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Is it safe to run
applications in
Linux Containers?
Jérôme Petazzoni
@jpetazzo
Docker Inc.
@docker
Is it safe to run
applications in
Linux Containers?
And, can Docker do
anything about it?
Question:
Is it safe to run
applications in
Linux Containers?
...
Yes
/* shocker: docker PoC VMM-container breakout (C) 2014 Sebastian Krahmer
*
* Demonstrates that any given docker image someone is asking
* you to run in your docker setup can access ANY file on your host,
* e.g. dumping hosts /etc/shadow or other sensitive info, compromising
* security of the host and any other docker VM's on it.
*
* docker using container based VMM: Sebarate pid and net namespace,
* stripped caps and RO bind mounts into container's /. However
* as its only a bind-mount the fs struct from the task is shared
* with the host which allows to open files by file handles
* (open_by_handle_at()). As we thankfully have dac_override and
* dac_read_search we can do this. The handle is usually a 64bit
* string with 32bit inodenumber inside (tested with ext4).
* Inode of / is always 2, so we have a starting point to walk
* the FS path and brute force the remaining 32bit until we find the
* desired file (It's probably easier, depending on the fhandle export
* function used for the FS in question: it could be a parent inode# or
* the inode generation which can be obtained via an ioctl).
* [In practise the remaining 32bit are all 0 :]
*
* tested with docker 0.11 busybox demo image on a 3.11 kernel:
*
* docker run -i busybox sh
*
* seems to run any program inside VMM with UID 0 (some caps stripped);
Wait
No!
Docker has changed its security status to
It's complicated
Who am I? Why am I here?
 Jérôme Petazzoni (@jpetazzo)
- Grumpy French Linux DevOps
 Operated dotCloud PAAS
for 3+ years
- hosts arbitrary code for arbitrary users
- all services, all apps, run in containers
- no major security issue yet (fingers crossed)
 Containerize all the things!
- VPN-in-Docker, KVM-in-Docker,
Xorg-in-Docker, Docker-in-Docker...
What are those “containers” ?
(1/3)
 Technically: ~chroot on steroids
- a container is a set of processes
(running on top of common kernel)
- isolated* from the rest of the machine
(cannot see/affect/harm host or other containers)
- using namespaces to have private view of the system
(network interfaces, PID tree, mountpoints...)
- and cgroups to have metered/limited/reserved resources
(to mitigate “bad neighbor” effect)
*Limitations may apply.
What are those “containers” ?
(2/3)
 From a distance: looks like a VM
- I can SSH into my container
- I can have root access in it
- I can install packages in it
- I have my own eth0 interface
- I can tweak routing table, iptables rules
- I can mount filesystems
- etc.
What are those “containers” ?
(3/3)
 Lightweight, fast, disposable...
virtual environments
- boot in milliseconds
- just a few MB of intrinsic disk/memory usage
- bare metal performance is possible
 The new way to build, ship, deploy,
run your apps!
Why is this a hot topic?
 Containers:
have been around for decades
 LXC (Linux Containers):
have been around for years
So, what?
Blame
Docker
Why is this a hot topic?
 Containers:
have been around for decades
 LXC (Linux Containers):
have been around for years
 Tools like Docker have commoditized LXC
(i.e. made it very easy to use)
 Everybody wants to deploy containers now
 But, oops, LXC wasn't made for security
 We want containers, and we want them now;
how can we do that safely?
Some
inspirational
quotes
“LXC is not yet secure.
If I want real security
I will use KVM.”
—Dan Berrangé
(famous LXC hacker)
This was in 2011.
The Linux Kernel has changed a tiny little bit since then.
“From security point
of view lxc is terrible and
may not be consider as
security solution.”
—someone on Reddit
(original spelling and grammar)
Common opinion among security experts and paranoid people.
To be fair, they have to play safe & can't take risks.
“Basically containers are
not functional as security
containers at present, in
that if you have root on
a container you have
root on the whole box.”
—Gentoo Wiki
That's just plain false, or misleading, and we'll see why.
“Containers do not
contain.”
—Dan Walsh
(Mr SELinux)
This was earlier this year,
and this guy knows what he's talking about.
Are we in trouble?
“For the fashion of Minas Tirith was
such that it was built on seven
levels, each delved into a hill,
and about each was set a wall,
and in each wall was a gate.”
—J.R.R. Tolkien
(also quoted in VAX/VMS Internals and Data Structures, ca. 1980)
Keyword:
levels
Let's review one of those quotes:
“If you have root on a container
you have root on the whole box.”
