Re: [PATCH 3/3] x86: kernel base offset ASLR

From: Ingo Molnar
Date: Fri Apr 05 2013 - 03:05:39 EST



* Julien Tinnes <jln@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 1:27 PM, H. Peter Anvin <hpa@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On 04/04/2013 01:23 PM, Julien Tinnes wrote:
> >> On Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 1:19 PM, Julien Tinnes <jln@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>> On Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 1:12 PM, H. Peter Anvin <hpa@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>>> On 04/04/2013 01:07 PM, Kees Cook wrote:
> >>>>> However, the benefits of
> >>>>> this feature in certain environments exceed the perceived weaknesses[2].
> >>>>
> >>>> Could you clarify?
> >>>
> >>> I think privilege reduction in general, and sandboxing in particular,
> >>> can make KASLR even more useful. A lot of the information leaks can be
> >>> mitigated in the same way as attack surface and vulnerabilities can be
> >>> mitigated.
> >>
> >> Case in point:
> >> - leaks of 64 bits kernel values to userland in compatibility
> >> sub-mode. Sandboxing by using seccomp-bpf can restrict a process to
> >> the 64-bit mode API.
> >> - restricting access to the syslog() system call
> >>
> >
> > That doesn't really speak to the value proposition. My concern is that
> > we're going to spend a lot of time chasing/plugging infoleaks instead of
> > tackling bigger problems.
>
> Certain leaks are already an issue, even without kernel base
> randomization.

Definitely. Stealth infiltration needs a high reliability expoit,
especially if the attack vector used is a zero day kernel vulnerability.

Injecting uncertainty gives us a chance to get a crash logged and the
vulnerability exposed.

> But yeah, this would give an incentive to plug more infoleaks. I'm not
> sure what cost this would incur on kernel development.

I consider it a plus on kernel development - the more incentives to plug
infoleaks, the better.

> There are by-design ones (printk) and bugs. I think we would want to
> correct bugs regardless?

Definitely.

> For by-design ones, privilege-reduction can often be an appropriate answer.

Correct, that's the motivation behind kptr_restrict and dmsg_restrict.

> I really see KASLR as the next natural step:
>
> 1. Enforce different privilege levels via the kernel
> 2. Attackers attack the kernel directly
> 3a. Allow user-land to restrict the kernel's attack surface and
> develop sandboxes (seccomp-bpf, kvm..)
> 3b. Add more exploitation defenses to the kernel, leveraging (3a) and (1).
>
> > 8 bits of entropy is not a lot.
>
> It would certainly be nice to have more, but it's a good first start.
> Unlike user-land segfaults, many kernel-mode panics aren't recoverable
> for an attacker.

The other aspect of even just a couple of bits of extra entropy is that it
changes the economics of worms and other remote attacks: there's a
significant difference between being able to infect one machine per packet
and only 1 out of 256 machines while the other 255 get crashed.

The downside is debuggability - so things like 'debug' on the kernel boot
command line should probably disable this feature automatically.

Thanks,

Ingo
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