mirror of
https://github.com/archlinuxarm/PKGBUILDs.git
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494 lines
15 KiB
Text
494 lines
15 KiB
Text
#sample default policy for grsecurity
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#
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# Role flags:
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# A -> This role is an administrative role, thus it has special privilege normal
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# roles do not have. In particular, this role bypasses the
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# additional ptrace restrictions
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# N -> Don't require authentication for this role. To access
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# the role, use gradm -n <rolename>
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# s -> This role is a special role, meaning it does not belong to a
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# user or group, and does not require an enforced secure policy
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# base to be included in the ruleset
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# u -> This role is a user role
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# g -> This role is a group role
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# G -> This role can use gradm to authenticate to the kernel
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# A policy for gradm will automatically be added to the role
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# T -> Enable TPE for this role
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# l -> Enable learning for this role
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# P -> Use PAM authentication for this role.
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# R -> Enable persistence of special role. Normal special roles will
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# be removed upon exit of the process that entered the role, or
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# upon unauth (this is what changes the apache process' role back
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# to its normal role after being restarted from the admin role, for
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# instance). Role persistence allows a special role to be used for
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# system shutdown, as the point at which the admin's shell/SSH
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# session is terminated won't cause the rest of the shutdown
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# sequence to execute with reduced privilege. Do *NOT* use this
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# flag with any role that does anything but shut the system down.
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# This role will also be transferred to the init process upon
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# writing to /dev/initctl. This allows init to execute the rc
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# scripts for shutdown with the necessary privilege.
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# For usability reasons, we allow the removal of persistence through
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# the normal unauth process (so persistence only survives exit).
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#
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# a role can only be one of user, group, or special
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#
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# role_allow_ip IP/optional netmask
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# eg: role_allow_ip 192.168.1.0/24
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# You can have as many of these per role as you want
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# They restrict the use of a role to a list of IPs. If a user
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# is on the system that would normally get the role does not
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# belong to those lists of IPs, the system falls back through
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# its method of determining a role for the user
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#
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# Role hierarchy
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# user -> group -> default
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# First a user role attempts to match, if one is not found,
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# a group role attempts to match, if one is not found,
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# the default role is used.
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#
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# role_transitions <special role 1> <special role 2> ... <special role n>
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# eg: role_transitions www_admin dns_admin
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#
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# role transitions specify which special roles a given role is allowed
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# to authenticate to. This applies to special roles that do not
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# require password authentication as well. If a user tries to
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# authenticate to a role that is not within his transition table, he
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# will receive a permission denied error
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#
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# Nested subjects
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# subject /usr/bin/su:/usr/bin/bash:/usr/bin/cat
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# / rwx
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# +CAP_ALL
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# grant privilege to specific processes if they are executed
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# within a trusted path. In this case, privilege is
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# granted if /usr/bin/cat is executed from /usr/bin/bash, which is
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# executed from /usr/bin/su.
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#
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# Configuration inheritance on nested subjects
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# nested subjects inherit rules from their parents. In the
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# example above, the nested subject would inherit rules
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# from the nested subject for /usr/bin/su:/usr/bin/bash,
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# and the subject /usr/bin/su
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# View the 1.9.x documentation for more information on
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# configuration inheritance
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#
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# new object modes:
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# m -> allow creation of setuid/setgid files/directories
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# and modification of files/directories to be setuid/setgid
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# M -> audit the setuid/setgid creation/modification
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# c -> allow creation of the file/directory
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# C -> audit the creation
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# d -> allow deletion of the file/directory
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# D -> audit the deletion
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# p -> reject all ptraces to this object
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# l -> allow a hardlink at this path
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# (hardlinking requires at a minimum c and l modes, and the target
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# link cannot have any greater permission than the source file)
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# L -> audit link creation
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# f -> needed to mark the pipe used for communication with init
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# to transfer the privilege of the persistent role; only valid
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# within a persistent role. Transfer only occurs when the file is
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# opened for writing
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# Z -> tells gradm to ignore earlier object of the same name and use this
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# one instead
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#
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# new subject modes:
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# O -> disable "writable library" restrictions for this task
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# t -> allow this process to ptrace any process (use with caution)
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# r -> relax ptrace restrictions (allows process to ptrace processes
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# other than its own descendants)
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# i -> enable inheritance-based learning for this subject, causing
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# all accesses of this subject and anything it executes to be placed
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# in this subject, and inheritance flags added to executable objects
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# in this subject
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# a -> allow this process to talk to the /dev/grsec device
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# s -> enable AT_SECURE when entering this subject
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# (enables the same environment sanitization that occurs in glibc
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# upon execution of a suid binary)
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# x -> allows executable anonymous shared memory for this subject
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# Z -> tells gradm to ignore earlier subject of the same path and use this
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# one instead
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# user/group transitions:
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# You may now specify what users and groups a given subject can
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# transition to. This can be done on an inclusive or exclusive basis.