First things first:
just don't give root in the container
If you really have to give root,
give looks-like-root
If that's not enough, give root
but build another wall
Root in
the host
Root in the
container
Uruks
(intruders)
There are multiple threat models
 Regular applications
- web servers, databases, caches, message queues, ...
 System services (high level)
- logging, remote access, periodic command execution, ...
 System services (low level)
- manage physical devices, networking, filesystems, ...
 Kernel
- security policies, drivers, ...
 The special case of immutable infrastructure
Regular
applications
Regular applications
 Apache, MySQL, PostgreSQL, MongoDB,
Redis, Cassandra, Hadoop, RabbitMQ...
 Virtually all your programs in any language
(services/web services, workers, everything!)
 They never ever need root privileges
(except to install packages)
 Don't run them as root! Ever!
Regular applications
 Risk: they run arbitrary code
- vector: by definition, they are arbitrary code
- vector: security breach causes execution of malicious code
 Fix: nothing
- by definition, we are willing to execute arbitrary code here
 Consequence:
assume those apps can try
anything to break out
Regular applications
 Risk: escalate from non-root to root
- vector: vulnerabilities in SUID binaries
 Fix: defang SUID binaries
- remove them
- remove suid bit
- mount filesystem with nosuid
 Docker:
- you can remove SUID binaries easily
- doesn't support nosuid mount (but trivial to add)
Docker, Linux Containers (LXC), and security
Regular applications
 Risk: execute arbitrary kernel code
- vector: bogus syscall (e.g. vmsplice* in 2008)
 Fix: limit available syscalls
- seccomp-bpf = whitelist/blacklist syscalls
- Docker: seccomp available in LXC driver; not in libcontainer
 Fix: run stronger kernels
- GRSEC is a good idea (stable patches for 3.14 since July 4th)
- update often (i.e. have efficient way to roll out new kernels)
- Docker: more experiments needed
*More details about that: http://lwn.net/Articles/268783/
Regular applications
 Risk: leak to another container
- vector: bug in namespace code; filesystem leak
(like the one showed in the beginning of this talk!)
 Fix: user namespaces
- map UID in container to a different UID outside
- two containers run a process with UID 1000,
but it's 14298 and 15398 outside
- Docker: PR currently being reviewed
 Fix: security modules (e.g. SELinux)
- assign different security contexts to containers
- those mechanisms were designed to isolate!
- Docker: SELinux integration; AppArmor in the works
System services
(high level)
System services (high level)
 SSH, cron, syslog...
 You use/need them all the time
 Bad news: they typically run as root
 Good news: they don't really need root
 Bad news: it's hard to run them as non-root
 Good news: they are not arbitrary code
System services (high level)
 Risk: running arbitrary code as root
- vector: malformed data or similar
(note: risk is pretty low for syslog/cron; much higher for SSH)
 Fix: isolate sensitive services
- run SSH on bastion host, or in a VM
- note: this is not container-specific
(if someone hacks into your SSH server,
you'll have a bad time anyway)
System services (high level)
 Risk: messing with /dev
- vector: malicious code
 Fix: “devices” control group
- whitelist/blacklist devices
- fine-grained: can allow only read, write, none, or both
- fine-grained: can specify major+minor number of device
 Docker: ✓
- sensible defaults
- support for fine-grained access to devices in the works
System services (high level)
 Risk: use of root calls (mount, chmod, iptables...)
- vector: malicious code
 Fix: capabilities
- break down “root” into many permissions
- e.g. CAP_NET_ADMIN (network configuration)
- e.g. CAP_NET_RAW (generate and sniff traffic)
- e.g. CAP_SYS_ADMIN (big can of worms )☹
- see capabilities(7)
 Docker: ✓
- sensible default capabilities
- but: CAP_SYS_ADMIN! (see next slide)
Interlude: CAP_SYS_ADMIN
Operations controlled by CAP_SYS_ADMIN...
 quotactl, mount, umount, swapon, swapoff
 sethostname, setdomainname
 IPC_SET, IPC_RMID on arbitrary System V IPC
 perform operations on trusted and security
Extended Attributes
 set realtime priority
(ioprio_set + IOPRIO_CLASS_RT)
 create new namespaces
(clone and unshare + CLONE_NEWNS)
System services (high level)
 Risk: messing with /proc, /sys
- vector: malicious code
 Fix: prevent unauthorized access control
- Mandatory Access Control (AppArmor, SELinux)
- remount read-only, then drop CAP_SYS_ADMIN to prevent
remount
 Fix: wider implementation of namespaces
- some parts of procfs/sysfs are “namespace-aware”
- some aren't, but can be fixed (by writing kernel code)
 Docker: ✓
- locks down /proc and /sys
System services (high level)
 Risk: leaking with UID 0
- vector: malicious code
 Fix: user namespaces
- already mentioned earlier
- UID 0 in the container is mapped to some random UID outside
- you break out: you're not root
- you manage to issue weird syscalls: they're done as
unprivileged UID
 Docker: work in progress
 Caveat: user namespaces are still new.
