 139 | comprehensive security response process. A full-time Android security team |
| 140 | constantly monitors Android-specific and the general security community for |
| 141 | discussion of potential vulnerabilities. Upon the discovery of legitimate |
| 142 | issues, the Android team has a response process that enables the rapid |
| 143 | mitigation of vulnerabilities to ensure that potential risk to all Android |
| 144 | users is minimized. These cloud-supported responses can include updating the |
| 145 | Android platform (over-the-air updates), removing applications from the Android |
| 146 | Market, and removing applications from devices in the field. |
| 147 | |
| 148 | ##Android Platform Security Architecture |
| 149 | |
| 150 | Android seeks to be the most secure and usable operating system for mobile |
| 151 | platforms by re-purposing traditional operating system security controls to: |
| 152 | |
| 153 | + Protect user data |
| 154 | + Protect system resources (including the network) |
| 155 | + Provide application isolation |
| 156 | |
| 157 | To achieve these objectives, Android provides these key security features: |
| 158 | |
| 159 | + Robust security at the OS level through the Linux kernel |
| 160 | + Mandatory application sandbox for all applications |
| 161 | + Secure interprocess communication |
| 162 | + Application signing |
| 163 | + Application-defined and user-granted permissions |
| 164 | |
| 165 | The sections below describe these and other security features of the Android |
| 166 | platform. *Figure 1* summarizes the security components and considerations of |
| 167 | the various levels of the Android software stack. Each component assumes that |
| 168 | the components below are properly secured. With the exception of a small amount |
| 169 | of Android OS code running as root, all code above the Linux Kernel is |
| 170 | restricted by the Application Sandbox. |
| 171 | |
| 172 |  |
| 173 | |
| 174 | *Figure 1: Android software stack.* |
| 175 | |
| 176 | #System and Kernel Level Security |
| 177 | |
| 178 | At the operating system level, the Android platform provides the security of |
| 179 | the Linux kernel, as well as a secure inter-process communication (IPC) |
| 180 | facility to enable secure communication between applications running in |
| 181 | different processes. These security features at the OS level ensure that even |
| 182 | native code is constrained by the Application Sandbox. Whether that code is |
| 183 | the result of included application behavior or a exploitation of an application |
| 184 | vulnerability, the system would prevent the rogue application from harming |
| 185 | other applications, the Android system, or the device itself. |
| 186 | |
| 187 | ##Linux Security |
| 188 | |
| 189 | The foundation of the Android platform is the Linux kernel. The Linux kernel |
| 190 | itself has been in widespread use for years, and is used in millions of |
| 191 | security-sensitive environments. Through its history of constantly being |
| 192 | researched, attacked, and fixed by thousands of developers, Linux has become a |
| 193 | stable and secure kernel trusted by many corporations and security |
| 194 | professionals. |
| 195 | |
| 196 | As the base for a mobile computing environment, the Linux kernel provides |
| 197 | Android with several key security features, including: |
| 198 | |
| 199 | + A user-based permissions model |
| 200 | + Process isolation |
| 201 | + Extensible mechanism for secure IPC |
| 202 | + The ability to remove unnecessary and potentially insecure parts of the kernel |
| 203 | |
| 204 | As a multiuser operating system, a fundamental security objective of the Linux |
| 205 | kernel is to isolate user resources from one another. The Linux security |
| 206 | philosophy is to protect user resources from one another. Thus, Linux: |
| 207 | |
| 208 | + Pevents user A from reading user B's files |
| 209 | + Ensures that user A does not exhaust user B's memory |
| 210 | + Ensures that user A does not exhaust user B's CPU resources |
| 211 | + Ensures that user A does not exhaust user B's devices (e.g. telephony, GPS, |
| 212 | bluetooth) |
| 213 | |
| 214 | ##The Application Sandbox |
| 215 | |
| 216 | The Android platform takes advantage of the Linux user-based protection as a |
| 217 | means of identifying and isolating application resources. The Android system |
| 218 | assigns a unique user ID (UID) to each Android application and runs it as that user |
| 219 | in a separate process. This approach is different from other operating systems |
| 220 | (including the traditional Linux configuration), where multiple applications |
| 221 | run with the same user permissions. |
| 222 | |
| 223 | This sets up a kernel-level Application Sandbox. The kernel enforces security |
| 224 | between applications and the system at the process level through standard Linux |
| 225 | facilities, such as user and group IDs that are assigned to applications. By |
| 226 | default, applications cannot interact with each other and applications have |
| 227 | limited access to the operating system. If application A tries to do something |
