| The execve system call can grant a newly-started program privileges that |
| its parent did not have. The most obvious examples are setuid/setgid |
| programs and file capabilities. To prevent the parent program from |
| gaining these privileges as well, the kernel and user code must be |
| careful to prevent the parent from doing anything that could subvert the |
| child. For example: |
| |
| - The dynamic loader handles LD_* environment variables differently if |
| a program is setuid. |
| |
| - chroot is disallowed to unprivileged processes, since it would allow |
| /etc/passwd to be replaced from the point of view of a process that |
| inherited chroot. |
| |
| - The exec code has special handling for ptrace. |
| |
| These are all ad-hoc fixes. The no_new_privs bit (since Linux 3.5) is a |
| new, generic mechanism to make it safe for a process to modify its |
| execution environment in a manner that persists across execve. Any task |
| can set no_new_privs. Once the bit is set, it is inherited across fork, |
| clone, and execve and cannot be unset. With no_new_privs set, execve |
| promises not to grant the privilege to do anything that could not have |
| been done without the execve call. For example, the setuid and setgid |
| bits will no longer change the uid or gid; file capabilities will not |
| add to the permitted set, and LSMs will not relax constraints after |
| execve. |
| |
| To set no_new_privs, use prctl(PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS, 1, 0, 0, 0). |
| |
| Be careful, though: LSMs might also not tighten constraints on exec |
| in no_new_privs mode. (This means that setting up a general-purpose |
| service launcher to set no_new_privs before execing daemons may |
| interfere with LSM-based sandboxing.) |
| |
| Note that no_new_privs does not prevent privilege changes that do not |
| involve execve. An appropriately privileged task can still call |
| setuid(2) and receive SCM_RIGHTS datagrams. |
| |
| There are two main use cases for no_new_privs so far: |
| |
| - Filters installed for the seccomp mode 2 sandbox persist across |
| execve and can change the behavior of newly-executed programs. |
| Unprivileged users are therefore only allowed to install such filters |
| if no_new_privs is set. |
| |
| - By itself, no_new_privs can be used to reduce the attack surface |
| available to an unprivileged user. If everything running with a |
| given uid has no_new_privs set, then that uid will be unable to |
| escalate its privileges by directly attacking setuid, setgid, and |
| fcap-using binaries; it will need to compromise something without the |
| no_new_privs bit set first. |
| |
| In the future, other potentially dangerous kernel features could become |
| available to unprivileged tasks if no_new_privs is set. In principle, |
| several options to unshare(2) and clone(2) would be safe when |
| no_new_privs is set, and no_new_privs + chroot is considerable less |
| dangerous than chroot by itself. |