We have to see how they behave with that!
System services
(low level)
System services (low level)
 Device management (keyboard, mouse,
screen), network and firewall config,
filesystem mounts...
 You use/need some of them all the time
 But you don't need any of them in containers
- physical device management is done by the host
- network configuration and filesystems are setup by the host
 Exceptions:
- custom mounts (FUSE)
- network appliances
System services (low level)
 Risk: running arbitrary code as root
- vector: malformed data or similar
 Fix: isolate sensitive functions
- “one-shot” commands can be fenced in privileged context
(think “sudo” but without even requiring “sudo”)
- everything else (especially processes that are long-running,
or handle arbitrary input) runs in non-privileged context
- works well for FUSE, some VPN services
 Docker: provides fine-grained sharing
- e.g. docker run --net container:… for network namespace
- nsenter for other out-of-band operations
System services (low level)
 Risk: run arbitrary code with full privileges
- vector: needs a process running with full privileges (rare!)
- vector: malformed data, unchecked input… classic exploit
 Fix: treat it as “kernel”
- we'll see that immediately in the next section
Kernel
Kernel
 Drivers
- can talk to the hardware, so can do pretty much anything
- except: virtualize the bus and use e.g. driver domains (Xen)
 Network stacks
- this probably has to live into the kernel for good performance
- except: DPDK, OpenOnload...
(networking stacks in userspace)
 Security policies
- by definition, they control everything else
- except: there might be nested security contexts some day
Kernel
 Risk: run arbitrary code with absolute
privileges
 Fix: ?
Reality check:
if you run something which by
definition needs full control over
hardware or kernel, containers
are not going to make it secure.
Please stop trying to shoot
yourself in the foot safely.
Reality check:
if you run something which by
definition needs full control over
hardware or kernel, containers
are not going to make it secure.
Please stop trying to shoot
yourself in the foot safely.
Kernel
 Risk:
run arbitrary code with absolute privileges
 Fix:
give it its own kernel and (virtual) hardware
- i.e. run it in a virtual machine
- that VM can run in a container
- that VM can hold a container
- run a privileged container, in Docker, in a VM,
while the VM runs in a container, in a Docker
https://github.com/jpetazzo/docker2docker
- inb4 xzibit meme
Docker, Linux Containers (LXC), and security
Immutable
immutable
infrastructure
Immutable immutable
infrastructure
 New rule:
the whole container is read-only
 Compromise:
if we must write, write to a noexec area
 Scalability has never been easier
(if totally read-only)
 It's even harder for malicious users
to do evil things
Recap (in no specific order!)
 don't run things as root
 drop capabilities
 enable user namespaces
 get rid of shady SUID binaries
 enable SELinux (or AppArmor)
 use seccomp-bpf
 get a GRSEC kernel
 update kernels often
 mount everything read-only
 ultimately, fence things in VMs
Recap (with Docker status)
 don't run things as root ☑ (you do it!)
 drop capabilities ☑ (but CAP_SYS_ADMIN!)
 enable user namespaces ☑ (work in progress)
 get rid of shady SUID binaries ☑ (but not enforced yet)
 enable SELinux (or AppArmor) ☑ (SELinux)
 use seccomp-bpf ☑ (on LXC driver)
 get a GRSEC kernel ☑ (to be confirmed)
 update kernels often ☑ (not Docker's job)
 mount everything read-only ☐ (not yet)
 ultimately, fence things in VMs ☑ (easy to do)
Recap (improvements needed)
 don't run things as root ☒ (you do it!)
 drop capabilities ☒ (but CAP_SYS_ADMIN!)
 enable user namespaces ☒ (work in progress)
 get rid of shady SUID binaries ☒ (but not enforced yet)
 enable SELinux (or AppArmor) ☒ (SELinux)
 use seccomp-bpf ☒ (on LXC driver)
 get a GRSEC kernel ☒ (to be confirmed)
 update kernels often ☒ (not Docker's job)
 mount everything read-only ☒ (not yet)
 ultimately, fence things in VMs ☒ (easy to do)
Docker, Linux Containers (LXC), and security
Thank you!