| 228 | malicious like read application B's data or dial the phone without permission |
| 229 | (which is a separate application), then the operating system protects against |
| 230 | this because application A does not have the appropriate user privileges. The |
| 231 | sandbox is simple, auditable, and based on decades-old UNIX-style user |
| 232 | separation of processes and file permissions. |
| 233 | |
| 234 | Since the Application Sandbox is in the kernel, this security model extends to |
| 235 | native code and to operating system applications. All of the software above the |
| 236 | kernel in *Figure 1*, including operating system libraries, application |
| 237 | framework, application runtime, and all applications run within the Application |
| 238 | Sandbox. On some platforms, developers are constrained to a specific |
| 239 | development framework, set of APIs, or language in order to enforce security. |
| 240 | On Android, there are no restrictions on how an application can be written that |
| 241 | are required to enforce security; in this respect, native code is just as |
| 242 | secure as interpreted code. |
| 243 | |
| 244 | In some operating systems, memory corruption errors generally lead to |
| 245 | completely compromising the security of the device. This is not the case in |
| 246 | Android due to all applications and their resources being sandboxed at the OS |
| 247 | level. A memory corruption error will only allow arbitrary code execution in |
| 248 | the context of that particular application, with the permissions established by |
| 249 | the operating system. |
| 250 | |
| 251 | Like all security features, the Application Sandbox is not unbreakable. |
| 252 | However, to break out of the Application Sandbox in a properly configured |
| 253 | device, one must compromise the security of the the Linux kernel. |
| 254 | |
| 255 | ##System Partition and Safe Mode |
| 256 | |
| 257 | The system partition contains Android's kernel as well as the operating system |
| 258 | libraries, application runtime, application framework, and applications. This |
| 259 | partition is set to read-only. When a user boots the device into Safe Mode, |
| 260 | only core Android applications are available. This ensures that the user can |
| 261 | boot their phone into an environment that is free of third-party software. |
| 262 | |
| 263 | ##Filesystem Permissions |
| 264 | |
| 265 | In a UNIX-style environment, filesystem permissions ensure that one user cannot |
| 266 | alter or read another user's files. In the case of Android, each application |
| 267 | runs as its own user. Unless the developer explicitly exposes files to other |
| 268 | applications, files created by one application cannot be read or altered by |
| 269 | another application. |
| 270 | |
| 271 | ##Filesystem Encryption |
| 272 | |
| 273 | Android 3.0 and later provides full filesystem encryption, so all user data can |
| 274 | be encrypted in the kernel using the dmcrypt implementation of AES128 with CBC |
| 275 | and ESSIV:SHA256. The encryption key is protected by AES128 using a key |
| 276 | derived from the user password, preventing unauthorized access to stored data |
| 277 | without the user device password. To provide resistance against systematic |
| 278 | password guessing attacks (e.g. “rainbow tables” or brute force), the |
| 279 | password is combined with a random salt and hashed repeatedly with SHA1 using |
| 280 | the standard PBKDF2 algorithm prior to being used to decrypt the filesystem |
| 281 | key. To provide resistance against dictionary password guessing attacks, |
| 282 | Android provides password complexity rules that can be set by the device |
| 283 | administrator and enforced by the operating system. Filesystem encryption |
| 284 | requires the use of a user password, pattern-based screen lock is not supported. |
| 285 | |
| 286 | More details on implementation of filesystem encryption are available at |
| 287 | [http://source.android.com/tech/encryption/android_crypto_implementation.html](/ |
| 288 | tech/encryption/android_crypto_implementation.html) |
| 289 | |
| 290 | ##Password Protection |
| 291 | |
| 292 | Android can be configured to verify a user-supplied password prior to providing |
| 293 | access to a device. In addition to preventing unauthorized use of the device, |
| 294 | this password protects the cryptographic key for full filesystem encryption. |
| 295 | |
| 296 | Use of a password and/or password complexity rules can be required by a device |
| 297 | administrator. |
| 298 | |
| 299 | ##Device Administration |
| 300 | |
| 301 | Android 2.2 and later provide the Android Device Administration API, which |
| 302 | provides device administration features at the system level. For example, the |
| 303 | built-in Android Email application uses the APIs to improve Exchange support. |
| 304 | Through the Email application, Exchange administrators can enforce password |
| 305 | policies — including alphanumeric passwords or numeric PINs — across |
