Improve security with polyinstantiation

Using a Pluggable Authentication Module to protect private data

To improve security, it's often wise to use more than one method of protection (also called "defense in depth"). That way, if one method is breached, another method remains operational and prevents further intrusion. This article describes a way to add another layer of depth to your security strategy: using PAM to polyinstantiate world-writeable shared directories. This means that a new instance of a directory, such as /tmp, is created for each user.

Polyinstantiation of world-writeable directories prevents the following types of attacks, as Russell Coker illustrates in "Polyinstantiation of directories in an SELinux system" (see Related topics):

Race-condition attacks with symbolic links

Exposing a file name considered secret information or useful to an attacker

Attacks by one user on another user

Attacks by a user on a daemon

Attacks by a non-root daemon on a user

However, polyinstantiation does NOT prevent these types of attacks:

Attacks by a root daemon on a user

Attacks by root (account or escalated privilege) on any user

How PAM and polyinstantiation work

PAM creates a polyinstantiated private /tmp directory at login time within a system instance directory; this redirection is transparent to the user logging in. The user sees a standard /tmp directory and can read and write to it normally. That user cannot see any other user's (including root's) /tmp space or the actual /tmp file system.

Polyinstantiated user directories are neither hidden nor protected from the root user. If you are interested in that level of protection, SELinux can help. The configuration examples provided here should work whether or not you have enabled SELinux. See Related topics for links to more information about using SELinux.

Enabling polyinstantiation

This section shows you how to enable polyinstantiation of /tmp and /var/tmp directories for users on your system. It also describes the optional configuration steps necessary to accommodate X Windows or a graphical display manager. I used Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.1 (RHEL 5.1) to write this article, but you can try the procedures described here on any Linux distribution that includes the pam_namespace module.

First we'll edit namespace.conf.

Edit namespace.conf

The first file you'll edit is /etc/security/namespace.conf, which controls the pam_namespace module. In this file, list the directories that you want PAM to polyinstantiate on login. Some example directories are listed in the file included with PAM and are commented out. Type man namespace.conf to view a comprehensive manual page. The syntax for each line in this file is polydir instance_prefix method list_of_uids .

Briefly, here is what these variables represent:

polydir is the absolute pathname of the directory to polyinstantiate.

is the absolute pathname of the directory to polyinstantiate. instance_prefix is the base directory of the new polyinstantiated user directory.

is the base directory of the new polyinstantiated user directory. method can be user, level, or context.

can be user, level, or context. list_of_uids is a list of user names for which PAM will NOT polyinstantiate their directories.

In this example, you are not using SELinux, so you must specify the user for the method. You can use the variables $USER and $HOME within the configuration file if needed.

Listing 1 creates a private /tmp and /var/tmp namespace instance for each user on the system except root and adm.

Listing 1. /etc/security/namespace.conf

#$HOME $HOME/$USER.inst/ user root,adm /tmp /tmp/tmp-inst/ user root,adm /var/tmp /var/tmp/tmp-inst/ user root,adm

The /tmp and /var/tmp directories do not have to be located on separate filesystems; they can be directories on a single file system. The directories /tmp/tmp-inst and /var/tmp/tmp-inst must be created once, manually, with file mode 000 before polyinstantiation will work. If the directories are not created correctly, logins will fail.

Type the following commands while logged in as the root user to create these directories:

# mkdir /tmp/tmp-inst # mkdir /var/tmp/tmp-inst # chown root:root /tmp/tmp-inst /var/tmp/tmp-inst # chmod 000 /tmp/tmp-inst /var/tmp/tmp-inst

Modify PAM

Next, modify the PAM configuration files to add the pam_namspace.so module to the list of required modules to run on login from the console and from the secure shell. Edit the /etc/pam.d/login and /etc/pam.d/sshd files to place the pam_namespace.so module on the last line in each file. Listing 2 and Listing 3 show where to add the module in /etc/pam.d/login and /etc/pam.d/sshd, respectively:

