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author | terminaldweller <devi@terminaldweller.com> | 2024-06-26 19:34:30 +0000 |
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committer | terminaldweller <devi@terminaldweller.com> | 2024-06-26 19:34:30 +0000 |
commit | a41bd6f466f0c11d6ec49655d8d74261ba8a28bb (patch) | |
tree | 0f7708f9267b4826548bf7daf2e9db668fcd7040 /mds | |
parent | update (diff) | |
download | blog-a41bd6f466f0c11d6ec49655d8d74261ba8a28bb.tar.gz blog-a41bd6f466f0c11d6ec49655d8d74261ba8a28bb.zip |
update
Diffstat (limited to 'mds')
-rw-r--r-- | mds/disposablefirefox.txt | 485 |
1 files changed, 485 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/mds/disposablefirefox.txt b/mds/disposablefirefox.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6c2f8dd --- /dev/null +++ b/mds/disposablefirefox.txt @@ -0,0 +1,485 @@ +== Making a Disposable Firefox Instance + +We want to make a disposable firefox instance. Why firefox? well the +only other choice is chromium really. Mozilla are no choir boys either. +Basically we are choosing between the lesser of two evils here. There is +also the whole google killing off manifest v2. Qutebrowser and netsurf +are solid but for this one, we will choose something that has more +compatibility. Now let’s talk about the requirements and goals for this +lil undertaking of ours: + +=== Requirements and Goals + +We want: + +* the instance to be ephemeral. This will prevent any persistent threat +to remain on the VM. +* the instance to be isolated from the host. +* to prevent our IP address from being revealed to the websites we +visit. + +We will not be: + +* doing any fingerprint-resisting. In case someone wants to do it, +here’s a good place to start: +https://github.com/arkenfox/user.js/[arkenfox’s user.js] +* we are trying to keep our IP from being revealed to the websites we +visit. We don’t care whether a VPN provider can be subpoenaed or not. +Otherwise, needless to say, use your own VPN server but that will limit +the IP choices you have. Trade-offs people, trade-offs. There is also +the better choice, imho, which is use a SOCKS5 proxy. + +=== Implementation + +==== Isolation and Sandboxing + +We will be practicing compartmentalization. This makes it harder for +threats to spread. There are more than one way to do this in the current +Linux landscape. We will be using a virtual machine and not a container. +Needless to say, defense in depth is a good practice so in case your +threat model calls for it, one could run firefox in a container inside +the VM but for our purposes running inside a virtual machine is enough. +To streamline the process, we will be using vagrant to provision the VM. +Like already mentioned, we will use Vagrant’s plugin for libvirt to +build/manage the VM which in turn will use qemu/kvm as the hypervisor. +We value transparency so we will use an open-source stack for the +virtualisation: Vagrant+libvirt+qemu/kvm The benefits of using an +open-source backend include: + +* we don’t have to worry about any backdoors in the software. There is a +big difference between "`they *probably* don’t put backdoors into their +software`" and "`there are no backdoors on this piece of software`"(the +xz incident non-withstanding) +* we don’t have to deal with very late and lackluster responses to +security vulnerabilities + +Yes. We just took shots at two specific hypervisors. If you know, you +know. + +Now lets move on to the base for the VM. We need something small for two +reasons: a smaller attack surface and a smaller memory footprint(yes. A +smaller memory-footprint. We will talk about this a bit later). So the +choice is simple if we are thinking of picking a linux distro. We use an +alpine linux base image. We could pick an openbsd base. That has the +added benefit of the host and the guest not running the same OS which +makes it harder for the threats to break isolation but for the current +iteration we will be using alpine linux. + +==== IP Address Leak prevention + +The choice here is rather simple: We either decide to use a VPN or a +SOCKS5 proxy. You could make your own VPN and or SOCKS5 proxy. This IS +the more secure option but will limit the ip choices we have. If your +threat model calls for it, then by all means, take that route. For my +purposes using a