Questions?

More Related Content

Docker, Linux Containers (LXC), and security

  • 1. Is it safe to run applications in Linux Containers? Jérôme Petazzoni @jpetazzo Docker Inc. @docker
  • 2. Is it safe to run applications in Linux Containers? And, can Docker do anything about it?
  • 3. Question: Is it safe to run applications in Linux Containers?
  • 4. ...
  • 5. Yes
  • 6. /* shocker: docker PoC VMM-container breakout (C) 2014 Sebastian Krahmer * * Demonstrates that any given docker image someone is asking * you to run in your docker setup can access ANY file on your host, * e.g. dumping hosts /etc/shadow or other sensitive info, compromising * security of the host and any other docker VM's on it. * * docker using container based VMM: Sebarate pid and net namespace, * stripped caps and RO bind mounts into container's /. However * as its only a bind-mount the fs struct from the task is shared * with the host which allows to open files by file handles * (open_by_handle_at()). As we thankfully have dac_override and * dac_read_search we can do this. The handle is usually a 64bit * string with 32bit inodenumber inside (tested with ext4). * Inode of / is always 2, so we have a starting point to walk * the FS path and brute force the remaining 32bit until we find the * desired file (It's probably easier, depending on the fhandle export * function used for the FS in question: it could be a parent inode# or * the inode generation which can be obtained via an ioctl). * [In practise the remaining 32bit are all 0 :] * * tested with docker 0.11 busybox demo image on a 3.11 kernel: * * docker run -i busybox sh * * seems to run any program inside VMM with UID 0 (some caps stripped);
  • 8. No!
  • 9. Docker has changed its security status to It's complicated
  • 10. Who am I? Why am I here?  Jérôme Petazzoni (@jpetazzo) - Grumpy French Linux DevOps  Operated dotCloud PAAS for 3+ years - hosts arbitrary code for arbitrary users - all services, all apps, run in containers - no major security issue yet (fingers crossed)  Containerize all the things! - VPN-in-Docker, KVM-in-Docker, Xorg-in-Docker, Docker-in-Docker...
  • 11. What are those “containers” ? (1/3)  Technically: ~chroot on steroids - a container is a set of processes (running on top of common kernel) - isolated* from the rest of the machine (cannot see/affect/harm host or other containers) - using namespaces to have private view of the system (network interfaces, PID tree, mountpoints...) - and cgroups to have metered/limited/reserved resources (to mitigate “bad neighbor” effect) *Limitations may apply.
  • 12. What are those “containers” ? (2/3)  From a distance: looks like a VM - I can SSH into my container - I can have root access in it - I can install packages in it - I have my own eth0 interface - I can tweak routing table, iptables rules - I can mount filesystems - etc.
  • 13. What are those “containers” ? (3/3)  Lightweight, fast, disposable... virtual environments - boot in milliseconds - just a few MB of intrinsic disk/memory usage - bare metal performance is possible  The new way to build, ship, deploy, run your apps!
  • 14. Why is this a hot topic?  Containers: have been around for decades  LXC (Linux Containers): have been around for years So, what?
  • 16. Why is this a hot topic?  Containers: have been around for decades  LXC (Linux Containers): have been around for years  Tools like Docker have commoditized LXC (i.e. made it very easy to use)  Everybody wants to deploy containers now  But, oops, LXC wasn't made for security  We want containers, and we want them now; how can we do that safely?
  • 18. “LXC is not yet secure. If I want real security I will use KVM.” —Dan Berrangé (famous LXC hacker) This was in 2011. The Linux Kernel has changed a tiny little bit since then.
  • 19. “From security point of view lxc is terrible and may not be consider as security solution.” —someone on Reddit (original spelling and grammar) Common opinion among security experts and paranoid people. To be fair, they have to play safe & can't take risks.
  • 20. “Basically containers are not functional as security containers at present, in that if you have root on a container you have root on the whole box.” —Gentoo Wiki That's just plain false, or misleading, and we'll see why.
  • 21. “Containers do not contain.” —Dan Walsh (Mr SELinux) This was earlier this year, and this guy knows what he's talking about. Are we in trouble?
