Hi! tl;dr: I hereby propose we enable AppArmor by default in testing/sid, and decide one year later if we want to keep it this way in the Buster release.
My goals when initiating this discussion are: - Get a rough idea of what amount of effort the Debian project is happy (and able) to invest into such proactive security measures. - Learn about any relevant social & technical concerns I am not aware of. I don't expect we'll make a decision based on this very proposal: I expect the proposal will need to be refined, or abandoned, to take into account what we will learn during this preliminary discussion. Why do we need AppArmor? ======================== AppArmor is a Mandatory Access Control framework implemented as a Linux Security Module (LSM), user space utilities, and a quite simple language to define policy. AppArmor confines programs according to a set of rules that specify what operations a given program can access, e.g. it can prevent exploited server software from accessing data it does not own and executing arbitrary code. This proactive approach helps protect the system against some known and unknown vulnerabilities. Various actors are actively exploiting software. Random users are victimized every day, and specific populations are specifically targeted, e.g. government opponents, human rights defenders, system administrators, software developers and distributors, as revealed by the Snowden leaks. Every month we learn about many new attack vectors made possible by programming errors. We fix them after the fact, which is great but a bit too late: users may already have been exploited. Most operating systems have adopted proactive approaches to mitigate the impact of such problems. In Debian, great efforts are in progress: hardening binaries makes it harder to write successful exploits, and making our packages build reproducibly will make it harder to introduce vulnerabilities at the binary level. Still, Debian is far from being best in class on this front: we have no widespread mechanism for sandboxing desktop applications. We can surely do better. The great news is that there is one low-hanging fruit waiting to be picked, and it's what this proposal is about :) A proposal ========== 1. Enable AppArmor by default in testing/sid as soon as feasible in the Buster cycle. I can think of several possible ways to do it but for now I'd rather focus on the "do we want to do it at all" conversation. If curious some options are listed on the wiki: https://wiki.debian.org/AppArmor/Progress#Enabling_AppArmor_by_default.3F Feel free to discuss them on <pkg-apparmor-t...@lists.alioth.debian.org>. And anyway, you can already opt-in for AppArmor on your system today: https://wiki.debian.org/AppArmor/HowToUse :) 2. During a year, watch out for AppArmor related issues and address them in a prompt manner. Note that the best way to address them quickly enough is sometimes to simply disable the problematic AppArmor profile: it's cheap, doesn't require advanced AppArmor skills, and IMO a smaller AppArmor policy enabled by default is more useful than a broader but less robust one that only a couple thousand users benefit from. 3. A year after AppArmor was enabled by default: evaluate how it went and decide if Buster should be shipped with AppArmor enabled by default or not. I commit to do an analysis using BTS data to help make this decision. If we need formal success criteria and a clearly defined team who'll make the call, I'm happy to think about it. But here again I'd rather focus on the general idea than on implementation details at this point. Questions and Answers ===================== Table of contents: - What's the benefit, exactly? - What do other distributions do? - What's the history of AppArmor in Debian? - How popular is AppArmor in Debian? - What's the cost for Debian users? - What's the cost for package maintainers? - Is the Debian AppArmor team strong enough to support this change? - Why AppArmor and not SELinux? - Why AppArmor and not sandboxing based on XYZ? - Will this prevent users from using another Linux Security Module? - What does upstream look like? - How much will we depend on Canonical's business priorities? - No thanks: I've tried AppArmor and it broke stuff too often - Doesn't AppArmor need out-of-tree kernel patches? - How can I help? - Credits What's the benefit, exactly? ---------------------------- Before we even bother looking at the cost of enabling AppArmor by default, let's look closer at the expected benefit. In other words: what kind of attacks does AppArmor really mitigate or prevent in the real world? tl;dr: big benefit for server software, and for desktop applications limited to less sophisticated, non-targeted attacks (but it'll get better). AppArmor is well suited to protect against remote exploitation of security issues in server software and non-GUI programs often run with elevated privileges (think of dhclient, ping, tcpdump). I'm sure one could identify a few serious issues that would have been mitigated or prevented by our current AppArmor policy, by looking at a list of DSA/CVE. Also, one gets interesting security properties when software is tuned for AppArmor: e.g. a given libvirt/QEMU virtual machine can only access its assigned storage volumes, and not other VMs'; this is useful against QEMU security issues that allow guests to escape the virtualization layer. On the desktop, to be honest things look pretty bad *currently*: AppArmor is not enough, and we need new concepts and technologies to fix serious limitations on the desktop sandboxing front. Thankfully this is being actively worked on and the future of desktop sandboxing on GNU/Linux looks bright and