VPN provider is enough. We will be using mullvad vpn. +Specifically, we will be using the openvpn config that mullvad generates +for us. We will not be using the mullvad vpn app mostly because a VPN +app is creepy. We will also be implementing a kill-switch for the VPN. +In case the VPN fails at any point, we don’t want to leak our IP +address. A kill-switch makes sure nothing is sent out when the VPN +fails. We will use ufw to implement the kill-switch feature. This is +similar to what https://tails.net/contribute/design/#index18h3[tails OS +does] as in, it tries to route everything through tor but it also blocks +any non-tor traffic, thus ensuring there are no leaks. We will be doing +the same. + +==== Non-Persistance + +We are running inside a VM so in order to achieve non-persistence we +could just make a new VM instance, run that and after we are done with +the instance, we can just destroy it. We will be doing just that but we +will be using a `+tmpfs+` filesystem and put our VM’s disk on that. This +has a couple of benefits: + +* RAM is faster than disk. Even faster than an nvme drive +* RAM is volatile + +One thing to be wary of is swap. In our case we will be using the newer +`+tmpfs+` which will use swap if we go over our disk limit so keep this +in mind while making the tmpfs mount. Please note that there are ways +around this as well. One could use the older `+ramfs+` but in my case +this is not necessary since I’m using zram for my host’s swap solution. +This means that the swap space will be on the RAM itself so hitting the +swap will still mean we never hit the disk. + +To mount a tmpfs, we can run: + +[source,sh] +---- +sudo mount -t tmpfs -o size=4096M tmpfs /tmp/tmpfs +---- + +Remember we talked about a smaller memory footprint? This is why. An +alpine VM with firefox on top of it is smaller both in disk-size and +memory used(mostly because of alpine using libmusl instead of glibc). +The above command will mount a 4GB tmpfs on `+/tmp/tmpfs+`. Next we want +to create a new storage pool for libvirt so that we can specify the VM +to use that in Vagrant. + +[source,sh] +---- +virsh pool-define-as tmpfs_pool /tmp/tmpfs +---- + +and then start the pool: + +[source,sh] +---- +virsh pool-start tmpfs_pool +---- + +=== Implementing the Kill-Switch Using UFW + +The concept is simple. We want to stop sending packets to any external +IP address once the VPN is down. In order to achieve this, we will +fulfill a much stricter requirement. We will go for a tails-like setup, +in that the only allowed external traffic will be to the IP address of +the VPN server(s). Here’s what that will look like: + +[source,sh] +---- +ufw --force reset +ufw default deny incoming +ufw default deny outgoing +ufw allow in on tun0 +ufw allow out on tun0 +# enable libvirt bridge +ufw allow in on eth0 from 192.168.121.1 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 192.168.121.1 proto tcp +# server block +ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.174 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.174 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.176 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.176 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.172 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.172 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.171 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.171 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.212.149.201 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.212.149.201 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.173 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.173 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 193.138.7.237 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 193.138.7.237 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 193.138.7.217 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 193.138.7.217 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.175 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.175 port 443 proto tcp +echo y | ufw enable +---- + +First, we forcefully reset ufw. This makes sure we are starting from a +known state. Second, we disable all incoming and outgoing traffic. This +makes sure our default policy for some unforseen scenario is to deny +traffic leaving the