Hi! Rule Set Based Access Control (RSBAC) for Linux version 1.1.0 has been released. Information and downloads are available from http://www.rsbac.org Amon Ott. ---------------------- Name: rsbac Version: 1.1.0 Kernelver: 2.2.17, 2.4.0-test10,11 Status: 9 (UP), 7 (SMP) Author: Amon Ott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Maintainer: Amon Ott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Description: Rule Set Based Access Control (RSBAC) Date: 30-November-2000 Descfile-URL: http://www.rsbac.org/rsbac.desc Download-URL: http://www.rsbac.org/download.htm Homepage-URL: http://www.rsbac.org/ Manual-URL: http://www.rsbac.org/instadm.htm What is RSBAC? -------------- RSBAC is an open source security extension for current Linux kernels. It is based on the Generalized Framework for Access Control (GFAC) by Abrams and LaPadula and provides a flexible system of access control based on several modules. All security relevant system calls are extended by security enforcement code. This code calls the central decision component, which in turn calls all active decision modules and generates a combined decision. This decision is then enforced by the system call extensions. Decisions are based on the type of access (request type), the access target and on the values of attributes attached to the subject calling and to the target to be accessed. Additional independent attributes can be used by individual modules, e.g. the privacy module (PM). All attributes are stored in fully protected directories, one on each mounted device. Thus changes to attributes require special system calls provided. As all types of access decisions are based on general decision requests, many different security policies can be implemented as a decision module. In the current RSBAC version (1.1.0), eight modules are included: MAC: Bell-LaPadula Mandatory Access Control (limited to 64 compartments) FC: Functional Control. A simple role based model, restricting access to security information to security officers and access to system information to administrators. SIM: Security Information Modification. Only security administrators are allowed to modify data labeled as security information PM: Privacy Model. Simone Fischer-Huebner's Privacy Model in its first implementation. See our paper on PM implementation for the National Information Systems Security Conference (NISSC 98) MS: Malware Scan. Scan all files for malware on execution (optionally on all file read accesses or on all TCP/UDP read accesses), deny access if infected. Currently the Linux viruses Bliss.A and Bliss.B and a handfull of others are detected. See our paper on malware detection and avoidance for The Third Nordic Workshop on Secure IT Systems (Nordsec'98) FF: File Flags. Provide and use flags for dirs and files, currently execute_only (files), read_only (files and dirs), search_only (dirs), secure_delete (files) and add_inherited (files and dirs). Only security officers may modify these flags. RC: Role Compatibility. Defines (up to) 64 roles and 64 types for each target type (file, dir, dev, ipc, scd, process). For each role compatibility to all types and to other roles can be set individually and with request granularity. AUTH: Authorization enforcement. Controls all CHANGE_OWNER requests for process targets, only programs/processes with general setuid allowance and those with a capability for the target user ID may setuid. Capabilities are controlled by other programs/processes. ACL: Access Control Lists. For every object there is an Access Control List, defining which subjects may access this object with which request types. Subjects can be of type user, RC role and ACL group. Objects are grouped by their target type, but have individual ACLs. If there is no ACL entry for a subject at an object, rights are inherited from parent objects, restricted by an inheritance mask. Direct (user) and indirect (role, group) rights are accumulated. For each object type there is a default ACL on top of the normal hierarchy. Group management has been added in version 1.0.9a. The underlying models are described in the module description at RSBAC homepage (http://www.rsbac.org). A general goal of RSBAC has been to some day reach (obsolete) Orange Book (TCSEC) B1 level. Now it is mostly targeting to be useful as secure and multi-purposed networked system, with special interest in firewalls. Changes against 1.0.9b: ----------------- - Port to 2.4.0-test11 - Interception of sys_mmap and sys_mprotect added. Now execution of library code requires EXECUTE privilege on the library file, and setting non-mmapped memory to EXEC mode requires EXECUTE on target NONE. - MAC Light option by Stanislav Ievlev added. See kernel config help or modules.htm. - Port to 2.4.0-test{[789]|10}, this means major changes to the lookup and inheritance code - of course #ifdef'd - Change string declarations to kmalloc. On the way moved MAX_PATH_LEN restriction from 1999 to max_kmalloc - 256 (>127K). - Renamed several PM xy.class to xy.object_class for C++ compatibility - Added SCD type ST_kmem - Changed rc_force_role default to rc_role_inherit_parent, terminated at root dir with old default rc_role_inherit_mixed. This makes it much easier to keep a dir of force-roled binaries. - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/