shiny! Some of the future options rely on AppArmor, some others don't. See the "Why AppArmor and not sandboxing based on XYZ?" section below. Still, confining desktop apps with AppArmor has benefit against scripted or non-targeted attacks: it will mitigate some attacks and others will get through. So while it's probably not worth starting to write lots of new policy for GUI applications now, I think that leveraging the existing one will already serve our users. What do other distributions do? ------------------------------- AppArmor has been enabled by default in several other GNU/Linux distributions and Debian derivatives for a while: * in openSUSE + SLES since 2006 * in Ubuntu since 2008, with a growing policy: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SecurityTeam/KnowledgeBase/AppArmorProfiles * in Tails, since 2014 for a few important services (CUPS, Tor) and a few desktop applications (e.g. Totem, Evince, Pidgin, Tor Browser, Thunderbird) * in a few other Debian derivatives (Whonix, Subgraph OS) for at least a couple years. What's the history of AppArmor in Debian? ----------------------------------------- AppArmor has been available (opt-in) in Debian since 2011. In 2014 a Debian AppArmor packaging team was created, that has been taking care of the AppArmor packages and policy since then. In the last 3 years the AppArmor policy shipped in Debian was extended substantially and its coverage is now on par with Ubuntu's. It's still rather small due to the strategy we chose: we wanted to avoid traumatizing early adopters and to avoid creating a culture of "AppArmor always breaks stuff, let's get used to disabling it". So like Ubuntu and openSUSE, we're shipping a rather small and mature AppArmor policy. I believe this strategy has been successful so far, and even some non-trivial pieces of software like Thunderbird now ship an AppArmor policy; but of course it has one drawback: most software, including web browsers, is not confined with AppArmor whatsoever. Surely with more people contributing to our AppArmor policy we could have it cover other important pieces of software; time will tell. A number of maintainers accepted shipping AppArmor policy in their own package. If you're one of them, please consider providing feedback about how it went for you. How popular is AppArmor in Debian? ---------------------------------- tl;dr: AppArmor has steadily become more and more popular in Debian in the last few years. I think the user base has reached a critical mass that proves it works OK. Here's what popcon says ("Vote" count) for the apparmor binary package, that's needed to use AppArmor: * 2015-01: ~400 * 2016-01: ~700 (+75% in a year) * 2017-01: ~1300 (+85% in a year) * today: 1870 (+44% in 7 months) But we have no way to tell whether a user who has AppArmor packages installed actually enabled the AppArmor LSM, so the data for apparmor-profiles-extra might be more useful here: I expect that only users who really want to use AppArmor with an extended policy would bother installing it. This one has 435 registered installations ("Vote" has always been 0 for some reason that I did not investigate); it was introduced in October 2014, and since then its popcon stats have been steadily increasing. What's the cost for Debian users? --------------------------------- AppArmor unavoidably breaks functionality from time to time: e.g. new versions of software we package (or of their dependencies) regularly start needing access to new file locations. And then users see broken applications from time to time, after upgrading their testing/sid system. This is to be taken seriously, but not a big concern IMO: - Apparently Ubuntu users have been coping with AppArmor enforced by default for 9 years. I see no reason why Debian users would not. - I've counted 14 bugs bugs reported in the Debian BTS during the Stretch development cycle against our supported AppArmor policy. Among those, 11 were closed (106 days after being reported on average); all the important ones were closed within 2 months; larger delays were due to users developing fixes and/or upstream taking some time to review merge requests. About the 3 bugs still open: one is waiting for input from other package maintainers since 2 years, another one had a patch waiting to be applied, and the last one needs to be fixed in libvirt upstream. - Serious breakage is less likely to happen once AppArmor is enabled by default, as there are greater chances that the maintainer would have noticed it before uploading. - Workarounds are regularly suggested to the bug reporter on the BTS, and in many cases the bug reporter documents in the bug report the workaround they have *already* applied. Implementing a suggested workarounds requires being able to edit a text file and running one command as root, which should be doable by the vast majority of testing/sid users. What's the cost for package maintainers? ---------------------------------------- For most of them: none at all. As said earlier, our AppArmor policy does not cover that much software yet. But maintainers of software confined by AppArmor will have to deal with a new kind of bug reports, whose number is likely to grow significantly once AppArmor is enabled by default. This means they have to: 1. identify if a bug report can possibly be related to AppArmor; 2. either learn how to debug AppArmor issues themselves, or ask the pkg-apparmor team for help (thanks to usertags: https://wiki.debian.org/AppArmor/Reportbug#Usertags). I expect that initially pkg-apparmor will need to provide help in many cases, but over time the affected maintainers will slowly learn just enough about AppArmor to handle at least