6.8 KiB
Qubes-VM-hardening
Fend off malware at VM startup: Lock-down and quarantine scripts in /rw private storage that affect the execution environment. Leverages Qubes template non-persistence to enhance the guest operating system's own defenses.
vm-boot-protect.service
- Acts at VM startup before private volume /rw mounts
- User: Protect /home desktop & shell startup executables
- Root: Quarantine all /rw configs & scripts, with whitelisting
- Re-deploy custom or default files to /rw on each boot
- SHA256 hashing guards against unwanted changes
- Provides rescue shell on error or request
- Works with template-based AppVMs, sys-net and sys-vpn
Installing
-
In a template VM, install the service files
cd Qubes-VM-hardening sudo sh ./install
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Activate by specifying one of the following Qubes services for your VM(s)...
vm-boot-protect
- Protects executables/scripts within /home/user and may be used with wide array of Qubes VMs including standalone, appVMs, netVMs, Whonix, etc.vm-boot-protect-root
- Protects /home/user as above, automatic /rw executable deactivation, whitelisting, checksumming, deployment. Works with appVMs, netVMs, etc. that are template-based.
CAUTION: The -root option by default removes prior copies of /rw/config, /rw/usrlocal and /rw/bind-dirs. This can delete data!
-
Disable Qubes default passwordless-root. This is necessary for the above measures to work effectively...
For Debian-based templates
configure-sudo-prompt
will launch automatically to enable a sudo yes/no prompt that appears in dom0. This handles the template configuration then displays several commands to manually configure dom0 (the dom0 step is required only once, regardless of how many templates you configure). You may test theconfigure-sudo-prompt
script in a regular template-based appVM to see if it works, although the effect will be temporary.Alternately, you can uninstall the
qubes-core-agent-passwordless-root
package from the template. After doing this, you will have to useqvm-run -u root
from dom0 to run any VM commands as root.
Usage
Operation is automatic and will result in either a normal boot process with full access to the private volume at /rw, or a rescue service mode providing an xterm shell and the private volume quarantined at /dev/badxvdb.
At the vm-boot-protect
level, certain executable files in /home will be made immutable so PATH and alias
cannot be used to hijack commands like su
and sudo
, nor can impostor apps autostart whenever a VM starts. This prevents normal-privilege attacks from gaining persistence at startup.
At the vm-boot-protect-root
level, the $privdirs paths will be renamed as backups, effectively removing them from the VM startup. Then whitelisting, hash/checksumming and deployment are done (if configured). This protects VM startup from attacks that had previously achieved privilege escalation.
The special vm-boot-protect-cli
level unconditionally runs an xterm rescue shell.
Configuration
Files can be added to /etc/default/vms in the template to enable the following features...
Hashes/Checksums are checked in ../vms/vms.all.SHA and ../vms/$vmname.SHA files. File paths contained in them must be absolute. See man page for sha256sum -c
.
Whitelists are checked in ../vms/vms.all.whitelist and ../vms/$vmname.whitelist files, and file paths contained in them must start with /rw/
. A default is provided in ..vms/sys-net.whitelist to preserve Network Manager connections and sleep module list in sys-net.
Deployment files are copied recursively from ../vms/vms.all/rw/ and ../vms/$vmname/rw/ dirs. Example is to place the .bashrc file in /etc/default/vms/vms.all/rw/home/user/.bashrc .
Scope and Limitations
The vm-boot-protect concept enhances the guest operating system's own defenses by using the root volume non-persistence provided by the Qubes template system; thus a relatively pristine startup state may be achieved if the private volume is brought online in a controlled manner. Protecting the init/autostart files should result in Qubes template-based VMs that boot 'cleanly' with much less chance of being affected by malware initially. Even if malware persists in a VM, it should be possible to run other apps and terminals without interference if the malware has not escalated to root (admittedly, a big 'if').
Conversely, attacks which damage/exploit the Ext4 private filesystem itself or quickly re-exploit network vulnerabilities could conceivably still persist at startup. Further, repeated running of some apps such as Firefox, Chrome, LibreOffice, PDF viewers, online games, etc. may reactivate malware; this is not only because of the complexity of the formats handled by such apps, but also because of settings contained in javascript or which specify commands to be executed by the app. Therefore, setting apps to autostart can diminish protection of the startup environment.
Note that as vulnerabilities are patched via system updates, malware that used those vulns to gain entry may cease to function without the kind of loopholes that vm-boot-protect closes.
Notes
-
The service name has been changed from
vm-sudo-protect
in pre-release tovm-boot-protect
. The install script will automatically try to disable the old service. -
All the user-writable startup files in /home should be protected by the immutable flag; See issue #9 if you notice an omission or other problem. An extra step of disabling the flag using
sudo chattr -i
is required whenever the user wants to modify these startup files. -
Adding /home or subdirs of it to $privdirs is possible. This would quarantine everything there to set the stage for applying whitelists on /home contents. The $privdirs variable can be changed via the service file, for example adding a .conf file in /lib/systemd/system/vm-boot-protect.d.
-
Using the -root option with a VPN VM can be approached different ways: SHA + whitelist combination can be made for the appropriate files. Alternately, all VPN configs can be added under /etc/default/vms/vmname/rw so they'll be automatically deployed.
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Currently the service cannot seamlessly handle 'first boot' when the private volume must be initialized. If you enabled the service on a VM before its first startup, on first start you will see a special rescue shell telling you to restart the VM. Subsequent starts will proceed normally.
Releases
- v0.8.1 Working rescue shell. Add sys-net whitelist, sudo config, fixes.
- v0.8.0 Adds protection to /rw, file SHA checksums, whitelists, deployment
- v0.2.0 Protects /home/user files and dirs