00e7e2a61b
This cast is fine in C, but if the header is included from C++, even from an extern "C" block, it will cause an error. |
||
---|---|---|
initscripts/gentoo | ||
ndhc | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README |
ndhc, Copyright (C) 2004-2014 Nicholas J. Kain. See LICENSE for licensing information. In short: Two-clause / New BSD. Requirements: Linux kernel GNU Make (tested: 3.82) or CMake (tested: 2.8) libcap (available via ftp.kernel.org) Ragel (tested: 6.7) INTRODUCTION ------------ ndhc is a multi-process, privilege-separated dhcp client. Each subprocess runs with the minimal necessary privileges in order to perform its task. Currently, ndhc consists of two subprocesses: the ndhc-master and ndhc-ifch. ndhc-master communicates with dhcp servers and handles the vagaries of the dhcp client protocol. It runs as a non-root user inside a chroot. ndhc retains only the minimum necessary set of privileges required to perform its duties. These powers include the ability to bind to a low port, the ability to open a raw socket, and the ability to communicate on broadcast channels. ndhc holds no other powers and is restricted to a chroot that contains nothing more than a domain socket filesystem object (if using syslog), a urandom device node, and a null device node. ndhc-ifch handles interface change requests. It listens on a shared pipe for such requests. ndhc-ifch runs as a non-root user inside a chroot, and retains only the power to configure network interfaces. ndhc-ifch automatically forks from ndhc-master to perform its job. ndhc fully implements RFC5227's address conflict detection and defense. Great care is taken to ensure that address conflicts will be detected, and ndhc also has extensive support for address defense. Care is taken to prevent unintentional ARP flooding under any circumstance. ndhc also monitors hardware link status via netlink events and reacts appropriately when interface carrier status changes or an interface is explicitly deconfigured. This functionality can be useful on wired networks when transient carrier downtimes occur (or cables are changed), but it is particularly useful on wireless networks. RFC3927's IPv4 Link Local Addressing is not supported. I have found v4 LLAs to be more of an annoyance than a help. v6 LLAs work much better in practice. FEATURES -------- Privilege-separated. ndhc does not run as root after initial startup, and capabilities are divided between the subprocesses. Both programs run in a chroot. Robust. ndhc performs no runtime heap allocations -- malloc() is never called (and neither is brk(), mmap(), etc), and ndhc never performs recursive calls and only stack-allocates fixed-length types, so stack depth is bounded, too. Active defense of IP address and IP collision avoidance. ndhc fully implements RFC5227. It is capable of both a normal level of tenacity in defense, where it will eventually back off and request a new lease if a peer won't relent in the case of a conflict, and of relentlessly defending a lease forever. In either mode, it rate-limits defense messages, so it can't be tricked into flooding by a hostile peer or DHCP server, either. Small. Both ndhc avoids unnecessary outside dependencies and is written in plain C. The only library used is libcap, as the raw raw kernel API for capabilities is not guaranteed to stay stable. Fast. ndhc filters input using the BPF/LPF mechanism so that uninteresting packets are dropped by the operating system before ndhc even sees the data. ndhc also only listens to DHCP traffic when it's necessary. Flexible. ndhc can request particular IPs, send user-specified client IDs, write a file that contains the current lease IP, write PID files, etc. Self-contained. ndhc does not exec other processes, or rely on the shell. Aware of the hardware link status. If you disconnect an interface on which ndhc is providing dhcp service, it will be aware. When the link status returns, ndhc will fingerprint the reconnected network and make sure that it corresponds to the one on which it has a lease. If the new network is different, it will forget about the old lease and request a new one. USAGE ----- 1) Compile and install ndhc. a) make b) Install the build/ndhc executable in a normal place. I would suggest /usr/sbin or /usr/local/sbin. 1alt) Compile and install ndhc. a) Create a build directory: mkdir build && cd build b) Create the makefiles: cmake .. c) Build ndhc: make d) Install the ndhc/ndhc executable in a normal place. I would suggest /usr/sbin or /usr/local/sbin. 2) Time to create the jail in which ndhc will run. a) Become root and create new group "ndhc". $ su - # umask 077 # groupadd ndhc b) Create new users "dhcpifch" and "dhcp". The primary group of these