| 306 | devices. Administrators can also remotely wipe (that is, restore factory |
| 307 | defaults on) lost or stolen handsets. |
| 308 | |
| 309 | In addition to use in applications included with the Android system, these APIs |
| 310 | are available to third-party providers of Device Management solutions. Details |
| 311 | on the API are provided here: |
| 312 | [http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/admin/device-admin.html](http://devel |
| 313 | oper.android.com/guide/topics/admin/device-admin.html). |
| 314 | |
| 315 | |
| 316 | ##Memory Management Security Enhancements |
| 317 | |
| 318 | Android includes many features that make common security issues harder to |
| 319 | exploit. The Android SDK, compilers, and OS use tools to make common memory |
| 320 | corruption issues significantly harder to exploit, including: |
| 321 | |
Nick Kralevich | 56c7e22 | 2011-12-02 10:05:13 -0800 | [diff] [blame] | 322 | + Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) to randomize key locations in memory |
Adrian Ludwig | bb084c5 | 2011-09-14 12:46:21 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 323 | + Hardware-based No eXecute (NX) to prevent code execution on the stack and heap |
| 324 | + ProPolice to prevent stack buffer overruns |
| 325 | + safe_iop to reduce integer overflows |
| 326 | + Extensions to OpenBSD dlmalloc to prevent double free() vulnerabilities and |
| 327 | to prevent chunk consolidation attacks. Chunk consolidation attacks are a |
| 328 | common way to exploit heap corruption. |
| 329 | + OpenBSD calloc to prevent integer overflows during memory allocation |
| 330 | + Linux mmap_min_addr() to mitigate null pointer dereference privilege |
| 331 | escalation |
| 332 | |
| 333 | ##Rooting of Devices |
| 334 | |
| 335 | By default, on Android only the kernel and a small subset of the core |
| 336 | applications run with root permissions. Android does not prevent a user or |
| 337 | application with root permissions from modifying the operating system, kernel, |
| 338 | and any other application. In general, root has full access to all |
| 339 | applications and all application data. Users that change the permissions on an |
| 340 | Android device to grant root access to applications increase the security |
| 341 | exposure to malicious applications and potential application flaws. |
| 342 | |
| 343 | The ability to modify an Android device they own is important to developers |
| 344 | working with the Android platform. On many Android devices users have the |
| 345 | ability to unlock the bootloader in order to allow installation of an alternate |
| 346 | operating system. These alternate operating systems may allow an owner to gain |
| 347 | root access for purposes of debugging applications and system components or to |
| 348 | access features not presented to applications by Android APIs. |
| 349 | |
| 350 | On some devices, a person with physical control of a device and a USB cable is |
| 351 | able to install a new operating system that provides root privileges to the |
| 352 | user. To protect any existing user data from compromise the bootloader unlock |
| 353 | mechanism requires that the bootloader erase any existing user data as part of |
| 354 | the unlock step. Root access gained via exploiting a kernel bug or security |
| 355 | hole can bypass this protection. |
| 356 | |
| 357 | Encrypting data with a key stored on-device does not protect the application |
| 358 | data from root users. Applications can add a layer of data protection using |
| 359 | encryption with a key stored off-device, such as on a server or a user |
| 360 | password. This approach can provide temporary protection while the key is not |
| 361 | present, but at some point the key must be provided to the application and it |
| 362 | then becomes accessible to root users. |
| 363 | |
| 364 | A more robust approach to protecting data from root users is through the use of |
| 365 | hardware solutions. OEMs may choose to implement hardware solutions that limit |
| 366 | access to specific types of content such as DRM for video playback, or the |
| 367 | NFC-related trusted storage for Google wallet. |
| 368 | |
| 369 | In the case of a lost or stolen device, full filesystem encryption on Android |
| 370 | devices uses the device password to protect the encryption key, so modifying |
| 371 | the bootloader or operating system is not sufficient to access user data |
| 372 | without the user’s device password. |
| 373 | |
| 374 | #Android Application Security |
| 375 | |
| 376 | ##Elements of Applications |
| 377 | |
| 378 | Android provides an open source platform and application environment for mobile |
| 379 | devices. The core operating system is based on the Linux kernel. Android |
| 380 | applications are most often written in the Java programming language and run in |
| 381 | the Dalvik virtual machine. However, applications can also be written in native |
| 382 | code. Applications are installed from a single file with the .apk file |
| 383 | extension. |
| 384 | |
| 385 | The main Android application building blocks are: |
| 386 | |