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# Omitting these rules allows a process with proper privilege granted by
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# capabilities to transition to any user/group.
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#
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# Examples:
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# subject /usr/bin/su
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# user_transition_allow root spender
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# group_transition_allow root spender
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# subject /usr/bin/su
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# user_transition_deny evilhacker
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# subject /usr/bin/su
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# group_transition_deny evilhacker1 evilhacker2
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#
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# Domains:
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# With domains you can combine users that don't share a common
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# GID as well as groups so that they share a single policy
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# Domains work just like roles, with the only exception being that
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# the line starting with "role" is replaced with one of the following:
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# domain somedomainname u user1 user2 user3 user4 ... usern
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# domain somedomainname g group1 group2 group3 group4 ... groupn
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#
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# Inverted socket policies:
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# Rules such as
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# connect ! www.google.com:80 stream tcp
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# are now allowed, which allows you to specify that a process can connect to anything
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# except to port 80 of www.google.com with a stream tcp socket
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# the inverted socket matching also works on bind rules
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#
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# INADDR_ANY overriding
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# You can now force a given subject to bind to a particular IP address on the machine
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# This is useful for some chrooted environments, to ensure that the source IP they
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# use is one of your choosing
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# to use, add a line like:
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# ip_override 192.168.0.1
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#
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# Per-interface socket policies:
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# Rules such as
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# bind eth1:80 stream tcp
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# bind eth0#1:22 stream tcp
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# are now allowed, giving you the ability to tie specific socket rules
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# to a single interface (or by using the inverted rules, all but one
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# interface). Virtual interfaces are specified by the <ifname>#<vindex>
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# syntax. If an interface is specified, no IP/netmask or host may be
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# specified for the rule.
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#
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# Allowing additional socket families:
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# Before v2.2.1 of the RBAC system, a subject that specified
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# connect/bind rules limited only the socket usage of IPv4, allowing
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# any other socket families to be used. Starting with v2.2.1 of the
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# RBAC system, when connect/bind rules are used, additional rules
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# will be required to unlock the use of additional socket families
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# (outside of the common unix family). Multiple families can be
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# specified per line.
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# To enable use of IPv6, add the line:
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# sock_allow_family ipv6
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# To enable use of netlink, add the line:
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# sock_allow_family netlink
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# To enable all other families, add the line:
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# sock_allow_family all
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#
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# New learning system:
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# To learn on a given subject: add l (the letter l, not the number 1)
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# to the subject mode
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# If you want to learn with the most restrictive policy, use the
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# following:
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# subject /path/to/bin lo
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# / h
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# -CAP_ALL
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# connect disabled
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# bind disabled
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# Resource learning is also supported, so lines like
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# RES_AS 0 0
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# can be used to learn a particular resource
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#
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# To learn on a given role, add l to the role mode
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# For both of these, to enable learning, enable the system like:
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# gradm -L /etc/grsec/learning.logs -E
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# and then generate the rules after disabling the system after the
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# learning phase with:
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# gradm -L /etc/grsec/learning.logs -O /etc/grsec/policy
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# To use full system learning, enable the system like:
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# gradm -F -L /etc/grsec/learning.logs
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# and then generate the rules after disabling the system after the
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# learning phase with:
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# gradm -F -L /etc/grsec/learning.logs -O /etc/grsec/policy
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#
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# New PaX flag format (replaces PaX subject flags):
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# PaX flags can be forced on or off, regardless of the flags on the
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# binary, by using + or - before the following PaX flag names:
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# PAX_SEGMEXEC
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# PAX_PAGEEXEC
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# PAX_MPROTECT
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# PAX_RANDMMAP
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# PAX_EMUTRAMP
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#
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# New feature for easier policy maintenance:
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# replace <variable name> <replace string>
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# e.g.:
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# replace CVSROOT /home/cvs
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# now $(CVSROOT) can be used in any subject or object pathname, like:
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# $(CVSROOT)/grsecurity r
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# This will translate to /home/cvs/grsecurity r
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# This feature makes it easier to update policies by naming specific
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# paths by their function, then only having to update those paths once
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# to have it affect a large number of subjects/objects.