  • 22. “For the fashion of Minas Tirith was such that it was built on seven levels, each delved into a hill, and about each was set a wall, and in each wall was a gate.” —J.R.R. Tolkien (also quoted in VAX/VMS Internals and Data Structures, ca. 1980)
  • 24. Let's review one of those quotes: “If you have root on a container you have root on the whole box.” First things first: just don't give root in the container If you really have to give root, give looks-like-root If that's not enough, give root but build another wall
  • 25. Root in the host Root in the container Uruks (intruders)
  • 26. There are multiple threat models  Regular applications - web servers, databases, caches, message queues, ...  System services (high level) - logging, remote access, periodic command execution, ...  System services (low level) - manage physical devices, networking, filesystems, ...  Kernel - security policies, drivers, ...  The special case of immutable infrastructure
  • 28. Regular applications  Apache, MySQL, PostgreSQL, MongoDB, Redis, Cassandra, Hadoop, RabbitMQ...  Virtually all your programs in any language (services/web services, workers, everything!)  They never ever need root privileges (except to install packages)  Don't run them as root! Ever!
  • 29. Regular applications  Risk: they run arbitrary code - vector: by definition, they are arbitrary code - vector: security breach causes execution of malicious code  Fix: nothing - by definition, we are willing to execute arbitrary code here  Consequence: assume those apps can try anything to break out
  • 30. Regular applications  Risk: escalate from non-root to root - vector: vulnerabilities in SUID binaries  Fix: defang SUID binaries - remove them - remove suid bit - mount filesystem with nosuid  Docker: - you can remove SUID binaries easily - doesn't support nosuid mount (but trivial to add)
  • 32. Regular applications  Risk: execute arbitrary kernel code - vector: bogus syscall (e.g. vmsplice* in 2008)  Fix: limit available syscalls - seccomp-bpf = whitelist/blacklist syscalls - Docker: seccomp available in LXC driver; not in libcontainer  Fix: run stronger kernels - GRSEC is a good idea (stable patches for 3.14 since July 4th) - update often (i.e. have efficient way to roll out new kernels) - Docker: more experiments needed *More details about that: http://lwn.net/Articles/268783/
  • 33. Regular applications  Risk: leak to another container - vector: bug in namespace code; filesystem leak (like the one showed in the beginning of this talk!)  Fix: user namespaces - map UID in container to a different UID outside - two containers run a process with UID 1000, but it's 14298 and 15398 outside - Docker: PR currently being reviewed  Fix: security modules (e.g. SELinux) - assign different security contexts to containers - those mechanisms were designed to isolate! - Docker: SELinux integration; AppArmor in the works
  • 35. System services (high level)  SSH, cron, syslog...  You use/need them all the time  Bad news: they typically run as root  Good news: they don't really need root  Bad news: it's hard to run them as non-root  Good news: they are not arbitrary code
  • 36. System services (high level)  Risk: running arbitrary code as root - vector: malformed data or similar (note: risk is pretty low for syslog/cron; much higher for SSH)  Fix: isolate sensitive services - run SSH on bastion host, or in a VM - note: this is not container-specific (if someone hacks into your SSH server, you'll have a bad time anyway)
  • 37. System services (high level)  Risk: messing with /dev - vector: malicious code  Fix: “devices” control group - whitelist/blacklist devices - fine-grained: can allow only read, write, none, or both - fine-grained: can specify major+minor number of device  Docker: ✓ - sensible defaults - support for fine-grained access to devices in the works
  • 38. System services (high level)  Risk: use of root calls (mount, chmod, iptables...) - vector: malicious code  Fix: capabilities - break down “root” into many permissions - e.g. CAP_NET_ADMIN (network configuration) - e.g. CAP_NET_RAW (generate and sniff traffic) - e.g. CAP_SYS_ADMIN (big can of worms )☹ - see capabilities(7)  Docker: ✓ - sensible default capabilities - but: CAP_SYS_ADMIN! (see next slide)
  • 39. Interlude: CAP_SYS_ADMIN Operations controlled by CAP_SYS_ADMIN...  quotactl, mount, umount, swapon, swapoff  sethostname, setdomainname  IPC_SET, IPC_RMID on arbitrary System V IPC  perform operations on trusted and security Extended Attributes  set realtime priority (ioprio_set + IOPRIO_CLASS_RT)  create new namespaces (clone and unshare + CLONE_NEWNS)
  • 40. System services (high level)  Risk: messing with /proc, /sys - vector: malicious code  Fix: prevent unauthorized access control - Mandatory Access Control (AppArmor, SELinux) - remount read-only, then drop CAP_SYS_ADMIN to prevent remount  Fix: wider implementation of namespaces - some parts of procfs/sysfs are “namespace-aware” - some aren't, but can be fixed (by writing kernel code)  Docker: ✓ - locks down /proc and /sys
  • 41. System services (high level)  Risk: leaking with UID 0 - vector: malicious code  Fix: user namespaces - already mentioned earlier - UID 0 in the container is mapped to some random UID outside - you break out: you're not root - you manage to issue weird syscalls: they're done as unprivileged UID  Docker: work in progress  Caveat: user namespaces are still new. We have to see how they behave with that!
