1=========================================== 2Seccomp BPF (SECure COMPuting with filters) 3=========================================== 4 5Introduction 6============ 7 8A large number of system calls are exposed to every userland process 9with many of them going unused for the entire lifetime of the process. 10As system calls change and mature, bugs are found and eradicated. A 11certain subset of userland applications benefit by having a reduced set 12of available system calls. The resulting set reduces the total kernel 13surface exposed to the application. System call filtering is meant for 14use with those applications. 15 16Seccomp filtering provides a means for a process to specify a filter for 17incoming system calls. The filter is expressed as a Berkeley Packet 18Filter (BPF) program, as with socket filters, except that the data 19operated on is related to the system call being made: system call 20number and the system call arguments. This allows for expressive 21filtering of system calls using a filter program language with a long 22history of being exposed to userland and a straightforward data set. 23 24Additionally, BPF makes it impossible for users of seccomp to fall prey 25to time-of-check-time-of-use (TOCTOU) attacks that are common in system 26call interposition frameworks. BPF programs may not dereference 27pointers which constrains all filters to solely evaluating the system 28call arguments directly. 29 30What it isn't 31============= 32 33System call filtering isn't a sandbox. It provides a clearly defined 34mechanism for minimizing the exposed kernel surface. It is meant to be 35a tool for sandbox developers to use. Beyond that, policy for logical 36behavior and information flow should be managed with a combination of 37other system hardening techniques and, potentially, an LSM of your 38choosing. Expressive, dynamic filters provide further options down this 39path (avoiding pathological sizes or selecting which of the multiplexed 40system calls in socketcall() is allowed, for instance) which could be 41construed, incorrectly, as a more complete sandboxing solution. 42 43Usage 44===== 45 46An additional seccomp mode is added and is enabled using the same 47prctl(2) call as the strict seccomp. If the architecture has 48``CONFIG_HAVE_ARCH_SECCOMP_FILTER``, then filters may be added as below: 49 50``PR_SET_SECCOMP``: 51 Now takes an additional argument which specifies a new filter 52 using a BPF program. 53 The BPF program will be executed over struct seccomp_data 54 reflecting the system call number, arguments, and other 55 metadata. The BPF program must then return one of the 56 acceptable values to inform the kernel which action should be 57 taken. 58 59 Usage:: 60 61 prctl(PR_SET_SECCOMP, SECCOMP_MODE_FILTER, prog); 62 63 The 'prog' argument is a pointer to a struct sock_fprog which 64 will contain the filter program. If the program is invalid, the 65 call will return -1 and set errno to ``EINVAL``. 66 67 If ``fork``/``clone`` and ``execve`` are allowed by @prog, any child 68 processes will be constrained to the same filters and system 69 call ABI as the parent. 70 71 Prior to use, the task must call ``prctl(PR_SET_NO_NEW_PRIVS, 1)`` or 72 run with ``CAP_SYS_ADMIN`` privileges in its namespace. If these are not 73 true, ``-EACCES`` will be returned. This requirement ensures that filter 74 programs cannot be applied to child processes with greater privileges 75 than the task that installed them. 76 77 Additionally, if ``prctl(2)`` is allowed by the attached filter, 78 additional filters may be layered on which will increase evaluation 79 time, but allow for further decreasing the attack surface during 80 execution of a process. 81 82The above call returns 0 on success and non-zero on error. 83 84Return values 85============= 86 87A seccomp filter may return any of the following values. If multiple 88filters exist, the return value for the evaluation of a given system 89call will always use the highest precedent value. (For example, 90``SECCOMP_RET_KILL_PROCESS`` will always take precedence.) 91 92In precedence order, they are: 93 94``SECCOMP_RET_KILL_PROCESS``: 95 Results in the entire process exiting immediately without executing 96 the system call. The exit status of the task (``status & 0x7f``) 97 will be ``SIGSYS``, not ``SIGKILL``. 