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#
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# capability auditing / log suppression
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# use of a capability can be audited by adding "audit" to the line, eg:
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# +CAP_SYS_RAWIO audit
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# log suppression for denial of a capbility can be done by adding "suppress":
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# -CAP_SYS_RAWIO suppress
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#
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# Per-role umask enforcement:
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# If you have a user that you want to be assured cannot accidentally
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# create a file that others can read (a confidentiality issue)
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# add the following under the role declaration:
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# role_umask 077
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# any normal octal umask may be specified
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# Note that unlike the normal umask, this umask will also apply
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# to the permissions one can chmod/fchmod a file to
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#
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# Note that the omission of any feature of a role or subject
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# results in a default-allow
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# For instance, if no capability rules are added in a subject without
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# policy inheritance ("o" in subject mode), an implicit +CAP_ALL is used
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#
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# Also note that policy inheritance does not exist for network policies, only
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# file objects and capabilities inherit policy
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#
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# Commonly-used objects can be defined and used in multiple subjects
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# As an example, we'll create a variable out of a list of objects
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# and their associated permissions that RBAC enforces
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# files, connect/bind rules, and capabilities can currently be added to a define
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define grsec_denied {
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/boot h
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/dev/grsec h
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/dev/kmem h
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/dev/mem h
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/dev/port h
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/etc/grsec h
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/proc/kcore h
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/proc/slabinfo h
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/proc/modules h
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/proc/kallsyms h
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# hide and suppress logs about accessing this path
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/usr/lib/modules hs
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/etc/ssh h
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}
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# usage:
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# $grsec_denied
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role shutdown sARG
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subject / rvka
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/
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/dev
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/dev/urandom r
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/dev/random r
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/etc r
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/usr rx
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/proc r
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$grsec_denied
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-CAP_ALL
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connect disabled
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bind disabled
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subject /usr/lib/systemd/systemd rvkao
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/ rwcdmlxi
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subject /usr/bin/systemctl rvkao
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/ rwcdmlxi
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/dev/initctl rwf
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/run/initctl rwf
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# Make sure to unauthenticate with gradm -u from
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# the admin role after restarting a service
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# The service started will run with admin
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# privileges until you run gradm -u or your shell exits
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role admin sA
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subject / rvka
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/ rwcdmlxi
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role default G
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role_transitions admin shutdown
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subject /
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/ r
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/opt rx
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/home rwxcd
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/mnt rw
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/dev
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/dev/urandom r
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/dev/random r
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/dev/zero rw
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/dev/input rw
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/dev/psaux rw
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/dev/null rw
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/dev/tty? rw
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/dev/console rw
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/dev/tty rw
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/dev/pts rw
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/dev/ptmx rw
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/dev/dsp rw
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/dev/mixer rw
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/dev/initctl rw
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/dev/fd0 r
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/dev/sr0 r
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/usr rx
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# compilation of kernel code should be done within the admin role
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/usr/src h
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/etc rx
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/proc rwx
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/proc/sys r
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/sys h
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/root r
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/run r
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/tmp rwcd
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/var rwxcd
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/var/tmp rwcd
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/var/log r
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# hide the kernel images and modules
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$grsec_denied
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# if sshd needs to be restarted, it can be done through the admin role
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# restarting sshd should be followed immediately by a gradm -u
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/usr/bin/sshd
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-CAP_KILL
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-CAP_SYS_TTY_CONFIG
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-CAP_LINUX_IMMUTABLE
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-CAP_NET_RAW
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-CAP_MKNOD
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-CAP_SYS_ADMIN