| 387 | + **AndroidManifest.xml**: The |
| 388 | [AndroidManifest.xml](http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifes |
| 389 | t-intro.html) file is the control file that tells the system what to do with |
| 390 | all the top-level components (specifically activities, services, broadcast |
| 391 | receivers, and content providers described below) in an application. This also |
| 392 | specifies which permissions are required. |
| 393 | |
| 394 | + **Activities**: An |
| 395 | [Activity](http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/fundamentals/activities.htm |
| 396 | l) is, generally, the code for a single, user-focused task. It usually |
| 397 | includes displaying a UI to the user, but it does not have to -- some |
| 398 | Activities never display UIs. Typically, one of the application's Activities |
| 399 | is the entry point to an application. |
| 400 | |
| 401 | + **Services**: A |
| 402 | [Service](http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/fundamentals/services.html) |
| 403 | is a body of code that runs in the background. It can run in its own process, |
| 404 | or in the context of another application's process. Other components "bind" to |
| 405 | a Service and invoke methods on it via remote procedure calls. An example of a |
| 406 | Service is a media player: even when the user quits the media-selection UI, the |
| 407 | user probably still intends for music to keep playing. A Service keeps the |
| 408 | music going even when the UI has completed. |
| 409 | |
| 410 | + **Broadcast Receiver**: A |
| 411 | [BroadcastReceiver](http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/Broad |
| 412 | castReceiver.html) is an object that is instantiated when an IPC mechanism |
| 413 | known as an |
| 414 | [Intent](http://code.google.com/android/reference/android/content/Intent.html) |
| 415 | is issued by the operating system or another application. An application may |
| 416 | register a receiver for the low battery message, for example, and change its |
| 417 | behavior based on that information. |
| 418 | |
| 419 | |
| 420 | ##The Android Permission Model: Accessing Protected APIs |
| 421 | |
| 422 | By default, an Android application can only access a limited range of system |
| 423 | resources. The system manages Android application access to resources that, if |
| 424 | used incorrectly or maliciously, could adversely impact the user experience, |
| 425 | the network, or data on the device. |
| 426 | |
| 427 | These restrictions are implemented in a variety of different forms. Some |
| 428 | capabilities are restricted by an intentional lack of APIs to the sensitive |
| 429 | functionality (e.g. there is no Android API for directly manipulating the SIM |
| 430 | card). In some instances, separation of roles provides a security measure, as |
| 431 | with the per-application isolation of storage. In other instances, the |
| 432 | sensitive APIs are intended for use by trusted applications and protected |
| 433 | through a security mechanism known as Permissions. |
| 434 | |
| 435 | These protected APIs include: |
| 436 | |
| 437 | + Camera functions |
| 438 | + Location data (GPS) |
| 439 | + Bluetooth functions |
| 440 | + Telephony functions |
| 441 | + SMS/MMS functions |
| 442 | + Network/data connections |
| 443 | |
| 444 | These resources are only accessible through the operating system. To make use |
| 445 | of the protected APIs on the device, an application must define the |
| 446 | capabilities it needs in its manifest. When preparing to install an |
| 447 | application, the system displays a dialog to the user that indicates the |
| 448 | permissions requested and asks whether to continue the installation. If the |
| 449 | user continues with the installation, the system accepts that the user has |
| 450 | granted all of the requested permissions. The user can not grant or deny |
| 451 | individual permissions -- the user must grant or deny all of the requested |
| 452 | permissions as a block. |
| 453 | |
| 454 | Once granted, the permissions are applied to the application as long as it is |
| 455 | installed. To avoid user confusion, the system does not notify the user again |
| 456 | of the permissions granted to the application, and applications that are |
| 457 | included in the core operating system or bundled by an OEM do not request |
| 458 | permissions from the user. Permissions are removed if an application is |
| 459 | uninstalled, so a subsequent re-installation will again result in display of |
| 460 | permissions. |
| 461 | |
| 462 | Within the device settings, users are able to view permissions for applications |
| 463 | they have previously installed. Users can also turn off some functionality |
| 464 | globally when they choose, such as disabling GPS, radio, or wi-fi. |
| 465 | |
| 466 | In the event that an application attempts to use a protected feature which has |
| 467 | not been declared in the application's manifest, the permission failure will |
| 468 | typically result in a security exception being thrown back to the application. |