the simplest cases themselves, just like it happened in Ubuntu years ago. Is the Debian AppArmor team strong enough to support this change? ----------------------------------------------------------------- This is a valid concern, as I have been doing the greatest part of the work on this team. So far I've found my AppArmor-related workload totally sustainable: it took me just a few hours here and there, and I would be doing this work for Tails anyway, so better do it directly in Debian. Still, primarily relying on one single person is concerning. Thankfully, a number of other people have been contributing in various ways. A few Debian users and contributors got used to reporting bugs and contribute improvements to our AppArmor policy upstream. Another team member uploaded src:apparmor once. Ulrike Uhlig wrote documentation about AppArmor for Debian users and contributors during an Outreachy project whose outcome was posted to debian-devel-announce in March, 2015. Also, just like any such distro-wide change, I expect the amount of work required to support the broader project: - will be large initially; I'm confident that the current state of our team is good enough to support the project during the first stage of the transition; - will only decrease over time, as Debian people get used to it and learn the small bits they need to know about the new technology, and eventually the cases when our AppArmor team has to give a hand will become rare; - will be done by AppArmor people from other distributions as well: a few of them actively participate on the pkg-apparmor mailing list and help on issues reported in the Debian BTS. So I think it's totally reasonable to give it a try. Why AppArmor and not SELinux? ----------------------------- SELinux is another LSM that tackles similar problems. Disclaimer: I've picked AppArmor years ago and didn't look much at SELinux recently, so some of what follows may be totally wrong or outdated. Sorry! Debian SELinux people, if you don't mind please help me get the basic facts right :) Pros: * Allows mediating more kernel objects / interfaces than AppArmor, so policy can be made stricter and safer given sufficient expertise and available time for maintenance. * Enabled by default in RHEL so in theory a great number of sysadmins are at ease with it (see below why reality may not match this). * A quick look at popcon suggests that SELinux might be more popular in Debian than AppArmor, but I'm not sure I am interpreting the numbers right (and I suspect that just like AppArmor, the popcon won't tell us if users who have installed the relevant support packages actually run their system with the corresponding LSM enabled & enforced). Cons: * Writing, maintaining, auditing and debugging SELinux policy requires grasping a complex conceptual model; I am told this is not as easy as doing the same with AppArmor. * As far as I could understand when chatting with sysadmins of Red Hat systems, this has resulted in a culture where many users got used to disable SELinux entirely on their systems, instead of trying to fix the buggy policy. I've seen the opposite happen with AppArmor, which is good: for example, pretty often bug reporters to the Debian BTS document themselves how they could workaround the problem locally *without* turning AppArmor off. Looking at open bugs in the BTS against src:refpolicy, this seems to happen very rarely for SELinux, so I wonder if it would be realistic to ship Debian with SELinux enforced by default and have our community support it. * https://wiki.debian.org/SELinux/Issues says "Graphical/Desktop installs of Debian are not heavily tested with selinux, so you might run into quite some issues". * I'm not aware of any Debian derivative shipping with SELinux enabled by default. If that's correct, then it means that we would have to deal with quite some policy compatibility issues ourselves. To me, the complexity of SELinux is a deal breaker: it seems that we would need to get lots more expertise and energy to enforce SELinux by default than doing the same with AppArmor. Now, if for some reason the project prefers to ship with SELinux enforced instead of AppArmor, fine by me: I would strongly prefer this option to nothing at all. Why AppArmor and not sandboxing based on XYZ? --------------------------------------------- (Replace "XYZ" with Flatpak, Ubuntu's Snappy, Subgraph OS' oz, Firejail, Subuser, or you preferred other promising option.) We need both! AppArmor covers server software well, and on the desktop it currently protects against not-too-sophisticated, non-targeted attacks. In a nutshell, the GNU/Linux desktop really wasn't designed for applications to be siloed. To fix that we need new concepts and technologies, such as Wayland, portals, and fine-grained D-Bus mediation. Next generation desktop sandboxing technologies will fix this and improve UX at the same time, and it will be amazing. But they are not ready for prime-time yet. A Debian user cannot benefit from them *today* much; this might change in time for Buster, but really we're comparing a well-established, polished solution with a bunch of other ones whose integration with Debian is being brainstormed. Anyway, this is not an either/or situation: even though there are currently compatibility issues, one can perfectly well develop/adapt such tools in a way that makes them work fine with AppArmor enabled. Let's enable AppArmor so we cover at least the server use case and the low-hanging fruits of the desktop one, and figure out later where we should put our efforts for securing the desktop, once the dust has settled and next generation solutions have matured and been integrated in