VM. Then we allow traffic through the VPN interface, +tun0. Finally, in my case and because of libvirt, we allow traffic to +and from the libvirt bridge, which in my case in 192.168.121.1. Then we +add two rules for each VPN server. One for incoming and one for outgoing +traffic: + +[source,sh] +---- +ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.174 port 443 proto tcp +ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.174 port 443 proto tcp +---- + +`+eth0+` is the interface that originally had internet access. Now after +denying it any access, we are allowing it to only talk to the VPN server +on the server’s port 443. Needless to say, the IP addresses, the ports +and the protocol(tcp/udp which we are not having ufw enforce) will +depend on the VPN server and your provider. Note: make sure you are not +doing DNS request out-of-band in regards to your VPN. This seems to be a +common mistake and some VPN providers don’t enable sending the DNS +requests through the VPN tunnel by default which means your actual +traffic goes through the tunnel but you are kindly letting your ISP(if +you have not changed your host’s DNS servers) know where you are sending +your traffic to. + +After setting the rules, we enable ufw. + +==== Sudo-less NTFS + +In order to make the process more streamlined and not mistakenly keep an +instance alive we need to have a sudo-less NTFS mount for the VM. +Without sudo-less NTFS, we would have to type in the sudo password +twice, once when the VM is being brought up and once when it is being +destroyed. Imagine a scenario when you close the disposable firefox VM, +thinking that is gone but in reality it needs you to type in the sudo +password to destroy it, thus, keeping the instance alive. The solution +is simple. We add the following to `+/etc/exports+`: + +[source,sh] +---- +"/home/user/share/nfs" 192.168.121.0/24(rw,no_subtree_check,all_squash,anonuid=1000,anongid=1000) +---- + +This will enable the VM to access `+/home/user/share/nfs+` without +needing sudo. + +=== The Vagrantfile + +Here is the Vagrantfile that will be used to provision the VM: + +[source,ruby] +---- +ENV['VAGRANT_DEFAULT_PROVIDER'] = 'libvirt' +Vagrant.require_version '>= 2.2.6' +Vagrant.configure('2') do |config| + config.vm.box = 'generic/alpine319' + config.vm.box_version = '4.3.12' + config.vm.box_check_update = false + config.vm.hostname = 'virt-disposable' + + # ssh + config.ssh.insert_key = true + config.ssh.keep_alive = true + config.ssh.keys_only = true + + # timeouts + config.vm.boot_timeout = 300 + config.vm.graceful_halt_timeout = 60 + config.ssh.connect_timeout = 15 + + config.vm.provider 'libvirt' do |libvirt| + # name of the storage pool, mine is ramdisk. + libvirt.storage_pool_name = 'ramdisk' + libvirt.default_prefix = 'disposable-' + libvirt.driver = 'kvm' + # amount of memory to allocate to the VM + libvirt.memory = '3076' + # amount of logical CPU cores to allocate to the VM + libvirt.cpus = 6 + libvirt.sound_type = nil + libvirt.qemuargs value: '-nographic' + libvirt.qemuargs value: '-nodefaults' + libvirt.qemuargs value: '-no-user-config' + # enabling a serial console just in case + libvirt.qemuargs value: '-serial' + libvirt.qemuargs value: 'pty' + libvirt.qemuargs value: '-sandbox' + libvirt.qemuargs value: 'on' + libvirt.random model: 'random' + end + + config.vm.provision 'update-upgrade', type: 'shell', name: 'update-upgrade', inline: <<-SHELL + set -ex + sudo apk update && \ + sudo apk upgrade + sudo apk add firefox-esr xauth font-dejavu wget openvpn unzip iptables ufw nfs-utils haveged tzdata + mkdir -p /vagrant && \ + sudo mount -t nfs 192.168.121.1:/home/devi/share/nfs /vagrant + SHELL + + config.vm.provision 'update-upgrade-privileged', type: 'shell', name: 'update-upgrade-privileged', privileged: true, inline: <<-SHELL + set -ex + sed -i 's/^#X11DisplayOffset .*/X11DisplayOffset 0/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config + sed -i 's/^X11Forwarding .