| 469 | Protected API permission checks are enforced at the lowest possible level to |
| 470 | prevent circumvention. An example of the user messaging when an application is |
| 471 | installed while requesting access to protected APIs is shown in *Figure 2*. |
| 472 | |
| 473 | The system default permissions are described at |
| 474 | [http://code.google.com/android/reference/android/Manifest.permission.html](http |
| 475 | ://code.google.com/android/reference/android/Manifest.permission.html). |
| 476 | Applications may declare their own permissions for other applications to use. |
| 477 | Such permissions are not listed in the above location. |
| 478 | |
| 479 | When defining a permission a protectionLevel attribute tells the system how the |
| 480 | user is to be informed of applications requiring the permission, or who is |
| 481 | allowed to hold a permission. Details on creating and using application |
| 482 | specific permissions are described at |
| 483 | [http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/security/security.html](http://develo |
| 484 | per.android.com/guide/topics/security/security.html). |
| 485 | |
| 486 | There are some device capabilities, such as the ability to send SMS broadcast |
| 487 | intents, that are not available to third-party applications, but that may be |
| 488 | used by applications pre-installed by the OEM. These permissions use the |
| 489 | signatureOrSystem permission. |
| 490 | |
| 491 | ##How Users Understand Third-Party Applications |
| 492 | |
| 493 | Android strives to make it clear to users when they are interacting with |
| 494 | third-party applications and inform the user of the capabilities those |
| 495 | applications have. Prior to installation of any application, the user is shown |
| 496 | a clear message about the different permissions the application is requesting. |
| 497 | After install, the user is not prompted again to confirm any permissions. |
| 498 | |
| 499 | There are many reasons to show permissions immediately prior to installation |
| 500 | time. This is when user is actively reviewing information about the |
| 501 | application, developer, and functionality to determine whether it matches their |
| 502 | needs and expectations. It is also important that they have not yet |
| 503 | established a mental or financial commitment to the app, and can easily compare |
| 504 | the application to other alternative applications. |
| 505 | |
| 506 | Some other platforms use a different approach to user notification, requesting |
| 507 | permission at the start of each session or while applications are in use. The |
| 508 | vision of Android is to have users switching seamlessly between applications at |
| 509 | will. Providing confirmations each time would slow down the user and prevent |
| 510 | Android from delivering a great user experience. Having the user review |
| 511 | permissions at install time gives the user the option to not install the |
| 512 | application if they feel uncomfortable. |
| 513 | |
| 514 | Also, many user interface studies have shown that over-prompting the user |
| 515 | causes the user to start saying "OK" to any dialog that is shown. One of |
| 516 | Android's security goals is to effectively convey important security |
| 517 | information to the user, which cannot be done using dialogs that the user will |
| 518 | be trained to ignore. By presenting the important information once, and only |
| 519 | when it is important, the user is more likely to think about what they are |
| 520 | agreeing to. |
| 521 | |
| 522 | Some platforms choose not to show any information at all about application |
| 523 | functionality. That approach prevents users from easily understanding and |
| 524 | discussing application capabilities. While it is not possible for all users to |
| 525 | always make fully informed decisions, the Android permissions model makes |
| 526 | information about applications easily accessible to a wide range of users. For |
| 527 | example, unexpected permissions requests can prompt more sophisticated users to |
| 528 | ask critical questions about application functionality and share their concerns |
| 529 | in places such as the [Android Market](https://market.android.com) where they |
| 530 | are visible to all users. |
| 531 | |
| 532 | <table> |
| 533 | <tr> |
| 534 | <td><strong>Permissions at Application Install -- Google Maps</strong></td> |
| 535 | <td><strong>Permissions of an Installed Application -- gMail</strong></td> |
| 536 | </tr> |
| 537 | <tr> |
| 538 | <td> |
| 539 | <img alt="Permissions at Application Install -- Google Maps" width=250 |
| 540 | src="images/image_install.png"/> |
| 541 | </td> |
| 542 | <td> |
| 543 | <img alt="Permissions of an Installed Application -- gMail" width=250 |
| 544 | src="images/image_gmail_installed.png"/> |
| 545 | </td> |
| 546 | </tr> |
| 547 | </table> |
| 548 | *Figure 2: Display of permissions for applications* |
| 549 | |
| 550 | ##Interprocess Communication |
| 551 | |
| 552 | Processes can communicate using any of the traditional UNIX-type mechanisms. |
| 553 | Examples include the filesystem, local sockets, or signals. However, the Linux |
