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Operating Systems and Virtual Machines Security

Operating Systems and Virtual Machines Security. Eng. Hector M Lugo-Cordero, MS CIS 4361 Secure OS Admin. Problem. Client / Server infrastructure very common among most organizations Clients provide access to system Servers run the systems

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Operating Systems and Virtual Machines Security

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  1. Operating Systems and Virtual Machines Security Eng. Hector M Lugo-Cordero, MS CIS 4361 Secure OS Admin

  2. Problem • Client / Server infrastructure very common among most organizations • Clients provide access to system • Servers run the systems • Software vulnerabilities (e.g. buffer overflow) and malware need to be considered • Follow a framework detailed by NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) to provide a secure environment, even when we know it is not there

  3. NIST Approach Phases • Planning • Installation • Configuration • Update • Maintenance • Consider the OS layered model, each layer needs to be properly secured, and it may be attack from layers bellow

  4. OS Layered Model

  5. Australian Defense Signals Directorate (DSD) • Publish on “Top 35 Mitigation Strategies” • 70% of intrusion studied by 2009 could be prevented with 4 measures • Patch operating systems and applications using auto-update • Patch 3rd party applications • Restrict admin privileges to users who need them • Disable root on linux (only via sudoers groups users may gain root privileges) • Create other accounts (other than default) in Windows with less privileges • White-list approved applications

  6. Overall Goal • Asses risks and plan the system development • Secure the underlying OS and then key applications • Ensure any critical content is secured • Ensure appropriate network protection mechanisms are used • Ensure appropriate process are used to maintain security (policies)

  7. System Security Planning • There is a course CIS4313 that talks about planning, here we care more about the RMM (Risk Management Mitigation) • Identify risks, along with their likelihood and what are there impact • Also identify how to prevent and mitigates these risks • Such process will drive what you need for establishing a secure system (personnel for installing, OS, hardware, apps, etc.)

  8. Things to keep in mind • Purpose of the system, type of information stored, applications and services provided • Users of the system and their privileges • How are users authenticated • How information on system is managed • What other hosts / DBs are accessed by system • Who will manage system and how (remote or local) • Additional measures such as: firewall, anti-virus, logging

  9. Hardening the OS • Default OS configurations are for ease of use • Measures have to be done at all stages • Installing and patching • Configuring • Remove unnecessary applications, services and protocols • Users, groups, controls and privileges • Install additional software (anti-virus, firewall, intrusion detection system, etc.) • Test Security

  10. Installing and Patching • Installation • Machines should not connect to network until secured • However removable media may be infected as well • Limited network (firewall) is acceptable, ideally: • No inbound connections • Only out to certain key sites • Install only required services and drivers (from trusted sources) • Set up automatic updates (only if update time is not an issue) • Booting • Protect BIOS changes with password • Disable some bootable media • Cryptographic hard drives? Pros and Cons

  11. Automatic Updates

  12. Remove Unnecessary Support • Software have vulnerabilities, hence more software = more vulnerabilities • Better to not install it at all • Uninstallers sometimes fail to clean all dependency • Disabled software may be enabled by an attacker upon control acquisition • Disabling can be done via msconfig command (Windows), yast or equivalent (Linux) or Control Panel (Windows / Linux)

  13. Configure U/G Authentication • Define user types and privileges • Admin (ideally only temporary) • Normal • Limited • Authentication • Force default password change • Password definition • Password lifespan • Remove or disable old accounts • Allow for remote connections?

  14. Additional Security and Testing • Anti-virus • Firewalls, IDS, IPS • White list • If attackers manage to install a program what will happen? • Run some test cases which attempt to break security (stress testing), good hackers make a lot of money here

  15. Security Testing

  16. Application Security • Configure applications properly • Use encryption when possible as seen earlier • For storing • For transmit (SSH connections) • Limit privileges as with users • Remember what we have said about security in Android, Blackberry, and iPhone • Applications may provide backdoors if not configured properly

  17. Maintenance • Now that system is set, keep it secure • This involves • Monitoring and analyzing logging information • Performing regular backups • Recovering from security compromises • Regular testing of security • Patch, update, and revise critical software

  18. Logging • Keep a record of important events in the computer • Problems • Need to make sure to have enough space • Manual analysis is hard, so these logs should contain a format such that a program (e.g. in Perl) can parse messages

  19. Data Backup • Backup is the act of creating copies of information such that it may be recovered • Archive is to keep these backups for a long period of time in order to meet some legal aspects • Should the backup be kept online or offline? • Online makes easier access, faster recover • Offline is more secure, harder to recover • Why not both?: Users should keep their own offline backups, in case online backup gets removed • Data may be lost accidentally (hardware failures, human mistake) or intentionally

