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In Fedora 22 and before, it was up to the package maintainer to add <code>%global _hardened_build 1</code> to their spec file to ensure their program was hardened. Beginning with Fedora 23 this will now become the defaults for all packages. You can compare the security by running the following as root:
In Fedora 22 and before, it was up to the package maintainer to add <code>%global _hardened_build 1</code> to their spec file to ensure their program was hardened. Beginning with Fedora 23 this will now become the defaults for all packages. You can compare the security by running the following as root:


* <code>yum install checksec</code>
* <code>dnf install checksec</code>
* <code>checksec --proc-all</code>
* <code>checksec --proc-all</code>



Revision as of 08:54, 8 October 2015

Harden All Packages

Summary

In Fedora 22 and before, it was up to the package maintainer to add %global _hardened_build 1 to their spec file to ensure their program was hardened. Beginning with Fedora 23 this will now become the defaults for all packages. You can compare the security by running the following as root:

  • dnf install checksec
  • checksec --proc-all

To see the mitigations in the libraries that a process is using, find the process id from the previous command (for example 123):

  • checksec --proc-libs 123

Owner


Current status

Detailed Description

Currently, the Packaging Guidelines allow maintainers to decide whether their packages use position-independent code (PIC). There are rules that say that a lot of packages should use PIC, but in reality a lot of packages do not use PIC even if they must. Also since a lot of packages if not all potentially process untrusted input, it makes sense for these packages to use PIC to enhance the security of Fedora. Therefore I propose to build all packages with PIC by changing RPM to use the appropriate flags by default.

Implementation (done): Change line 130 in redhat-rpm-config macros from #_hardened_build 0 to %_hardened_build 1


References:

Detailed Harden Flags Description

The following only deals with flags added by this proposal. It does not mention existing hardening flags such as the -fstack-protector-strong compiler flag or the -z relro linker flag.

This table shows the required compiler and linker flags with and without full ASLR support. The flags are described from the perspective of the gcc or g++ compiler driver, so linker flags (for ld) are prefixed with -Wl.

Non-hardening Hardening
Compile for static linking (nothing) -fPIE
Link executable (nothing) -pie -Wl,-z,now
Compile for dynamic linking -fPIC -fPIC
Link shared object -shared -shared -Wl,-z,now


The key change is that for PIE builds, compilation for static linking (such as object files which go into the main program, not a library) needs the flag -fPIE. But this flag must not be included when compiling for dynamic linking because the resulting object code is not compatible with that. To repeat, you should not specify both -fpic and -fpie on the same command line because this rarely has the intended effect.

For both hardened and non-hardened builds, it is possible to compile everything with -fPIC -pie. This can simplify injecting the flags into the build process.

Alternatively, you can rely on the RPM-provided compiler and linker flag settings. In Fedora 23, this will enable additional GCC specs files (which are not related to RPM spec files), altering the compiler driver behavior in the following way:

  • If there is no -fPIC-style flag on the command line, the source file is compiled as if -fPIE were specified.
  • If there is no -shared flag on the command line, the program is linked with -pie.
  • -z now is always passed to the linker.

This happens by injection CFLAGS, CXXFLAGS, and LDFLAGS environment variables in the invocation of the %configure RPM macro. Details are in the /usr/lib/rpm/redhat/macros file. (In previous Fedora releases, this only happened when the _hardended_build RPM macro was set to 1 in the spec file.)

In effect, this maps the non-hardening column to the hardening column in the table above.

Copy relocations support in GCC 5 and binutils 2.26 makes the performance on x86_64 of PIE literally zero for many programs.



redhat-hardened-cc1

*cc1_options:
+ %{!fpie:%{!fPIE:%{!fpic:%{!fPIC:%{!fno-pic:-fPIE}}}}}

redhat-hardened-ld

*self_spec:
+ %{!shared:-pie}

*link:
+ -z now

How To Test

  1. Running checksec should always report only

Full RELRO Canary found NX enabled PIE enabled No RPATH No RUNPATH otherwise a tracking bug should exist for the respective packages. All packages need to be tested as usual for normal behaviour.


Troubleshooting steps for package maintainers

1. Add %global _hardened_build 1 and build your package against F21. As F21 uses GCC 4.9.2, older binutils, older glibc etc. you will be able to identify whether the build failure is caused by GCC5, the newer binutils, the new glibc etc..

2. If you get linker errors, you can try disabling -z now by putting the following under the %build section of your spec file:

CFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -Wl,-z,lazy"
CXXFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -Wl,-z,lazy"

export CFLAGS
export CXXFLAGS

3a. Check whether it builds successfully if you disable the hardening change:

%undefine _hardened_build

3b. Enable only PIE manually for your package:

CFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -fPIC -pie"
CXXFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -fPIC -pie"

export CFLAGS
export CXXFLAGS

3c. Enable only -z now manually for your package:

CFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -Wl,-z,relro -Wl,-z,now"
CXXFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -Wl,-z,relro -Wl,-z,now"

export CFLAGS
export CXXFLAGS

3d. Enable 3b and 3c above manually for your package:

CFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -fPIC -pie -Wl,-z,relro -Wl,-z,now"
CXXFLAGS="$RPM_OPT_FLAGS -fPIC -pie -Wl,-z,relro -Wl,-z,now"

export CFLAGS
export CXXFLAGS


Benefit to Fedora

Packages in Fedora will be more secure than in other distributions or packages provided by upstream. Therefore our users less likely become victims of attacks. Fedora will use more state-of-the-art security mechanisms to fulfill its first and features foundations.

Scope

  • Proposal owners:

Help writing the new packaging guidelines.

  • Other developers:

Change the rpm macros to build packages by default with PIC/PIE flags (i.e. set _hardened_package to 1 by default). Bug report: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1192183

  • Release engineering:

Do a mass rebuild for all arch packages

  • Policies and guidelines:

Adjust the Packaging Guidelines to allow non-PIC packages only if the package is not working otherwise and require a tracker bug similar to packages not working on certain archs. Update the Guidelines to reflect the new defaults.

Upgrade/compatibility impact

This should not cause problems with upgrades.

User Experience

Fedora users might notice less sucessful attacks on their systems.

Dependencies

The rpm macros for Fedora need to be adjusted. Prelink might be retired.

Contingency Plan

  • Contingency mechanism: Package maintainers should refer to the section Troubleshooting steps for package maintainers above if they don't want their FTBFS packages retired.
  • Contingency deadline: beta freeze
  • Blocks release? No

Documentation

The current packaging guidelines can be consulted.


Release Notes

Fedora now hardens as many packages as possible with position-independent code (ASLR) and FULL RELRO to reduce the impact of certain potential security vulnerabilities.