| 554 | permissions still apply. |
| 555 | |
| 556 | Android also provides new IPC mechanisms: |
| 557 | |
| 558 | + **Binder**: A lightweight capability-based remote procedure call mechanism |
| 559 | designed for high performance when performing in-process and cross-process |
| 560 | calls. Binder is implemented using a custom Linux driver. See |
| 561 | [http://developer.android.com/reference/android/os/Binder.html](http://developer |
| 562 | .android.com/reference/android/os/Binder.html). |
| 563 | |
| 564 | + **Services**: Services (discussed above) can provide interfaces directly |
| 565 | accessible using binder. |
| 566 | |
| 567 | + **Intents**: An Intent is a simple message object that represents an |
| 568 | "intention" to do something. For example, if your application wants to display |
| 569 | a web page, it expresses its "Intent" to view the URL by creating an Intent |
| 570 | instance and handing it off to the system. The system locates some other piece |
| 571 | of code (in this case, the Browser) that knows how to handle that Intent, and |
| 572 | runs it. Intents can also be used to broadcast interesting events (such as a |
| 573 | notification) system-wide. See |
| 574 | [http://code.google.com/android/reference/android/content/Intent.html](http://co |
| 575 | de.google.com/android/reference/android/content/Intent.html). |
| 576 | |
| 577 | + **ContentProviders**: A ContentProvider is a data storehouse that provides |
| 578 | access to data on the device; the classic example is the ContentProvider that |
| 579 | is used to access the user's list of contacts. An application can access data |
| 580 | that other applications have exposed via a ContentProvider, and an application |
| 581 | can also define its own ContentProviders to expose data of its own. See |
| 582 | [http://code.google.com/android/reference/android/content/ContentProvider.html]( |
| 583 | http://code.google.com/android/reference/android/content/ContentProvider.html). |
| 584 | |
| 585 | While it is possible to implement IPC using other mechanisms such as network |
| 586 | sockets or world-writable files, these are the recommended Android IPC |
| 587 | frameworks. Android developers will be encouraged to use best practices around |
| 588 | securing users' data and avoiding the introduction of security vulnerabilities. |
| 589 | |
| 590 | ##Cost-Sensitive APIs |
| 591 | |
| 592 | A cost sensitive API is any function that might generate a cost for the user or |
| 593 | the network. The Android platform has placed cost sensitive APIs in the list of |
| 594 | protected APIs controlled by the OS. The user will have to grant explicit |
| 595 | permission to third-party applications requesting use of cost sensitive APIs. |
| 596 | These APIs include: |
| 597 | |
| 598 | + Telephony |
| 599 | + SMS/MMS |
| 600 | + Network/Data |
| 601 | + In-App Billing |
| 602 | + NFC Access |
| 603 | |
| 604 | ##SIM Card Access |
| 605 | |
| 606 | Low level access to the SIM card is not available to third-party apps. The OS |
| 607 | handles all communications with the SIM card including access to personal |
| 608 | information (contacts) on the SIM card memory. Applications also cannot access |
| 609 | AT commands, as these are managed exclusively by the Radio Interface Layer |
| 610 | (RIL). The RIL provides no high level APIs for these commands. |
| 611 | |
| 612 | ##Personal Information |
| 613 | |
| 614 | Android has placed APIs that provide access to user data into the set of |
| 615 | protected APIs. With normal usage, Android devices will also accumulate user |
| 616 | data within third-party applications installed by users. Applications that |
| 617 | choose to share this information can use Android OS permission checks to |
| 618 | protect the data from third-party applications. |
| 619 | |
| 620 |  |
| 622 | |
| 623 | *Figure 3: Access to sensitive user data is only available through protected |
| 624 | APIs* |
| 625 | |
| 626 | System content providers that are likely to contain personal or personally |
| 627 | identifiable information such as contacts and calendar have been created with |
| 628 | clearly identified permissions. This granularity provides the user with clear |
| 629 | indication of the types of information that may be provided to the application. |
| 630 | During installation, a third-party application may request permission to |
| 631 | access these resources. If permission is granted, the application can be |
| 632 | installed and will have access to the data requested at any time when it is |
| 633 | installed. |
| 634 | |
| 635 | Any applications which collect personal information will, by default, have that |
| 636 | data restricted only to the specific application. If an application chooses to |
| 637 | make the data available to other applications though IPC, the application |
| 638 | granting access can apply permissions to the IPC mechanism that are enforced by |
| 639 | the operating system. |
| 640 | |
| 641 | ##Sensitive Data Input Devices |
| 642 | |
| 643 | Android devices frequently provide sensitive data input devices that allow |