  20. Backups

  21. Linux / Unix Security Periodic Runs • Patch Management • Configure packet manager (cmd) on cron with crontab –e (can be used for updates) • Debian, Ubuntu: apt-get • Red Hat, Fedora, CentOS: up2date • SuSE: yast • Mac OS X: ports • Crontab usage -e  Edit or create crontab file -l   Display your crontab file -r   Remove your crontab file

  22. Linux / Unix Security Configuration • Applications and Services configuration • Global configuration may be found at /etc or in program tree • Local configurations inside of ~/.<dir> • ~ is an alias for $HOME, which is user home directory, equivalent to C:\Users\<username> • Typically located in /home/<username>/.<dir> • Advantage • Can have a program (e.g. Perl) that calculates hashes for configuration files and verify its integrity later

  23. Linux / Unix Security Permissions • Users/Groups permissions • Permissions are not only to files but to process (/proc), memory (/dev), boot (/boot), etc. • Commands • chmod: change file mode • chmod +x jpegconv or chmod a+x jpegconv • chmod g+w jpegconv • chmod o-x jpegconv • chmod u+rwx jpegconv • chmod –c 777 jpegcong • rwx rwx rwx (groups of tree bits) • Each octal represents a group, bit 1 means grant right, bit 0 means remove/reject right • getfacl/setfacl: get/set file access control list • chown: changes file owner • chgrp: changes file group • groups <username>: shows a list of groups to which username or current belong to, equivalent to cat /etc/groups | grep <username> • There are other commands which start with ch and help with other things, use auto-complete feature (tab) for a complete list • Access Control List (more on man setfacl) • setfacl -m u:lisa:r file

  24. Linux / Unix Access Control Lists • [d[efault]:] [u[ser]:]uid [:perms] • Permissions of a named user. Permissions of the file owner if uid is empty. • [d[efault]:] g[roup]:gid [:perms] • Permissions of a named group. Permissions of the owning group if gid is empty. • [d[efault]:] m[ask][:] [:perms] • Effective rights mask • [d[efault]:] o[ther][:] [:perms] • Permissions of others.

  25. Linux / Unix Security Remote Access • Configure firewalls to prevent remote access • Commands: • /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny files • iptables • Filter by protocol • Filter by source/destination • Filter by rule (i.e. in, out, forward) • For consistency should log into /dev/log • openlog() • syslog() • closelog() • logger command • lsof: list open files • lsof | egrep log • ps -efawww | egrep syslog • chroot jail: set temporary a new root directory such that services if they get hijacked do not give access to all the system (system call: chroot)

  26. Linux / Unix Security Testing • Nessus: security scanning and vulnerability testing (like a fuzzer) • Tripwire: builds and check integrity of files (md5 compares) • Nmap: can check for surrounding network services

  27. Windows Security • Use automatic updates specially for • Windows • Adobe Acrobat Reader and Flash Plugin • Java • Users are defined with a Security ID (SID) and information such as passwords may be stored at Security Account Manager (SAM) • System restore • User Account Control to treat users with admin only as admin when required, otherwise as normal (Vista and later)

  28. Windows Registry • Hard to maintain • Easy to access • May use a specific application hiding complex information from administrator • May use regedit to see everything • Useful to have an application that queues and monitors registry changes, such that they need to get approved before proceeding

  29. Other Windows Security • Anti-virus • Anti-spyware • Personal firewall • Encrypting File Systems • Local Security Policy • BitLocker: full disk encryption with AES • More on Control Panel System Security • Microsoft Baseline Security Analyzer • Checks for minimal recommended requirements in a system • Its free • Shavlik NetChk Limited for legacy

  30. Virtualization • Virtualization: defines an isomorphism that maps a virtual guest system to a physical host • Adds another degree of freedom by enabling multiple resource managers and controlled sharing. • Adds a level of indirection • Can virtualize a single resource (DRAM, Disks) or an entire system (machine). • may create one or more virtual objects. • Virtual Machine: Add virtualization layer which transforms the physical machine into the desired virtual architecture.

  31. Virtualization (Some Terms) • Hypervisor/Virtual Machine Monitor: manages physical resource allocation among VMs • Application Virtualization: allow an application written for one environment, to run at others • Java • .NET • Full Virtualization: allows to run a full OS on a machine • Native Virtualization: runs without a host OS • Hosted Virtualization: requires to have an OS running below it

  32. Some Virtual Machines • Oracle VirtualBox • Microsoft Virtual PC (formerly Virtual PC) • VMware • Xen Hypervisor • Parallel Desktop (popular on MAC)

  33. History of Virtualization • 1960’s • 1964 - Birth of virtualization with the IBM CP series which was a test bed for the IBM S/360 system. Provided full hardware virtualization with the ability to run 14 OS instances. • 1965 – IBM begins shipping S/360 systems, the first mass production multi-purpose mainframe. First machine to use virtual memory for ‘infinite’ storage capacity.