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-CAP_SYS_RAWIO
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-CAP_SYS_MODULE
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-CAP_SYS_PTRACE
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-CAP_NET_ADMIN
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-CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE
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-CAP_NET_RAW
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-CAP_SYS_CHROOT
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-CAP_SYS_BOOT
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-CAP_SETFCAP
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-CAP_SYSLOG
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# RES_AS 100M 100M
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# connect 192.168.1.0/24:22 stream tcp
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# bind 0.0.0.0 stream dgram tcp udp
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# the d flag protects /proc fd and mem entries for sshd
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# all daemons should have 'p' in their subject mode to prevent
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# an attacker from killing the service (and restarting it with trojaned
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# config file or taking the port it reserved to run a trojaned service)
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subject /usr/bin/sshd dpo
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/
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/* h
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/usr/bin/bash x
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/dev h
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/dev/random r
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/dev/urandom r
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/dev/null rw
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/dev/ptmx rw
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/dev/pts rw
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/dev/tty rw
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/dev/tty? rw
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/etc r
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/etc/grsec h
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/home
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/home/*/.ssh/authorized_keys r
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/root
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/proc r
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/proc/*/oom_adj rw
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/proc/*/oom_score_adj rw
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/proc/kcore h
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/proc/sys h
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/proc/sys/kernel/ngroups_max r
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/selinux r
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/usr/lib rx
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/usr/lib32 rx
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/usr/libx32 rx
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/usr/share/zoneinfo r
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/var/log
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/var/spool/mail
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/var/log/lastlog rw
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/var/log/wtmp w
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/var/run
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/run
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/run/systemd/journal/dev-log rw
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/var/run/sshd
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/var/run/utmp rw
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/var/run/utmpx rw
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/var/run/.nscd_socket rw
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-CAP_ALL
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+CAP_CHOWN
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+CAP_SETGID
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+CAP_SETUID
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+CAP_SYS_CHROOT
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+CAP_SYS_RESOURCE
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+CAP_SYS_TTY_CONFIG
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+CAP_AUDIT_WRITE
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# to access user keys
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+CAP_DAC_OVERRIDE
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subject /usr/bin/Xorg
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/dev/mem rw
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+CAP_SYS_ADMIN
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+CAP_SYS_TTY_CONFIG
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+CAP_SYS_RAWIO
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subject /usr/bin/ssh
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/etc/ssh/ssh_config r
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subject /usr/bin/postgres
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/run/systemd/journal/dev-log rw
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subject /usr/bin/exim
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/run/systemd/journal/dev-log rw
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subject /usr/bin/syslog-ng
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+CAP_SYS_ADMIN
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subject /usr/bin/rsyslogd
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+CAP_SYS_ADMIN
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subject /usr/bin/cron
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/run/systemd/journal/dev-log rw
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subject /usr/bin/crond
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/run/systemd/journal/dev-log rw
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subject /usr/bin/login
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/run/systemd/journal/dev-log rw
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/var/log/wtmp w
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/var/log/faillog rwcd
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subject /usr/bin/su
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/run/systemd/journal/dev-log rw
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subject /usr/bin/sudo
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/run/systemd/journal/dev-log rw
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subject /usr/bin/agetty
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/var/log/wtmp w
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subject /usr/bin/init
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/var/log/wtmp w
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subject /usr/bin/xauth
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/home r
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/home/*/.Xauthority-* rwcdl
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# prevent ld.so breakouts of subjects with /usr/lib rx
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# many distros clutter up /usr/lib with shell scripts
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# that can be easily hijacked for malicious purposes
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subject /usr/lib o
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/ h
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-CAP_ALL
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connect disabled
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bind disabled
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subject /usr/lib32 o
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/ h
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-CAP_ALL
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connect disabled
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bind disabled
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subject /usr/lib/ld-linux.so.2 o
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/ h
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-CAP_ALL
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connect disabled
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bind disabled
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subject /usr/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 o
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/ h
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-CAP_ALL
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connect disabled
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bind disabled
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