ndhc/DESIGN
2011-05-01 21:05:39 -04:00

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Goals:
1. Security
a. Divide into seperate processes that each have the minimal
system access necessary to complete their task.
b. Use a well defined IPC mechanism to facilitate cooperation
between processes. In this case, UNIX domain sockets are
used, since they allow for UNIX DAC (on Linux, at least).
c. Write each program to be secure; don't rely on the
privilege seperations for security.
d. Simple error handling is favored rather than complex error
handling that may possibly be caused to "recover" in an
exploitable way.
e. Don't make stupid assumptions. Implement only the minimal
functionality necessary to perform a task. Expect brain
damaged or malicious inputs.
f. Run inside a chroot, with minimal privileges via
capabilities or MAC.
2. Reliability
a. Don't try to handle severe errors.
b. Log errors if program state is still sane.
c. Recover from predictable problems if necessary. Make sure
that recovery behavior is well understood and defined.
d. Complicated or unsafe recoveries should not be performed;
instead the program should promptly exit. Dead programs
don't cause exploits.
3. Portability
a. Portability is good, but portability may not be as wide as
a less secure program. Capabilities or MAC are not well
standardized, but remain necessary features.
4. Miscellaneous
a. Speed: If we aren't required to sacrifice anything more
important, it's always good to be fast.
a. Size: If we aren't required to sacrifice anything more
important, it's always good to be frugal.
Layout:
ndhc daemon (root -> chroot -> drop all !(CAP_NET_BROADCAST|CAP_NET_RAW)
-> nopriv)
* handles dhcp protocol issues, netlink hw link notifications, and ARP checks
* keeps track of leases
* talks to ifchd to perform tasks that require
higher privileges than CAP_NET_BROADCAST or CAP_NET_RAW
ifchd daemon (root -> openfd -> chroot -> drop all !CAP_NET_ADMIN -> nopriv)
* listens for interface change requests via UNIX domain socket
* restricts valid IP ranges that will be accepted
* performs interface changes
* keeps rw fds for system files (such as /etc/resolv.conf) that must
be modified outside the chroot