sepgsql
 
  sepgsql
 
 
  sepgsql> is a loadable module that supports label-based
  mandatory access control (MAC) based on SELinux> security
  policy.
 
 
   
     The current implementation has significant limitations, and does not
     enforce mandatory access control for all actions.  See
     .
   
 
 
  Overview
  
   This module integrates with SELinux> to provide an
   additional layer of security checking above and beyond what is normally
   provided by PostgreSQL.  From the perspective of
   SELinux>, this module allows
   PostgreSQL to function as a user-space object
   manager.  Each table or function access initiated by a DML query will be
   checked against the system security policy.  This check is in addition to
   the usual SQL permissions checking performed by
   PostgreSQL.
  
  
   SELinux access control decisions are made using
   security labels, which are represented by strings such as
   system_u:object_r:sepgsql_table_t:s0>.  Each access control
   decision involves two labels: the label of the subject attempting to
   perform the action, and the label of the object on which the operation is
   to be performed.  Since these labels can be applied to any sort of object,
   access control decisions for objects stored within the database can be
   (and, with this module, are) subjected to the same general criteria used
   for objects of any other type, such as files.  This design is intended to
   allow a centralized security policy to protect information assets
   independent of the particulars of how those assets are stored.
  
  
   The  statement allows assignment of
   a security label to a database object.
  
 
 
  Installation
  
    sepgsql> can only be used on Linux
    2.6.28 or higher with SELinux enabled.
    It is not available on any other platform.  You will also need
    libselinux> 2.0.93 or higher and
    selinux-policy> 3.9.13 or higher (although some
    distributions may backport the necessary rules into older policy
    versions).
  
  
   The sestatus> command allows you to check the status of
   SELinux.  A typical display is:
$ sestatus
SELinux status:                 enabled
SELinuxfs mount:                /selinux
Current mode:                   enforcing
Mode from config file:          enforcing
Policy version:                 24
Policy from config file:        targeted
   If SELinux> is disabled or not installed, you must set
   that product up first before installing this module.
  
  
   To build this module, include the option --with-selinux> in
   your PostgreSQL configure> command.  Be sure that the
   libselinux-devel> RPM is installed at build time.
  
  
   To use this module, you must include sepgsql>
   in the  parameter in
   postgresql.conf>.  The module will not function correctly
   if loaded in any other manner.  Once the module is loaded, you
   should execute sepgsql.sql in each database.
   This will install functions needed for security label management, and
   assign initial security labels.
  
  
   Here is an example showing how to initialize a fresh database cluster
   with sepgsql> functions and security labels installed.
   Adjust the paths shown as appropriate for your installation:
  
$ export PGDATA=/path/to/data/directory
$ initdb
$ vi $PGDATA/postgresql.conf
  change
    #shared_preload_libraries = ''                # (change requires restart)
  to
    shared_preload_libraries = 'sepgsql'          # (change requires restart)
$ for DBNAME in template0 template1 postgres; do
    postgres --single -F -c exit_on_error=true $DBNAME \
      </usr/local/pgsql/share/contrib/sepgsql.sql >/dev/null
  done
  
   Please note that you may see some or all of the following notifications
   depending on the particular versions you have of
   libselinux> and selinux-policy>:
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/sepgsql_contexts:  line 33 has invalid object type db_blobs
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/sepgsql_contexts:  line 36 has invalid object type db_language
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/sepgsql_contexts:  line 37 has invalid object type db_language
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/sepgsql_contexts:  line 38 has invalid object type db_language
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/sepgsql_contexts:  line 39 has invalid object type db_language
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/sepgsql_contexts:  line 40 has invalid object type db_language
   These messages are harmless and should be ignored.
  
  
   If the installation process completes without error, you can now start the
   server normally.
  
 
 
  Regression Tests
  
   Due to the nature of SELinux, running the
   regression tests for sepgsql> requires several extra
   configuration steps, some of which must be done as root.
   The regression tests will not be run by an ordinary
   make check> or make installcheck> command; you must
   set up the configuration and then invoke the test script manually.
   The tests must be run in the contrib/sepgsql> directory
   of a configured PostgreSQL build tree.  Although they require a build tree,
   the tests are designed to be executed against an installed server,
   that is they are comparable to make installcheck> not
   make check>.
  
  
   First, set up sepgsql in a working database
   according to the instructions in .
   Note that the current operating system user must be able to connect to the
   database as superuser without password authentication.
  