98 99``SECCOMP_RET_KILL_THREAD``: 100 Results in the task exiting immediately without executing the 101 system call. The exit status of the task (``status & 0x7f``) will 102 be ``SIGSYS``, not ``SIGKILL``. 103 104``SECCOMP_RET_TRAP``: 105 Results in the kernel sending a ``SIGSYS`` signal to the triggering 106 task without executing the system call. ``siginfo->si_call_addr`` 107 will show the address of the system call instruction, and 108 ``siginfo->si_syscall`` and ``siginfo->si_arch`` will indicate which 109 syscall was attempted. The program counter will be as though 110 the syscall happened (i.e. it will not point to the syscall 111 instruction). The return value register will contain an arch- 112 dependent value -- if resuming execution, set it to something 113 sensible. (The architecture dependency is because replacing 114 it with ``-ENOSYS`` could overwrite some useful information.) 115 116 The ``SECCOMP_RET_DATA`` portion of the return value will be passed 117 as ``si_errno``. 118 119 ``SIGSYS`` triggered by seccomp will have a si_code of ``SYS_SECCOMP``. 120 121``SECCOMP_RET_ERRNO``: 122 Results in the lower 16-bits of the return value being passed 123 to userland as the errno without executing the system call. 124 125``SECCOMP_RET_TRACE``: 126 When returned, this value will cause the kernel to attempt to 127 notify a ``ptrace()``-based tracer prior to executing the system 128 call. If there is no tracer present, ``-ENOSYS`` is returned to 129 userland and the system call is not executed. 130 131 A tracer will be notified if it requests ``PTRACE_O_TRACESECCOM``P 132 using ``ptrace(PTRACE_SETOPTIONS)``. The tracer will be notified 133 of a ``PTRACE_EVENT_SECCOMP`` and the ``SECCOMP_RET_DATA`` portion of 134 the BPF program return value will be available to the tracer 135 via ``PTRACE_GETEVENTMSG``. 136 137 The tracer can skip the system call by changing the syscall number 138 to -1. Alternatively, the tracer can change the system call 139 requested by changing the system call to a valid syscall number. If 140 the tracer asks to skip the system call, then the system call will 141 appear to return the value that the tracer puts in the return value 142 register. 143 144 The seccomp check will not be run again after the tracer is 145 notified. (This means that seccomp-based sandboxes MUST NOT 146 allow use of ptrace, even of other sandboxed processes, without 147 extreme care; ptracers can use this mechanism to escape.) 148 149``SECCOMP_RET_LOG``: 150 Results in the system call being executed after it is logged. This 151 should be used by application developers to learn which syscalls their 152 application needs without having to iterate through multiple test and 153 development cycles to build the list. 154 155 This action will only be logged if "log" is present in the 156 actions_logged sysctl string. 157 158``SECCOMP_RET_ALLOW``: 159 Results in the system call being executed. 160 161If multiple filters exist, the return value for the evaluation of a 162given system call will always use the highest precedent value. 163 164Precedence is only determined using the ``SECCOMP_RET_ACTION`` mask. When 165multiple filters return values of the same precedence, only the 166``SECCOMP_RET_DATA`` from the most recently installed filter will be 167returned. 168 169Pitfalls 170======== 171 172The biggest pitfall to avoid during use is filtering on system call 173number without checking the architecture value. Why? On any 174architecture that supports multiple system call invocation conventions, 175the system call numbers may vary based on the specific invocation. If 176the numbers in the different calling conventions overlap, then checks in 177the filters may be abused. Always check the arch value! 178 179Example 180======= 181 182The ``samples/seccomp/`` directory contains both an x86-specific example 183and a more generic example of a higher level macro interface for BPF 184program generation. 185 186Sysctls 187======= 188 189Seccomp's sysctl files can be found in the ``/proc/sys/kernel/seccomp/`` 190directory. Here's a description of each file in that directory: 191 192``actions_avail``: 193 A read-only ordered list of seccomp return values (refer to the 194 ``SECCOMP_RET_*`` macros above) in string form. The ordering, from 195 left-to-right, is the least permissive return value to the most 196 permissive return value. 