| 644 | applications to interact with the surrounding environment, such as camera, |
| 645 | microphone or GPS. For a third-party application to access these devices, it |
| 646 | must first be explicitly provided access by the user through the use of Android |
| 647 | OS Permissions. Upon installation, the installer will prompt the user |
| 648 | requesting permission to the sensor by name. |
| 649 | |
| 650 | If an application wants to know the user's location, the application requires a |
| 651 | permission to access the user's location. Upon installation, the installer will |
| 652 | prompt the user asking if the application can access the user's location. At |
| 653 | any time, if the user does not want any application to access their location, |
| 654 | then the user can run the "Settings" application, go to "Location & Security", |
| 655 | and uncheck the "Use wireless networks" and "Enable GPS satellites". This will |
| 656 | disable location based services for all applications on the user's device. |
| 657 | |
| 658 | ##Device Metadata |
| 659 | |
| 660 | Android also strives to restrict access to data that is not intrinsically |
| 661 | sensitive, but may indirectly reveal characteristics about the user, user |
| 662 | preferences, and the manner in which they use a device. |
| 663 | |
| 664 | By default applications do not have access to operating system logs, |
| 665 | browser history, phone number, or hardware / network identification |
| 666 | information. If an application requests access to this information at install |
| 667 | time, the installer will prompt the user asking if the application can access |
| 668 | the information. If the user does not grant access, the application will not be |
| 669 | installed. |
| 670 | |
| 671 | ##Application Signing |
| 672 | |
| 673 | Code signing allows developers to identify the author of the application and to |
| 674 | update their application without creating complicated interfaces and |
| 675 | permissions. Every application that is run on the Android platform must be |
| 676 | signed by the developer. Applications that attempt to install without being |
| 677 | signed will rejected by either the Android Market or the package installer on |
| 678 | the Android device. |
| 679 | |
| 680 | On Android Market, application signing bridges the trust Google has with the |
| 681 | developer and the trust the developer has with their application. Developers |
| 682 | know their application is provided, unmodified to the Android device; and |
| 683 | developers can be held accountable for behavior of their application. |
| 684 | |
| 685 | On Android, application signing is the first step to placing an application in |
| 686 | its Application Sandbox. The signed application certificate defines which user |
| 687 | id is associated with which application; different applications run under |
| 688 | different user IDs. Application signing ensures that one application cannot |
| 689 | access any other application except through well-defined IPC. |
| 690 | |
| 691 | When an application (APK file) is installed onto an Android device, the Package |
| 692 | Manager verifies that the APK has been properly signed with the certificate |
| 693 | included in that APK. If the certificate (or, more accurately, the public key |
| 694 | in the certificate) matches the key used to sign any other APK on the device, |
| 695 | the new APK has the option to specify in the manifest that it will share a UID |
| 696 | with the other similarly-signed APKs. |
| 697 | |
| 698 | Applications can be signed by a third-party (OEM, operator, alternative market) |
| 699 | or self-signed. Android provides code signing using self-signed certificates |
| 700 | that developers can generate without external assistance or permission. |
| 701 | Applications do not have to be signed by a central authority. Android currently |
| 702 | does not perform CA verification for application certificates. |
| 703 | |
| 704 | Applications are also able to declare security permissions at the Signature |
| 705 | protection level, restricting access only to applications signed with the same |
| 706 | key while maintaining distinct UIDs and Application Sandboxes. A closer |
| 707 | relationship with a shared Application Sandbox is allowed via the [shared UID |
| 708 | feature](http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifest-element.htm |
| 709 | l#uid) where two or more applications signed with same developer key can |
| 710 | declare a shared UID in their manifest. |
| 711 | |
| 712 | ##Digital Rights Management |
| 713 | |
| 714 | The Android platform provides an extensible DRM framework that lets |
| 715 | applications manage rights-protected content according to the license |
| 716 | constraints that are associated with the content. The DRM framework supports |
| 717 | many DRM schemes; which DRM schemes a device supports is left to the device |
| 718 | manufacturer. |
| 719 | |
| 720 | The [Android DRM |
| 721 | framework](http://developer.android.com/reference/android/drm/package-summary.ht |
