Rainbow: Difference between revisions

From OLPC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Reverted edits by 77.64.72.243 (Talk) to last revision by FGrose)
 
(74 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{OLPC}}
{{developers}}
{{translations}}
{{translations}}
<noinclude>{{Google Translations}}
<noinclude>{{ GoogleTrans-en | es =show | bg =show | zh-CN =show | zh-TW =show | hr =show | cs =show | da =show | nl =show | fi =show | fr =show | de =show | el =show | hi =show | it =show | ja =show | ko =show | no =show | pl =show | pt =show | ro =show | ru =show | sv =show }}</noinclude>
[[Category:Security]]
== Introduction ==
</noinclude>{{Rainbow page}}
''[http://dev.laptop.org/git/users/mstone/security git] :: [http://dev.laptop.org/~mstone/releases/SOURCES sources] :: [http://dev.laptop.org/~mstone/releases/SOURCES/rainbow-0.8.2.tar.bz2 rainbow-0.8.2.tar.bz2]''


Rainbow implements the isolation shell implicitly described in the [[OLPC Bitfrost|Bitfrost]] security specification. This means that it isolates activities (and eventually system services) that it is asked to run from one another and the rest of the system.
The [[OLPC Bitfrost|Bitfrost]] security specification argues that existing desktop security conventions do not meet the security needs:
* of adventurous kids in 1-1 computing programs,
* of the technical staff who help maintain such initiatives, and
* of the political constituencies which determine where such programs take place.
The most serious inadequacy of such systems is that they force end-users to take unnecessary security risks (for example, giving all programs a user runs access to the network, to auto-start facilities, and to other programs' data files) while simultaneously denying users the opportunity to do things which can be done safely but which were not anticipated by the system administrator (notably, installing new software or modifying the local system.)


Consequently, [[Security credits#Activity Isolation|we]] wrote [http://dev.laptop.org/git/users/mstone/security/tree/rainbow Rainbow].
Rainbow implements this isolation by generating a new uid (and perhaps a new gid) for each program it is asked to run. Running each activity as a separate user means that standard Unix access checks can be used as the primary 'gate' to control the visibility of activity-driven side-effects like reading from or writing to files or devices or signalling other processes.


Rainbow is an isolation shell. This means two things:
'''[[Security#Contributions|Contributions]] are welcome.'''


# ''shell'': Rainbow runs programs on behalf of humans and programs. Rainbow provides those programs with a suitable environment: places in which temporary and persistent data can be stored, environment variables to identify those places, etc.
== For Activity Developers ==
# ''isolation'': People and programs should use Rainbow when they want to isolate programs from other programs and important system resources. "Isolation" is already a familiar concept to most UNIX programmers: many system daemons already operate using their own unique UID and/or GID, and most have private places in which they store their configuration. Rainbow generalizes and extends this paradigm by providing every program it runs with a unique identity, with private storage, with pre-configured resource usage limits, etc.


At the moment, Rainbow only knows how to provide the same primitive form of filesystem and signal isolation that competent sysadmins provide to users of multi-user Unix shell servers.
When the user asks Sugar to start your activity, Rainbow is the software which actually asks the Linux kernel to do the 'starting'. However, in order to achieve the security goals described in Bitfrost, it places some restrictions on your software. You can find out more about these restrictions in the [[Low-level Activity API#Security|low-level activity api]] documentation. (In the future, the [[Sugar almanac]] may also contain some similar information).


However, '''[[Security#Contributions|contributions]]''' are welcome, particularly contributions which advance [[Rainbow/Next Steps|existing plans]].
=== Disabling Rainbow for Testing ===


'''Information about rainbow-0.8.*'''
Sugar's use of Rainbow can be trivially disabled by running


* [[Rainbow/Current Situation|current situation]]: feature, design, and implementation notes for rainbow-0.8.*
rm /etc/olpc-security
* [[Rainbow/Installation Instructions|installation instructions]] for rainbow-0.8.*
* [[Rainbow/Testing|testing]] instructions for rainbow-0.8.*
* [[Rainbow/Next Steps|next steps!]]
* [[Rainbow/Demo Ideas|demo ideas]]


'''Other Information'''
as root. It can be re-enabled by running


* notes for [[Rainbow/Information for Activity Developers|Activity Developers]], for Sugar 0.82 and rainbow-0.7.*
touch /etc/olpc-security
* [[Rainbow/Historical Designs|historical design comparisons]], for rainbow-0.6.*, -0.7.*, and -0.8.*

* [[Rainbow/Curiosities|curiosities]]
also as root.
==Subpages==

(Titles in ''italics'' redirect to another page.){{Special:PrefixIndex/{{PAGENAME}}/}}
== Design ==
Rainbow has been implemented according to three designs to date.