  
   Second, build and install the policy package for the regression test.
   The sepgsql-regtest> policy is a special purpose policy package
   which provides a set of rules to be allowed during the regression tests.
   It should be built from the policy source file
   sepgsql-regtest.te>, which is done using
   make with a Makefile supplied by SELinux.
   You will need to locate the appropriate
   Makefile on your system; the path shown below is only an example.
   Once built, install this policy package using the
   semodule> command, which loads supplied policy packages
   into the kernel.  If the package is correctly installed,
   semodule> -l> should list sepgsql-regtest as an
   available policy package:
  
$ cd .../contrib/sepgsql
$ make -f /usr/share/selinux/devel/Makefile
$ sudo semodule -u sepgsql-regtest.pp
$ sudo semodule -l | grep sepgsql
sepgsql-regtest 1.03
  
   Third, turn on sepgsql_regression_test_mode>.
   We don't enable all the rules in sepgsql-regtest>
   by default, for your system's safety.
   The sepgsql_regression_test_mode parameter enables
   the rules needed to launch the regression tests.
   It can be turned on using the setsebool> command:
  
$ sudo setsebool sepgsql_regression_test_mode on
$ getsebool sepgsql_regression_test_mode
sepgsql_regression_test_mode --> on
  
   Fourth, verify your shell is operating in the unconfined_t>
   domain:
  
$ id -Z
unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023
  
   See  for details on adjusting your
   working domain, if necessary.
  
  
   Finally, run the regression test script:
  
$ ./test_sepgsql
  
   This script will attempt to verify that you have done all the configuration
   steps correctly, and then it will run the regression tests for the
   sepgsql> module.
  
  
   After completing the tests, it's recommended you disable
   the sepgsql_regression_test_mode parameter:
  
$ sudo setsebool sepgsql_regression_test_mode off
  
   You might prefer to remove the sepgsql-regtest> policy
   entirely:
  
$ sudo semodule -r sepgsql-regtest
 
 
  GUC Parameters
  
   
    sepgsql.permissive> (boolean)
    
     sepgsql.permissive> configuration parameter
    
    
     
      This parameter enables sepgsql> to function
      in permissive mode, regardless of the system setting.
      The default is off.
      This parameter can only be set in the postgresql.conf>
      file or on the server command line.
     
     
      When this parameter is on, sepgsql> functions
      in permissive mode, even if SELinux in general is working in enforcing
      mode.  This parameter is primarily useful for testing purposes.
     
    
   
   
    sepgsql.debug_audit> (boolean>)>
    
     sepgsql.debug_audit> configuration parameter>
    
    
     
      This parameter enables the printing of audit messages regardless of
      the system policy settings.
      The default is off, which means that messages will be printed according
      to the system settings.
     
     
      The security policy of SELinux> also has rules to
      control whether or not particular accesses are logged.
      By default, access violations are logged, but allowed
      accesses are not.
     
     
      This parameter forces all possible logging to be turned on, regardless
      of the system policy.
     
    
   
  
 
 
  Features
  
   Controlled Object Classes
   
    The security model of SELinux> describes all the access
    control rules as relationships between a subject entity (typically,
    a client of the database) and an object entity (such as a database
    object), each of which is
    identified by a security label.  If access to an unlabelled object is
    attempted, the object is treated as if it were assigned the label
    unlabeled_t>.
   
   
    Currently, sepgsql allows security labels to be
    assigned to schemas, tables, columns, sequences, views, and functions.
    When sepgsql is in use, security labels are
    automatically assigned to supported database objects at creation time.
    This label is called a default security label, and is decided according
    to the system security policy, which takes as input the creator's label
    and the label assigned to the new object's parent object.
   
   
    A new database object basically inherits the security label of the parent
    object, except when the security policy has special rules known as
    type-transition rules, in which case a different label may be applied.
    For schemas, the parent object is the current database; for tables,
    sequences, views, and functions, it is the containing schema; for columns,
    it is the containing table.
   
  
  
   DML Permissions
   
    For tables, db_table:select>, db_table:insert>,
    db_table:update> or db_table:delete> is
    checked for all the referenced target tables depending on the kind of
    statement;
    in addition, db_table:select> is also checked for
    all the tables that contain the columns referenced in the
    WHERE> or RETURNING> clause, as a data source
    of UPDATE>, and so on.  For example, consider:
UPDATE t1 SET x = 2, y = md5sum(y) WHERE z = 100;
    In this case we must have db_table:select> in addition to
    db_table:update>, because t1.a> is referenced
    within the WHERE> clause.  Column-level permissions will also be
    checked for each referenced column.
   
   
    For columns, db_column:select> is checked on
    not only the columns being read using SELECT>, but those being
    referenced in other DML statements.
    Of course, it also checks db_column:update> or
    db_column:insert> on columns being modified by
    UPDATE> or INSERT>.
   
   
UPDATE t1 SET x = 2, y = md5sum(y) WHERE z = 100;
    In this case, it checks db_column:update> on the column
    t1.x> being updated, db_column:{select update}>
    on the column t1.y> being updated and referenced, and
    db_column:select> on the column t1.z>, since that is
    only referenced in the WHERE> clause.
    db_table:{select update}> will also be checked
    at the table level.
   
