AppArmor - kernel enhancement to confine programs to a limited set of resources.
AppArmor is a kernel enhancement to confine programs to a limited set of
resources. AppArmor's unique security model is to bind access control
attributes to programs rather than to users.
AppArmor confinement is provided via
profiles loaded into the kernel via
apparmor_parser(8), typically through the
/etc/init.d/apparmor
SysV initscript, which is used like this:
# /etc/init.d/apparmor start
# /etc/init.d/apparmor stop
# /etc/init.d/apparmor restart
AppArmor can operate in two modes:
enforcement, and
complain or
learning:
- •
-
enforcement - Profiles loaded in enforcement mode
will result in enforcement of the policy defined in the profile as well as
reporting policy violation attempts to syslogd.
- •
-
complain - Profiles loaded in "complain"
mode will not enforce policy. Instead, it will report policy violation
attempts. This mode is convenient for developing profiles. To manage
complain mode for individual profiles the utilities aa-complain(8)
and aa-enforce(8) can be used. These utilities take a program name
as an argument.
Profiles are traditionally stored in files in
/etc/apparmor.d/ under
filenames with the convention of replacing the
/ in pathnames with
. (except for the root
/) so profiles are easier to manage (e.g.
the
/usr/sbin/nscd profile would be named
usr.sbin.nscd).
Profiles are applied to a process at
exec(3) time (as seen through the
execve(2) system call): once a profile is loaded for a program, that
program will be confined on the next
exec(3). If a process is already
running under a profile, when one replaces that profile in the kernel, the
updated profile is applied immediately to that process. On the other hand, a
process that is already running unconfined cannot be confined.
AppArmor supports the Linux kernel's securityfs filesystem, and makes available
the list of the profiles currently loaded; to mount the filesystem:
# mount -tsecurityfs securityfs /sys/kernel/security
$ cat /sys/kernel/security/apparmor/profiles
/usr/bin/mutt
/usr/bin/gpg
...
Normally, the initscript will mount securityfs if it has not already been done.
AppArmor also restricts what privileged operations a confined process may
execute, even if the process is running as root. A confined process cannot
call the following system calls:
create_module(2) delete_module(2) init_module(2) ioperm(2)
iopl(2) ptrace(2) reboot(2) setdomainname(2)
sethostname(2) swapoff(2) swapon(2) sysctl(2)
When a confined process tries to access a file it does not have permission to
access, the kernel will report a message through audit, similar to:
audit(1386511672.612:238): apparmor="DENIED" operation="exec"
parent=7589 profile="/tmp/sh" name="/bin/uname" pid=7605
comm="sh" requested_mask="x" denied_mask="x" fsuid=0 ouid=0
audit(1386511672.613:239): apparmor="DENIED" operation="open"
parent=7589 profile="/tmp/sh" name="/bin/uname" pid=7605
comm="sh" requested_mask="r" denied_mask="r" fsuid=0 ouid=0
audit(1386511772.804:246): apparmor="DENIED" operation="capable"
parent=7246 profile="/tmp/sh" pid=7589 comm="sh" pid=7589
comm="sh" capability=2 capname="dac_override"
The permissions requested by the process are described in the operation= and
denied_mask= (for files - capabilities etc. use a slightly different log
format). The "name" and process id of the running program are
reported, as well as the profile name including any "hat" that may
be active, separated by "//". ("Name" is in quotes,
because the process name is limited to 15 bytes; it is the same as reported
through the Berkeley process accounting.)
For confined processes running under a profile that has been loaded in complain
mode, enforcement will not take place and the log messages reported to audit
will be of the form:
audit(1386512577.017:275): apparmor="ALLOWED" operation="open"
parent=8012 profile="/usr/bin/du" name="/etc/apparmor.d/tunables/"
pid=8049 comm="du" requested_mask="r" denied_mask="r" fsuid=1000 ouid=0
audit(1386512577.017:276): apparmor="ALLOWED" operation="open"
parent=8012 profile="/usr/bin/du" name="/etc/apparmor.d/tunables/"
pid=8049 comm="du" requested_mask="r" denied_mask="r" fsuid=1000 ouid=0
If the userland auditd is not running, the kernel will send audit events to
klogd; klogd will send the messages to syslog, which will log the messages
with the KERN facility. Thus, REJECTING and PERMITTING messages may go to
either
/var/log/audit/audit.log or
/var/log/messages, depending
upon local configuration.
AppArmor provides a few facilities to log more information, which can help
debugging profiles.
When debug mode is enabled, AppArmor will log a few extra messages to dmesg (not
via the audit subsystem). For example, the logs will tell whether environment
scrubbing has been applied.
To enable debug mode, run:
echo 1 > /sys/module/apparmor/parameters/debug
By default, operations that trigger "deny" rules are not logged. This
is called
deny audit quieting.
To turn off deny audit quieting, run:
echo -n noquiet >/sys/module/apparmor/parameters/audit
AppArmor can log a message for every operation that triggers a rule configured
in the policy. This is called
force audit mode.
Warning! Force audit mode can be extremely noisy even for a single
profile, let alone when enabled globally.
To set a specific profile in force audit mode, add the "audit" flag:
profile foo flags=(audit) { ... }
To enable force audit mode globally, run:
echo -n all > /sys/module/apparmor/parameters/audit
If auditd is not running, to avoid losing too many of the extra log messages,
you will likely have to turn off rate limiting by doing:
echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/printk_ratelimit
But even then the kernel ring buffer may overflow and you might lose messages.
Else, if auditd is running, see
auditd(8) and
auditd.conf(5).
- /etc/init.d/apparmor
- /etc/apparmor.d/
- /var/lib/apparmor/
- /var/log/audit/audit.log
- /var/log/messages
apparmor_parser(8),
aa_change_hat(2),
apparmor.d(5),
aa-autodep(1),
clean(1),
auditd(8),
aa-unconfined(8),
aa-enforce(1),
aa-complain(1), and
<
https://wiki.apparmor.net>.