*/X11Forwarding yes/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config + rc-service sshd restart + + ln -fs /usr/share/zoneinfo/UTC /etc/localtime + + #rc-update add openvpn default + mkdir -p /tmp/mullvad/ && \ + cp /vagrant/mullvad_openvpn_linux_fi_hel.zip /tmp/mullvad/ && \ + cd /tmp/mullvad && \ + unzip mullvad_openvpn_linux_fi_hel.zip && \ + mv mullvad_config_linux_fi_hel/mullvad_fi_hel.conf /etc/openvpn/openvpn.conf && \ + mv mullvad_config_linux_fi_hel/mullvad_userpass.txt /etc/openvpn/ && \ + mv mullvad_config_linux_fi_hel/mullvad_ca.crt /etc/openvpn/ && \ + mv mullvad_config_linux_fi_hel/update-resolv-conf /etc/openvpn && \ + chmod 755 /etc/openvpn/update-resolv-conf + modprobe tun + echo "net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1" >> /etc/sysctl.d/ipv4.conf + sysctl -p /etc/sysctl.d/ipv4.conf + rc-service openvpn start || true + sleep 1 + SHELL + + config.vm.provision 'kill-switch', communicator_required: false, type: 'shell', name: 'kill-switch', privileged: true, inline: <<-SHELL + # http://o54hon2e2vj6c7m3aqqu6uyece65by3vgoxxhlqlsvkmacw6a7m7kiad.onion/en/help/linux-openvpn-installation + set -ex + ufw --force reset + ufw default deny incoming + ufw default deny outgoing + ufw allow in on tun0 + ufw allow out on tun0 + # allow local traffic through the libvirt bridge + ufw allow in on eth0 from 192.168.121.1 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 192.168.121.1 proto tcp + # server block + ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.174 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.174 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.176 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.176 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.172 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.172 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.171 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.171 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.212.149.201 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.212.149.201 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.173 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.173 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 193.138.7.237 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 193.138.7.237 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 193.138.7.217 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 193.138.7.217 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow out on eth0 to 185.204.1.175 port 443 proto tcp + ufw allow in on eth0 from 185.204.1.175 port 443 proto tcp + + echo y | ufw enable + SHELL + + config.vm.provision 'mullvad-test', type: 'shell', name: 'test', privileged: false, inline: <<-SHELL + set -ex + curl --connect-timeout 10 https://am.i.mullvad.net/connected | grep -i "you\ are\ connected" + SHELL +end +---- + +==== Provisioning + +We will be using the vagrant shell provisioner to prepare the VM. The +first provisioner names `+update-upgrade+` does what the name implies. +It installs the required packages. The next provisioner, +`+update-upgrade-privileged+`, enables X11 forwarding on openssh, sets +up openvpn as a service and starts it and finally sets the timezone to +UTC. The third provisioner, `+kill-switch+`, sets up our kill-switch +using ufw. The final provisioner runs the mullvad test for their VPN. +Since at this point we have set up the kill-switch we wont leak our IP +address to the mullvad website but that’s not important since we are +using our own IP address to connect to the mullvad VPN servers. + +==== Interface + +how do we interface with our firefox instance. ssh or spice? I have gone +with ssh. In our case we use ssh’s X11 forwarding feature. This choice +is made purely out of convenience. You can go with spice. + +==== Timezone + +We set the VM’s timezone to UTC because it’s generic. + +==== haveged + +haveged is a daemon that provides a source of randomness for our VM. +Look https://www.kicksecure.com/wiki/Dev/Entropy#haveged[here]. + +===== QEMU Sandbox + +From `+man 1 qemu+`: + +[source,txt] +---- +-sandbox arg[,obsolete=string][,elevateprivileges=string][,spawn=string][,resourcecontrol=string] + Enable Seccomp mode 2 system call filter. 