  • 43. System services (low level)  Device management (keyboard, mouse, screen), network and firewall config, filesystem mounts...  You use/need some of them all the time  But you don't need any of them in containers - physical device management is done by the host - network configuration and filesystems are setup by the host  Exceptions: - custom mounts (FUSE) - network appliances
  • 44. System services (low level)  Risk: running arbitrary code as root - vector: malformed data or similar  Fix: isolate sensitive functions - “one-shot” commands can be fenced in privileged context (think “sudo” but without even requiring “sudo”) - everything else (especially processes that are long-running, or handle arbitrary input) runs in non-privileged context - works well for FUSE, some VPN services  Docker: provides fine-grained sharing - e.g. docker run --net container:… for network namespace - nsenter for other out-of-band operations
  • 45. System services (low level)  Risk: run arbitrary code with full privileges - vector: needs a process running with full privileges (rare!) - vector: malformed data, unchecked input… classic exploit  Fix: treat it as “kernel” - we'll see that immediately in the next section
  • 47. Kernel  Drivers - can talk to the hardware, so can do pretty much anything - except: virtualize the bus and use e.g. driver domains (Xen)  Network stacks - this probably has to live into the kernel for good performance - except: DPDK, OpenOnload... (networking stacks in userspace)  Security policies - by definition, they control everything else - except: there might be nested security contexts some day
  • 48. Kernel  Risk: run arbitrary code with absolute privileges  Fix: ?
  • 49. Reality check: if you run something which by definition needs full control over hardware or kernel, containers are not going to make it secure. Please stop trying to shoot yourself in the foot safely.
  • 50. Reality check: if you run something which by definition needs full control over hardware or kernel, containers are not going to make it secure. Please stop trying to shoot yourself in the foot safely.
  • 51. Kernel  Risk: run arbitrary code with absolute privileges  Fix: give it its own kernel and (virtual) hardware - i.e. run it in a virtual machine - that VM can run in a container - that VM can hold a container - run a privileged container, in Docker, in a VM, while the VM runs in a container, in a Docker https://github.com/jpetazzo/docker2docker - inb4 xzibit meme
  • 54. Immutable immutable infrastructure  New rule: the whole container is read-only  Compromise: if we must write, write to a noexec area  Scalability has never been easier (if totally read-only)  It's even harder for malicious users to do evil things
  • 55. Recap (in no specific order!)  don't run things as root  drop capabilities  enable user namespaces  get rid of shady SUID binaries  enable SELinux (or AppArmor)  use seccomp-bpf  get a GRSEC kernel  update kernels often  mount everything read-only  ultimately, fence things in VMs
  • 56. Recap (with Docker status)  don't run things as root ☑ (you do it!)  drop capabilities ☑ (but CAP_SYS_ADMIN!)  enable user namespaces ☑ (work in progress)  get rid of shady SUID binaries ☑ (but not enforced yet)  enable SELinux (or AppArmor) ☑ (SELinux)  use seccomp-bpf ☑ (on LXC driver)  get a GRSEC kernel ☑ (to be confirmed)  update kernels often ☑ (not Docker's job)  mount everything read-only ☐ (not yet)  ultimately, fence things in VMs ☑ (easy to do)
  • 57. Recap (improvements needed)  don't run things as root ☒ (you do it!)  drop capabilities ☒ (but CAP_SYS_ADMIN!)  enable user namespaces ☒ (work in progress)  get rid of shady SUID binaries ☒ (but not enforced yet)  enable SELinux (or AppArmor) ☒ (SELinux)  use seccomp-bpf ☒ (on LXC driver)  get a GRSEC kernel ☒ (to be confirmed)  update kernels often ☒ (not Docker's job)  mount everything read-only ☒ (not yet)  ultimately, fence things in VMs ☒ (easy to do)