Debian. Will this prevent users from using another Linux Security Module? ----------------------------------------------------------------- Some "minor" Linux Security Modules, such as Yama, live perfectly well with others. But currently it is not possible to enable several of the major security modules. There's been (slow) work in progress to fix this for a while, but it has picked up recently and there is a lot of interest to have, say, AppArmor and SELinux stackable: https://lwn.net/Articles/719731/ Now, every user will still be able to opt-out from AppArmor and instead enable their preferred LSM. What does upstream look like? ----------------------------- The upstream project is almost 20 years old, very mature and cooperative with Debian. E.g. the upstream release schedule has been adjusted both for Jessie and Stretch to accommodate Debian's schedule nicely. Regarding who does the work: - Canonical employees do most of the kernel work. They also maintain the library and other C code, e.g. the policy parser. - The Python utilities are primarily maintained by openSUSE's Christian Boltz. - Maintaining AppArmor policy is a cross-distro team effort, mostly done by Debian, Ubuntu and openSUSE people. How much will we depend on Canonical's business priorities? ----------------------------------------------------------- Given Canonical employees do the greatest part of the work upstream: indeed, we will. I see two main concerns about this: Long-term reliability: this funding could run out some day. I personally am not overly concerned, as Canonical has been investing a lot into products (Snappy, LXC/LXD) that strongly depend on AppArmor in the last few years. Power imbalance: the company that does so much of the work has great power over the priorities of the upstream project. This is the case for a large amount of critical software we ship, so like it or not, it is something we are living with already. AppArmor developers employed by Canonical have shown great willingness in cooperating with Debian in the last few years, so I'm confident that our contributions will be welcome for the foreseeable future, whenever we need to adapt the software to our needs. But of course management/business decisions can change this at any time. No thanks: I've tried AppArmor and it broke stuff too often ----------------------------------------------------------- Sorry about that. I think this has had three main causes so far, that all share one single root cause i.e. "AppArmor is not enabled by default" (chicken'n'egg!): 1. Most package maintainers don't test packages with AppArmor before uploading, so users notice breakage that could easily be avoided. 2. The huge majority of our users are not affected by breakage caused by AppArmor, so we handle such breakage in a way that saves maintainers' time: e.g. in many cases I've personally preferred to wait for my fixes to AppArmor profiles to be approved and merged upstream before applying them in Debian. Once AppArmor is enabled by default, as far as I'm concerned I don't plan to wait for upstream review before fixing regressions in testing/sid. 3. The huge majority of our users are not affected by breakage caused by AppArmor, so such breakage was kinda acceptable and thus we *sometimes* preferred to give a specific AppArmor profile more exposure to testers, even if it had a couple known issues, in order to identify problems and help stabilize it (e.g. Tor, libvirt). I think we will need to be more conservative once AppArmor is enabled by default, i.e. profiles that break functionality too much or too often should not be enabled by default. Doesn't AppArmor need out-of-tree kernel patches? ------------------------------------------------- Yes and no. Historically, the mainline Linux kernel has supported a rather small subset of the AppArmor mediation made possible by the out-of-tree kernel patch. This made the value of enabling AppArmor smaller than it could be (e.g. LXC is not well confined in Debian: #750106), and smaller than it is in distros that apply the out-of-tree kernel patch (such as Ubuntu). Still, even with the set of features available in mainline Linux *today*, IMO enabling AppArmor already has a good cost/benefit ratio for Debian and our users. I'm not proposing we apply out-of-tree AppArmor kernel patches. Thankfully, the AppArmor kernel developers recently changed how they proceed: new features are now added to Linux mainline before they reach Ubuntu, so I'm confident that this situation will get better and better in the future, and Buster's kernel will support tons of new AppArmor mediation types compared to Stretch. How can I help? --------------- * Enable AppArmor on your Debian systems: https://wiki.debian.org/AppArmor/HowToUse * If you maintain a package for which we ship AppArmor policy in Debian: test it with AppArmor enabled before uploading. Ask for help if needed: https://wiki.debian.org/AppArmor/Reportbug#Usertags * Join the team: https://wiki.debian.org/AppArmor/Contribute * Talk to us: <pkg-apparmor-t...@lists.alioth.debian.org> Credits ------- A huge thank you to the people who reviewed this text, provided valuable input that I took into account & integrated, and helped me change my mind here and there: Christian Boltz, gregoa, Guido Günther, Jamie Strandboge, John Johansen, Sebastien Delafond, Simon McVittie and Solveig! Sorry to those I forgot. I shamelessly stole bits of text they wrote. I absolutely do *not* imply they endorse this proposal. Thanks a lot to my pkg-apparmor team-mates, to Kees Cook who introduced AppArmor in Debian in the first place, and to all AppArmor contributors upstream and in other distros :) Cheers, -- intrigeri