'on' will enable syscall filtering and 'off' will disable it. The default is 'off'. +---- + +===== CPU Pinning + +CPU pinning alone is not what we want. We want cpu pinning and then +further isolating those cpu cores on the host so that only the VM runs +on those cores. This will give us a better performance on the VM side +but also provide better security and isolation since this will mitigate +side-channel attacks based on the CPU(the spectre/metldown family, the +gift that keeps on giving). In my case, I’ve done what I can on the +host-side to mitigate spectre/meltdown but I don’t have enough resources +to ping 6 logical cores to this VM. If you can spare the resources, by +all means, please do. + +==== No Passthrough + +We will not be doing any passthroughs. It is not necessarily a choice +made because of security, but merely out of a lack of need for the +performance benefit that hardware-acceleration brings. + +=== Launcher Script + +[source,sh] +---- +#!/usr/bin/dash +set -x + +sigint_handler() { + local ipv4="$1" + xhost -"${ipv4}" + vagrant destroy -f +} + +trap sigint_handler INT +trap sigint_handler TERM + +working_directory="/home/devi/devi/vagrantboxes.git/main/disposable/" +cd ${working_directory} || exit 1 + +vagrant up +disposable_id=$(vagrant global-status | grep disposable | awk '{print $1}') +disposable_ipv4=$(vagrant ssh "${disposable_id}" -c "ip a show eth0 | grep inet | grep -v inet6 | awk '{print \$2}' | cut -d/ -f1 | tr -d '[:space:]'") + +trap 'sigint_handler ${disposable_ipv4}' INT +trap 'sigint_handler ${disposable_ipv4}' TERM + +echo "got IPv4 ${disposable_ipv4}" +xhost +"${disposable_ipv4}" +ssh \ + -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no \ + -o Compression=no \ + -o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null \ + -X \ + -i".vagrant/machines/default/libvirt/private_key" \ + vagrant@"${disposable_ipv4}" \ + "XAUTHORITY=/home/vagrant/.Xauthority firefox-esr -no-remote" https://mullvad.net/en/check/ +xhost -"${disposable_ipv4}" +vagrant destroy -f +---- + +The script is straightforward. It brings up the VM, and destroys it when +the disposable firefox instance is closed. Let’s look at a couple of +things that we are doing here: + +* The shebang line: we are using `+dash+`, the debian almquist shell. It +has a smaller attack surface. It’s small but we don’t need all the +features of bash or zsh here so we use something "`more secure`". +* we add and remove the IP of the VM from the xhost list. This allows +the instance to display the firefox window on the host’s X server and +after it’s done, we remove it so we don’t end up whitelisting the entire +IP range(least privilege principle, remember?). +* we use `+-o UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null+` to prevent the VM from +adding to the host’s known hosts file. There are two reasons why we do +this here. One, the IP range is limited, we will eventually end up +conflicting with another IP that lives on your hostsfile that was a live +and well VM as some point but is now dead so libvirt will reassign its +IP address to our disposable instance which will prompt ssh to tell you +that it suspects there is something going on which will prevent the ssh +command from completing successfully which will in turn result in the VM +getting killed. Two, we will stop polluting the hostsfile by all the IPs +of the disposable VM instances that we keep creating so that you won’t +have to deal with the same problem while running other VMs. +* we register a signal handler for `+SIGTERM+` and `+SIGINT+` so that we +can destroy the VM after we created it and we one of those signals. This +helps ensure a higher rate of confidence in the VM getting destroyed. +This does not guarantee that. A `+SIGKILL+` will kill the script and +that’s that. + +=== Notes Regarding the Host + +A good deal of security and isolation comes from the host specially in a +scenario when you are running a VM on top of the host. This is an +entirely different topic so we won’t be getting into it but +https://kernsec.org/wiki/index.php/Kernel_Self_Protection_Project/Recommended_Settings[here] +is a good place to start. Just because it’s only a single line at the +end of some random blogpost doesn’t mean its not important. Take this +seriously. + +We are using somebody else’s vagrant base image. Supply-chain attacks +are a thing so it is very much better to use our own base image. As a +starting you can look +https://github.com/lavabit/robox/tree/master/scripts/alpine319[here]. +This is how the base image we are using is created. + +timestamp:1719428898 + +version:1.0.0 + +https://blog.terminaldweller.com/rss/feed + +https://raw.githubusercontent.com/terminaldweller/blog/main/mds/disposablefirefox.md |