197 198 The list represents the set of seccomp return values supported 199 by the kernel. A userspace program may use this list to 200 determine if the actions found in the ``seccomp.h``, when the 201 program was built, differs from the set of actions actually 202 supported in the current running kernel. 203 204``actions_logged``: 205 A read-write ordered list of seccomp return values (refer to the 206 ``SECCOMP_RET_*`` macros above) that are allowed to be logged. Writes 207 to the file do not need to be in ordered form but reads from the file 208 will be ordered in the same way as the actions_avail sysctl. 209 210 It is important to note that the value of ``actions_logged`` does not 211 prevent certain actions from being logged when the audit subsystem is 212 configured to audit a task. If the action is not found in 213 ``actions_logged`` list, the final decision on whether to audit the 214 action for that task is ultimately left up to the audit subsystem to 215 decide for all seccomp return values other than ``SECCOMP_RET_ALLOW``. 216 217 The ``allow`` string is not accepted in the ``actions_logged`` sysctl 218 as it is not possible to log ``SECCOMP_RET_ALLOW`` actions. Attempting 219 to write ``allow`` to the sysctl will result in an EINVAL being 220 returned. 221 222Adding architecture support 223=========================== 224 225See ``arch/Kconfig`` for the authoritative requirements. In general, if an 226architecture supports both ptrace_event and seccomp, it will be able to 227support seccomp filter with minor fixup: ``SIGSYS`` support and seccomp return 228value checking. Then it must just add ``CONFIG_HAVE_ARCH_SECCOMP_FILTER`` 229to its arch-specific Kconfig. 230 231 232 233Caveats 234======= 235 236The vDSO can cause some system calls to run entirely in userspace, 237leading to surprises when you run programs on different machines that 238fall back to real syscalls. To minimize these surprises on x86, make 239sure you test with 240``/sys/devices/system/clocksource/clocksource0/current_clocksource`` set to 241something like ``acpi_pm``. 242 243On x86-64, vsyscall emulation is enabled by default. (vsyscalls are 244legacy variants on vDSO calls.) Currently, emulated vsyscalls will 245honor seccomp, with a few oddities: 246 247- A return value of ``SECCOMP_RET_TRAP`` will set a ``si_call_addr`` pointing to 248 the vsyscall entry for the given call and not the address after the 249 'syscall' instruction. Any code which wants to restart the call 250 should be aware that (a) a ret instruction has been emulated and (b) 251 trying to resume the syscall will again trigger the standard vsyscall 252 emulation security checks, making resuming the syscall mostly 253 pointless. 254 255- A return value of ``SECCOMP_RET_TRACE`` will signal the tracer as usual, 256 but the syscall may not be changed to another system call using the 257 orig_rax register. It may only be changed to -1 order to skip the 258 currently emulated call. Any other change MAY terminate the process. 259 The rip value seen by the tracer will be the syscall entry address; 260 this is different from normal behavior. The tracer MUST NOT modify 261 rip or rsp. (Do not rely on other changes terminating the process. 262 They might work. For example, on some kernels, choosing a syscall 263 that only exists in future kernels will be correctly emulated (by 264 returning ``-ENOSYS``). 265 266To detect this quirky behavior, check for ``addr & ~0x0C00 == 2670xFFFFFFFFFF600000``. (For ``SECCOMP_RET_TRACE``, use rip. For 268``SECCOMP_RET_TRAP``, use ``siginfo->si_call_addr``.) Do not check any other 269condition: future kernels may improve vsyscall emulation and current 270kernels in vsyscall=native mode will behave differently, but the 271instructions at ``0xF...F600{0,4,8,C}00`` will not be system calls in these 272cases. 273 274Note that modern systems are unlikely to use vsyscalls at all -- they 275are a legacy feature and they are considerably slower than standard 276syscalls. New code will use the vDSO, and vDSO-issued system calls 277are indistinguishable from normal system calls. 278