users should be "ndhc". # useradd -d /var/lib/ndhc -s /sbin/nologin -g ndhc dhcpifch # useradd -d /var/lib/ndhc -s /sbin/nologin -g ndhc dhcp c) Create the state directory where DUIDs and IAIDs will be stored. # mkdir /etc/ndhc # chown root.root /etc/ndhc # chmod 0755 /etc/ndhc d) Create the jail directory and set its ownership properly. # mkdir /var/lib/ndhc # chown root.root /var/lib/ndhc # chmod a+rx /var/lib/ndhc # cd /var/lib/ndhc # mkdir var # mkdir var/state # mkdir var/run # chown -R dhcp.ndhc var # chmod -R a+rx var # chmod g+w var/run e) Create a urandom device for ndhc to use within the jail. # mkdir dev # mknod dev/urandom c 1 9 # mknod dev/null c 1 3 # chown -R root.root dev # chmod a+rx dev # chmod a+r dev/urandom # chmod a+rw dev/null f) (optional) If you wish for logging to properly work, you will need to properly configure your logging daemon so that it opens a domain socket in the proper location within the jail. Since this varies per-daemon, I cannot provide a general configuration. 3) At this point the jail is usable; ndhc is ready to be used. An example of invoking ndhc: # ndhc -b -i wan0 -u dhcp -U dhcpifch -C /var/lib/ndhc -l /var/state/wan0.lease 4o) If you encounter problems, I suggest running ndhc in the foreground and examining the printed output. BEHAVIOR NOTES -------------- ndhc does not enable updates of the local hostname and resolv.conf by default. If you wish to enable these functions, use the --resolve (-R) and --hostname (-H) flags. See ndhc --help. STATE STORAGE NOTES ------------------- ndhc requires a read/writable directory to store the DUID/IAID states. By default this directory is /etc/ndhc. It exists outside the chroot. The DUID will be stored in a single file, DUID. The IAIDs exist per-interface and are stored in files with names similar to IAID-xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx, where the xx values are replaced by the Ethernet hardware address of the interface. If it is impossible to read or store the DUIDs or IAIDs, ndhc will fail at start time before it performs any network activity or forks any subprocesses. If the host system lacks volatile storage, then a clientid should manually be specified using the -c or --clientid command arguments. RANDOMNESS NOTES ---------------- Each ndhc subprocess maintains a combined Tausworthe PRNG that is uniquely seeded from the kernel random device at startup. Each PRNG consumes 128 bits of entropy for its initial state. DHCP does not require cryptographic randomness, so this arrangement should be more than sufficient to ensure proper UUIDs, assuming only that the kernel random device is even minimally seeded with real entropy. PORTING NOTES ------------- DHCP clients aren't naturally very portable. It's necessary to perform a lot of tasks that are platform-specific. ndhc is rather platform-dependent, and it extensively uses Linux-specific features. Some of these features are also available on the BSDs. 1) ndhc takes advantage of Linux capabilities so that it does not need full root privileges. Capabilities were a proposed POSIX feature that was not made part of the official standard, so any implemention that may exist will be system-dependent. 2) ndhc configures network interfaces and routes. Interface and route configuration is entirely non-portable. 3) ndhc uses netlink sockets extensively for fetching data, setting data, and hardware link state change notification events. 4) ndhc uses the Berkeley Packet Filter / Linux Packet Filter interfaces to drop unwanted packets in kernelspace. This functionality is available on most modern unix systems, but it is not standard. 5) ndhc uses epoll() and signalfd(). These are Linux-specific. 6) Numerous socket options are used, and the AF_PACKET socket family is used for raw sockets and ARP. These are largely Linux-specific, too. 7) ndhc can optionally use seccomp-filter to allow only a set of whitelisted syscalls. This functionality is Linux-specific. HISTORY ------- I started writing ndhc back in 2004. My ISP at the time required a dhcp client for connection authentication, and I was not comfortable with any of the existing clients, which all ran as root and had colorful security histories. DHCP is generally not a routed protocol, and lacks real authentication mechanisms in real world deployments (some largely abandoned RFCs for such behavior do exist), so no program existed to fill the niche of a truly secure DHCP client. My router/server at the time ran a custom Linux distro that was designed for extreme security. A root privileged DHCP client would be nearly the only root-owned process running on the machine, so I was highly motivated to develop an alternative. A separate ifchd was first written entirely from