=== 0.8-series ===
The 0.8 series is designed as an [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain_loading "exec-wrapper"]. The "rainbow-run" wrapper is receives control from the shell, performs any requested isolation steps, then hands control over to isolated program. This way, rainbow can be used from [http://freedesktop.org freedesktop.org] [http://standards.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/ .desktop] launcher files, from the command-line, and from custom graphical shells like [[Sugar]] with equal ease.

=== 0.7-series ===
The 0.7 series was designed as a privileged [http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/dbus dbus] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daemon_(computer_software) daemon]. Sugar calls into this daemon when it wants to launch activities. An advantage of having a daemon is that the daemon can cache the results of expensive computations like python module loading. The problem with the daemon is that it consumes extra memory and that its caching behavior can cause many frustrating bugs.

=== 0.6-series ===
The first implementation of rainbow (and of [[olpc-update]]) used a containerization technology called [http://linux-vserver.org VServer] to implement extensive isolation including network and CPU usage limits. Unfortunately, these early implementations revealed fundamental race conditions in the custom vserver patches provided to OLPC and the OLPC kernel team was unwilling to support the patches. [[User:Mstone|Michael Stone]] created a new design outline, written up in [http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=security;a=blob;f=rainbow.txt;hb=HEAD rainbow.txt] which explained how Bitfrost could be approached without vserver and vserver was removed from the kernel.

== Installation ==

=== 0.8-series ===

The basic idea is to install rainbow, either

'''from a distro package:'''

* Fedora >= 10: yum install rainbow
* Ubuntu: [https://launchpad.net/~codewiz/+archive/ppa Bernie's PPA] contains some basic rainbow packages which you can install.
* Other: Install rainbow from source or help others by packaging it for your distro!

'''from source:'''

RAINBOW=rainbow-0.8.2
wget http://dev.laptop.org/~mstone/releases/SOURCES/$RAINBOW.tar.bz2
tar xf $RAINBOW.tar.bz2 && cd $RAINBOW
make -f Makefile.build build
sudo make -f Makefile.build install

'''from a unified builder or image:'''

like [http://sugarlabs.org/go/DevelopmentTeam/Jhbuild sugar-jhbuild] or [http://sugarlabs.org/go/Sugar_on_a_Stick Sugar on a Stick] (SoaS). ''(nb: future work)''

'''FINALLY''':

Next, in order for rainbow to function, you may need to inject its users and groups into the system by running:

sudo /bin/sed -i -e s/^passwd:/passwd:\ rainbow/ /etc/nsswitch.conf
sudo /bin/sed -i -e s/^group:/group:\ rainbow/ /etc/nsswitch.conf

Congratulations. You are now ready to test rainbow.

== Testing ==

Rainbow is easy to test in chroots, for example, those created by [http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Projects/Mock mock]. See [http://dev.laptop.org/git/users/mstone/test-rainbow test-rainbow] and, in particular,this [http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=users/mstone/test-rainbow;a=blob;f=suggestions;hb=HEAD small multi-user test script].

To test it on a regular system, you might [[#Installation|install it]], then run something like:

sudo rainbow-run -q -s /var/spool/rainbow/2 -c / -f 0 -f 1 -f 2 -u `whoami` -i nice -- /bin/bash

This will drop you into an isolated bash session in which you can play.

''NB: If you want to isolate graphical software, then you're going to need to use a helper program like <tt>rainbow-sugarize</tt> to provide an X cookie, access to the D-Bus session bus, etc.''

Obviously, please contribute more automated tests, helpers, and [[Reporting bugs|bug reports]]!

== Next Steps ==
Last updated: [[User:Mstone|Michael Stone]] 21:36, 27 February 2009 (UTC)

; Integration with sugar-0.86
: There are a couple of small impedance mismatches that will need to be overcome; e.g. sugar needs a way to kill an activity, a way to garbage-collect dead jails, and a way to reuse a jail when an activity is to be resumed.