| 722 | ml) is implemented in two architectural layers (see figure below): |
| 723 | |
| 724 | + A DRM framework API, which is exposed to applications through the Android |
| 725 | application framework and runs through the Dalvik VM for standard applications. |
| 726 | |
| 727 | + A native code DRM manager, which implements the DRM framework and exposes an |
| 728 | interface for DRM plug-ins (agents) to handle rights management and decryption |
| 729 | for various DRM schemes |
| 730 | |
| 731 |  |
| 733 | |
| 734 | *Figure 4: Architecture of Digital Rights Management on Android platform* |
| 735 | |
| 736 | #Android Updates |
| 737 | |
| 738 | Android provides system updates for both security and feature related purposes. |
| 739 | |
| 740 | There are two ways to update the code on most Android devices: over-the-air |
| 741 | (OTA updates) or side-loaded updates. OTA updates can be rolled out over a |
| 742 | defined time period or be pushed to all devices at once, depending on how the |
| 743 | OEM and/or carrier would like to push the updates. Side-loaded updates can be |
| 744 | provided from a central location for users to download as a zip file to their |
| 745 | local desktop machine or directly to their handset. Once the update is copied |
| 746 | or downloaded to the SD card on the device, Android will recognize the update, |
| 747 | verify its integrity and authenticity, and automatically update the device. |
| 748 | |
| 749 | If a dangerous vulnerability is discovered internally or responsibly reported |
| 750 | to Google or the Android Open Source Project, the Android security team will |
| 751 | start the following process. |
| 752 | |
| 753 | 1. The Android team will notify companies who have signed NDAs regarding the |
| 754 | problem and begin discussing the solution. |
| 755 | 2. The owners of code will begin the fix. |
| 756 | 3. The Android team will fix Android-related security issues. |
| 757 | 4. When a patch is available, the fix is provided to the NDA companies. |
| 758 | 5. The Android team will publish the patch in the Android Open Source Project |
| 759 | 6. OEM/carrier will push an update to customers. |
| 760 | |
| 761 | The NDA is required to ensure that the security issue does not become public |
| 762 | prior to availabilty of a fix and put users at risk. Many OHA members run their |
| 763 | own code on Android devices such as the bootloader, wifi drivers, and the |
| 764 | radio. Once the Android Security team is notified of a security issue in this |
| 765 | partner code, they will consult with OHA partners to quickly find a fix for the |
| 766 | problem at hand and similar problems. However, the OHA member who wrote the |
| 767 | faulty code is ultimately responsible for fixing the problem. |
| 768 | |
| 769 | If a dangerous vulnerability is not responsibly disclosed (e.g., if it is |
| 770 | posted to a public forum without warning), then Google and/or the Android Open |
| 771 | Source Project will work as quickly as possible to create a patch. The patch |
| 772 | will released to the public (and any partners) when the patch is tested and |
| 773 | ready for use. |
| 774 | |
| 775 | At Google I/O 2011, many of the largest OHA partners committed to providing |
| 776 | updates to devices for 18 months after initial shipment. This will provide |
| 777 | users with access to the most recent Android features, as well as security |
| 778 | updates. |
| 779 | |
| 780 | Any developer, Android user, or security researcher can notify the Android |
| 781 | security team of potential security issues by sending email to |
| 782 | security@android.com. If desired, communication can be encrypted using the |
| 783 | Android security team PGP key available here: |
| 784 | [https://developer.android.com/security_at_android_dot_com.txt](https://develope |
| 785 | r.android.com/security_at_android_dot_com.txt). |
| 786 | |
| 787 | #Other Resources |
| 788 | |
| 789 | Information about the Android Open Source Project is available at |
| 790 | [http://source.android.com](http://source.android.com). |
| 791 | |
| 792 | Information for Android application developers is here: |
| 793 | [http://developer.android.com](http://developer.android.com). |
| 794 | |
| 795 | The Android Security team can be reached at |
| 796 | [security@android.com](mailto:security@android.com). |
| 797 | |
| 798 | Security information exists throughout the Android Open Source and Developer |
| 799 | Sites. A good place to start is here: |
| 800 | [http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/security/security.html](http://develo |
| 801 | per.android.com/guide/topics/security/security.html). |
| 802 | |
| 803 | A Security FAQ for developers is located here: |
| 804 | [http://developer.android.com/resources/faq/security.html](http://developer.andr |
| 805 | oid.com/resources/faq/security.html). |
| 806 | |
| 807 | A community resource for discussion about Android security exists here: |
| 808 | [http://groups.google.com/group/android-security-discuss](http://groups.google.c |
| 809 | om/group/android-security-discuss). |
| 810 | |