   
    For sequences, db_sequence:get_value> is checked when we
    reference a sequence object using SELECT>; however, note that we
    do not currently check permissions on execution of corresponding functions
    such as lastval()>.
   
   
    For views, db_view:expand> will be checked, then any other
    required permissions will be checked on the objects being
    expanded from the view, individually.
   
   
    For functions, db_procedure:{execute}> is defined, but is not
    checked in this version.
   
   
    The client must be allowed to access all referenced tables and
    columns, even if they originated from views which were then expanded,
    so that we apply consistent access control rules independent of the manner
    in which the table contents are referenced.
   
   
    The default database privilege system allows database superusers to
    modify system catalogs using DML commands, and reference or modify
    toast tables.  These operations are prohibited when
    sepgsql> is enabled.
   
  
  
   DDL Permissions
   
    When  is executed, setattr>
    and relabelfrom> will be checked on the object being relabeled
    with its old security label, then relabelto> with the supplied
    new security label.
   
   
    In the case where multiple label providers are installed and the user tries
    to set a security label, but it is not managed by SELinux>,
    only setattr> should be checked here.
    This is currently not done due to implementation restrictions.
   
  
  
   Trusted Procedures
   
    Trusted procedures are similar to security definer functions or set-uid
    commands. SELinux> provides a feature to allow trusted
    code to run using a security label different from that of the client,
    generally for the purpose of providing highly controlled access to
    sensitive data (e.g. rows might be omitted, or the precision of stored
    values might be reduced).  Whether or not a function acts as a trusted
    procedure is controlled by its security label and the operating system
    security policy.  For example:
   
postgres=# CREATE TABLE customer (
               cid     int primary key,
               cname   text,
               credit  text
           );
CREATE TABLE
postgres=# SECURITY LABEL ON COLUMN customer.credit
               IS 'system_u:object_r:sepgsql_secret_table_t:s0';
SECURITY LABEL
postgres=# CREATE FUNCTION show_credit(int) RETURNS text
             AS 'SELECT regexp_replace(credit, ''-[0-9]+$'', ''-xxxx'', ''g'')
                        FROM customer WHERE cid = $1'
           LANGUAGE sql;
CREATE FUNCTION
postgres=# SECURITY LABEL ON FUNCTION show_credit(int)
               IS 'system_u:object_r:sepgsql_trusted_proc_exec_t:s0';
SECURITY LABEL
   
    The above operations should be performed by an administrative user.
   
postgres=# SELECT * FROM customer;
ERROR:  SELinux: security policy violation
postgres=# SELECT cid, cname, show_credit(cid) FROM customer;
 cid | cname  |     show_credit
-----+--------+---------------------
   1 | taro   | 1111-2222-3333-xxxx
   2 | hanako | 5555-6666-7777-xxxx
(2 rows)
   
    In this case, a regular user cannot reference customer.credit>
    directly, but a trusted procedure show_credit> allows him
    to print the credit card numbers of customers with some of the digits
    masked out.
   
  
  
   Miscellaneous
   
    We reject the  command across the board, because
    any module loaded could easily circumvent security policy enforcement.
   
  
 
 
  Limitations
  
   
    Data Definition Language (DDL) Permissions
    
     
      Due to implementation restrictions, DDL permissions are not checked.
     
    
   
   
    Data Control Language (DCL) Permissions
    
     
      Due to implementation restrictions, DCL permissions are not checked.
     
    
   
   
    Row-level access control
    
     
      PostgreSQL> does not support row-level access; therefore,
      sepgsql does not support it either.
     
    
   
   
    Covert channels
    
     
      sepgsql> does not try to hide the existence of
      a certain object, even if the user is not allowed to reference it.
      For example, we can infer the existence of an invisible object as
      a result of primary key conflicts, foreign key violations, and so on,
      even if we cannot obtain the contents of the object.  The existence
      of a top secret table cannot be hidden; we only hope to conceal its
      contents.
     
    
   
  
 
 
  External Resources
  
   
    SE-PostgreSQL Introduction
    
     
      This wiki page provides a brief overview, security design, architecture,
      administration and upcoming features.
     
    
   
   
    Fedora SELinux User Guide
    
     
      This document provides a wide spectrum of knowledge to administer
      SELinux> on your systems.
      It focuses primarily on Fedora, but is not limited to Fedora.
     
    
   
   
    Fedora SELinux FAQ
    
     
      This document answers frequently asked questions about
      SELinux.
      It focuses primarily on Fedora, but is not limited to Fedora.
     
    
   
  
 
 
  Author
  
   KaiGai Kohei kaigai@ak.jp.nec.com