; P_NETWORK
: We'd like to have the option to restrict a program's access to the network. James Morris suggests that we check out [http://lxc.sourceforge.net unshare(CLONE_NEWNET)].
: See [[Isolation LSM]], http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/1/7/18, and http://lkml.org/lkml/2009/1/7/613 for some other approaches.

; P_DOCUMENT*
: Requested by Gary C. Martin. To implement this, we need to put some authorization gates in the datastore, then somehow record which data should be accessible to which activities. (Or maybe we could do it all with ACLs?)
: See [[Olpcfs]] and [[Journal reloaded]] for some other approaches.

; P_X
: -- we'll start by trying out XSECURITY (i.e. by making activities untrusted clients) and see where that leaves us. Then on to XACE as per [http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/security/2008-April/000390.html previous discussion]
:: -- unfortunately, it seems (c.f. ssh man page) that most apps break when you treat them as untrusted clients. Hmm.

== Demo Ideas ==

* (paraphrase): "The insight behind Rainbow is that the problem of isolating an operator from his/her programs is similar to the problem of isolating users of a shared server from one another and from root." -- ''C. Scott Ananian''
* "I see the cool parts [of Rainbow] as (1) per-instance isolation, (2) isolation without virtualization, and (3) isolation using the uid mechanisms. All three are unique and impressive." ''-- Ben Schwartz''
: ''(NB: Actually, lots of other people have played with these ideas. [http://plash.beasts.org/wiki/ plash] is a compelling example.)''

Ideas:

* Give people an isolated Terminal to play in.
* Show off rlimits with a fork-bomb.
* Show off filesystem protections -- rm -rf, restriction of readable dirs, etc.

== Items of Historical Interest ==

* [http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=security;a=blob;f=rainbow/README;hb=HEAD README] - A description of the original scope and design of Rainbow.
* [http://dev.laptop.org/git?p=security;a=blob;f=rainbow/NOTES;hb=HEAD Notes] - Notes on design and hurdles in developing Rainbow.
* [[Rainbow/DataStore Access]] - thoughts on datastore access mechanisms, superseded by [[Olpcfs]].
* [http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/security/2008-January/000370.html "Why not SELinux?"]
* [http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/sugar/2007-November/003725.html "Bitfrost Compliance for Update.1" announcement mail]
* {{Ticket|2732}}, {{Ticket|2906}}, {{Ticket|4184}} - influential tickets in the history of rainbow

[[Category:Software]]
[[Category:Security]]

Latest revision as of 21:00, 26 November 2011

  english | español HowTo [ID# 263143]  +/-  

Rainbow :: git :: sources :: rainbow-0.8.6.tar.bz2 :: announcement


The Bitfrost security specification argues that existing desktop security conventions do not meet the security needs:

  • of adventurous kids in 1-1 computing programs,
  • of the technical staff who help maintain such initiatives, and
  • of the political constituencies which determine where such programs take place.

The most serious inadequacy of such systems is that they force end-users to take unnecessary security risks (for example, giving all programs a user runs access to the network, to auto-start facilities, and to other programs' data files) while simultaneously denying users the opportunity to do things which can be done safely but which were not anticipated by the system administrator (notably, installing new software or modifying the local system.)

Consequently, we wrote Rainbow.

Rainbow is an isolation shell. This means two things:

  1. shell: Rainbow runs programs on behalf of humans and programs. Rainbow provides those programs with a suitable environment: places in which temporary and persistent data can be stored, environment variables to identify those places, etc.
  2. isolation: People and programs should use Rainbow when they want to isolate programs from other programs and important system resources. "Isolation" is already a familiar concept to most UNIX programmers: many system daemons already operate using their own unique UID and/or GID, and most have private places in which they store their configuration. Rainbow generalizes and extends this paradigm by providing every program it runs with a unique identity, with private storage, with pre-configured resource usage limits, etc.

At the moment, Rainbow only knows how to provide the same primitive form of filesystem and signal isolation that competent sysadmins provide to users of multi-user Unix shell servers.

However, contributions are welcome, particularly contributions which advance existing plans.

Information about rainbow-0.8.*

Other Information

Subpages

(Titles in italics redirect to another page.)