  34. History of Virtualization • 1970’s • IBM S/370, more of the same • 1980’s • 1987 - Merge/386 becomes available allowing emulation of Intel 8086 instructions on Intel 80286 & 80386 CPUs. Could run any 8086 coded OS but was typical found running Microsoft MS-DOS.

  35. History of Virtualization • 1990’s • 1997 – Virtual PC released for Macintosh • 1998 – VMware released for Windows • 1999 – Citrix Presentation Server released for Windows • 2001 • Virtual PC released for Windows • VMware Server released (first x86 server VM)

  36. History of Virtualization • 2003 • Xen Hypervisor released (Open Source x86) • MS buys Virtual PC & releases MS Virtual PC 2004 • 2005 • MS releases Virtual Server 2005 (guest machines limited to 32bit, 4GB of RAM, & 1 CPU) • Intel’s VT and AMD’s AMD-V hardware virtualization added to Server and Desktop CPUs

  37. History of Virtualization • 2006 • VMware Server 1.0 released for free • MS Virtual Server 2005 R2 released for free • MS Virtual PC 2007 released for free • MS buys and releases SoftGrid (now called MS App-V) • Amazon begins developing the first true Cloud • 2007 • VMware Server 2.0 released • VirtualBox Open Source released • Citrix acquires Xen

  38. History of Virtualization • 2008 • VMware buys Thinstall and releases ThinApp • VMware 6.5 released, first DX9 hardware virtualization • MS releases Hyper-V for Windows 2008 (guest machines gain 64bit support, 64 GB of RAM, & 4 CPUs) • First public Cloud systems come online 38

  39. History of Virtualization • 2009 • MS releases Hyper-V R2 for Windows 2008 R2 (guest machines gain CPU pooling) • 2010 • MS releases Hyper-V R2 SP1 (guest machines gain RAM pooling and DX9 hardware support) • ARM announces A15 with hardware virtualization

  40. Processor Performance • CPU Speeds • 1965 - IBM S/360 – 0.1 MIPS (133,300 IPS) • 1972 - IBM S/370 – 1.0 MIPS (1,000,000 IPS) • 2000 - 1 GHz Intel P3 – 3,000 MIPS (3,000,000,000 IPS) • 2009 - Qualcomm Snapdragon A8 – 2,000 MIPS • 2010 - Intel Core i7 – 4 x 147,600 MIPS • 2010 - Qualcomm Snapdragon MP – 2 x 2,500 MIPS • 2011 - Qualcomm/Samsung/nVidia A9 MP – 2 x 5,000 MIPS • 2012 – ARM Cortex A15 MP – 4 x 25,000 MIPS

  41. Uses Implement multiprogramming: multiple single-user virtual machine instances. IBM System/370 used this approach to provide time-sharing behavior with each VM running a simple single-user OS (Conversational Monitor System or CMS) Multiple single-application VMs: Dedicates a VM for each application program, uses a general purpose OS. Multiple secure environments: VM creates sandbox to isolate environments and security domains. Manage application environment: Install core applications in one VM then create per user VMs for them to load their own apps. Mixed-OS environments: Single hardware platform can support multiple Operating System environments. Legacy applications: Dedicate VMs for legacy applications. Multiplatform applications development: One hardware platform with VMs providing emulation of alternative hardware.

  42. Uses New system transition: Staged or gradual migration (opposite of legacy support). System software development: For testing or developing new system software in a protected environment. Operating system training: Run OS instance in a VM so parameter or configuration adjustments do not affect rest of system Help desk support: Use VM to replicate user environment Operating system instrumentation: Can monitor hardware access or low level software abstractions Event monitoring: execution traces, machine state dumps and replaying of traces System encapsulation: Check pointing system state and restarting on same or different machine.

  43. Virtualization Security Issues • Guest OS isolation: to have no connection among running OS and the Hypervisor • Keep the integrity of the hypervisor • Adds layers to the OS security

  44. Virtualization Security Guidelines • Plan the security • Secure all elements of full virtualization • OS • Hypervisor • Virtualized infrastructure • Restrict and protect administrator access

  45. Hypervisor Security • Like OS security • Install from private network, or clean media • Configure for automatic updates • Disable unused services and hardware • Restrict access to hypervisor • If there is remote access do it on a separate network (e.g. VLAN, VPN, etc.)

  46. Virtualized Infrastructure Security • Consider monitoring hardware activity • Search for VMM which allow to allocate hardware properly, such these activities on the guess OS may be monitored

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