scratch. It did not take long to write, since it was by design rather simple, and I was already familiar with the quirks of Linux capabilities. That left me with the choice of adapting an existing DHCP client or writing my own from scratch. At the time, I just wanted something that would work, so my choice was to adapt udhcpc to work with ifchd. udhcpc was chosen since it was intended to be used with resource-constrained or embedded systems, and was thus very small. ISC dhclient was another alternative, but it is an extremely large program, and it would have been very hard to audit it for correctness. udhcpc was not did not really fit my requirements well, since it was designed to be small at all costs, sacrificing correctness when necessary. The code was hard to follow, and had many quirks. Bounds-checking was rare, type aliasing common, and state transitions were convoluted. Not all of the client was asynchronous, and no precautions were taken against conflicting peers. ARP was not used at all. However, it was small. With a lot of work, I ripped out the script-calling mechanisms and replaced them with ifchd requests. Bounds-checking was aggressively (and somewhat hamfistedly) retrofitted into the code. It was cleaned to a degree, and importantly it worked for connecting to my ISP. Then I changed ISPs. My new ISP used PPPoE, not dhcp. Around the same time, I also switched to using Gentoo rather than a hand-built distribution. I didn't have time to maintain the old custom setup, and it was very hard keeping up with library vulnerabilties in eg, zlib or openssl, and ensuring that all installed binaries, dynamic and static, were updated. ndhc was abandoned for many years. It wasn't needed on my server, and it was "too much effort" to deviate from the stock distro dhcp clients on other machines. Then, around 2008, I changed ISPs again. This time my new ISP used dhcp and not PPPoE. So, after a few months, I decided to dust off the old ndhc/ifchd project and adapt it to my modern standards and machines. ifchd was in good shape and required little work. I ended up rewriting ndhc. The only parts that remained from the original were the parts that I had already rewritten before, and some of those were rewritten, too. Eventually ifchd was rewritten to extensively use a Ragel-generated DFA-based parser to make it easier to verify correct behavior for all possible inputs. Quite a while later, I eventually merged ifchd into the same binary as ndhc and instead rely on forking subprocesses and using pipes for IPC. This brought a lot of simplifications, particularly for user configuration. The end result is a modern DHCP client is largely RFC-compliant, except where the RFCs dictate behavior that would be problematic, overly complex, useless, or exploitable. DHCP is poorly specified, and real-world servers and clients vary a lot from the RFCs, so these conditions are necessary for a useful program. Although ndhc's implementation and behavior are different, I have to credit the idea of using netlink events to discover hardware link status transitions to Stefan Rompf and his 'dhcpclient' program. The Linux netlink events that are used are otherwise rather obscure and poorly documented, and I wouldn't have known about them otherwise. GRSECURITY NOTES ---------------- Make sure that CONFIG_GRKERNSEC_CHROOT_CAPS is disabled. Otherwise, ndhc will lose its capabilities (in particular, the ability to reconfigure interfaces) when it chroots. DHCP PROTOCOL QUIRKS -------------------- Send a packet that has an options field set to: 'DHCP-OPTION-OVERLOAD:3' Then in the file and sname fields: 'DHCP-OPTION-OVERLOAD:3' I suspect some bad dhcp programs will hang given this input. DHCP explicitly specifies that there is no minimum lease time and also specifies that the minimum default rebinding time is leasetime*0.875 and the minimum default renewing time is leasetime*0.500. All times are relative to the instant when the lease is bound and are specified in seconds. Taken together, this means that a client strictly implementing the RFC should accept a lease that either is perpetually rebinding (lease == 1s) or instantly expires (lease == 0s). ndhc ignores the RFC and specifies a minimum lease time of one minute. Renew and rebind times are optionally specified and may take on any value. This means that a malicious server could demand a rebind time before a renew time, or make these times ridiculously short, or specify both times past that of the lease duration. ndhc avoids all of this nonsense by simply ignoring these options and using the default values specified by the RFC. There are other quirks, but these are just several interesting ones that immediately occur to me while I'm writing this document.