Listing 2. Adding the PAM module to /etc/pam.d/login

#%PAM-1.0 auth [user_unknown=ignore success=ok ignore=ignore default=bad] pam_securetty.so auth include system-auth account required pam_nologin.so account include system-auth password include system-auth # pam_selinux.so close should be the first session rule session required pam_selinux.so close session include system-auth session required pam_loginuid.so # session optional pam_console.so # pam_selinux.so open should only be followed by sessions to be executed in the user context session required pam_selinux.so open session optional pam_keyinit.so force revoke # Polyinstantiation: session required pam_namespace.so

Listing 3. Adding the PAM module to /etc/pam.d/sshd

#%PAM-1.0 auth include system-auth account required pam_nologin.so account include system-auth password include system-auth session optional pam_keyinit.so force revoke session include system-auth session required pam_loginuid.so # Polyinstantiation: session required pam_namespace.so

Enable X Windows

Because of the way the X Window system uses temporary directories, graphical sessions might fail for users with a polyinstantiated /tmp directory. PAM executes the contents of the /etc/security/namespace.init file during login if pam_namespace is specified in any files in the /etc/pam.d directory. Use this file to make the necessary changes to allow X Windows to start correctly. A default namespace.init file is included with RHEL 5.1, but I have modified it slightly in Listing 4.

Listing 4. Enables X Windows to start correctly

if [ $1 = /tmp ]; then if [ ! -f /.tmp/.X11-unix ]; then mkdir -p /.tmp/.X11-unix fi mount --bind /tmp/.X11-unix /.tmp/.X11-unix [ -f /tmp/.X0-lock ] && cp -fp -- /tmp/.X0-lock "$2/.X0-lock" mkdir -p -- "$2/.X11-unix" ln -fs -- /.tmp/.X11-unix/X0 "$2/.X11-unix/X0" fi exit 0

Configure the Gnome Display Manager

Configuring the Gnome Display Manager (GDM) is easy. Add the pam_namespace.so module to the list of required modules in the /etc/pam.d/gdm file. Listing 5 shows an example.

Listing 5. Configuring the Gnome Display Manager

#%PAM-1.0 auth required pam_env.so auth include system-auth account required pam_nologin.so account include system-auth password include system-auth session optional pam_keyinit.so force revoke session include system-auth session required pam_loginuid.so session optional pam_console.so # Polyinstantiation: session required pam_namespace.so

If you are using the X Display Manager (XDM) instead of GDM, configure the /etc/pam.d/xdm file in the same way. Now both the graphical logins and the command-line logins result in polyinstantiated /tmp and /var/tmp directories.

Finishing up: Allowing for errors

If PAM encounters an error when running the pam_namespace.so module, the login session for the user trying to login will fail. Until you are sure that things are operating as you intend, allow logins to continue in case of an error. To enable the ignore_config_error option, add it to the end of the line in each file in the /etc/pam.d directory where you added the pam_namspace.so module.

For example, in the /etc/pam.d/login file, edit the line containing the pam_namspace.so module as follows:

session required pam_namespace.so ignore_config_error

For a complete list of options, see the pam_namespace manual page. After a user logs in, check the file /var/log/secure for errors. When you are satisfied that your PAM configuration is correct, remove the ignore_config_error option.

Finishing up: Results

After you have modified and saved the configuration files, choose a non-root user account to test and log out all instances of that user from the system. Log in again and a new polyinstantiated /tmp and /var/tmp directory will be created for that user. Listing 6 and Listing 7 show what this looks like on the system and from the user's perspective. In this example, the username is robb.

Listing 6. Console session from the user's perspective

[robb@testbox tmp]$ cd /tmp [robb@testbox tmp]$ touch foo [robb@testbox tmp]$ ls foo

Listing 7. Console session on the system as root

[root@testbox ~]# ls /tmp tmp-inst [root@testbox ~]# ls /tmp/tmp-inst/ robb [root@testbox ~]# ls /tmp/tmp-inst/robb/ foo

Because of polyinstantiation, robb's /tmp directory is isolated in a separate directory under /tmp/tmp-inst/, and robb cannot see the system /tmp directory or any files within it.

Conclusion

While polyinstantiation will not prevent every type of attack, it is a useful addition to your security toolkit that is straightforward to configure. Feel free to experiment by polyinstantiating other directories such as /home. With the ignore_config_error option, mistakes are not fatal, but don't forget to remove that option after you have finished testing your configuration.

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