Me: What browser do you use?
Other: Google Chrome.
Me: Why is that?
Other: Oh, it's so much faster.
Me: Oh, you saw that awesome JSNES, huh? (http://benfirshman.com/projects/jsnes/)
It's a sobering reminder that users -- and even security experts -- are often making decisions on things like speed and stability. It was similar with vsftpd. I set out to build the most secure FTP server, but usage took off unexpectedly because of the speed and scalability.
Julien talked about his clever Linux sandboxing trick that is used in the Chromium Linux port. One component of the sandbox is an empty
chroot()
jail, but setting up such a jail is a pain on many levels. The problems and solutions are as follows:chroot()
needs root privilege. Therefore, a tiny setuid wrapper binary has been created to execute sandboxed renderer processes. Some people will incorrectly bleat and moan about any new setuid binary, but the irony is that is it required to make your browser more secure. Also, a setuid binary can be made small and careful. It will only execute a specific trusted binary (the Chromium renderer) inside an empty jail.exec()
ing something from inside an empty jail is hard, because your view of the filesystem is empty. You could include copies of the needed dynamic libraries or a static executable but both of these are a maintenance and packaging nightmare. This is where Julien's clever tweak comes in. By using theclone()
flagCLONE_FS
, and sharing the FS structure between a trusted / privileged thread and theexec()
ed renderer, the trusted thread can callchroot()
and have it affect the unprivileged, untrusted renderer process post-exec. Neat, huh?- Other tricks such as
CLONE_NEWPID
andCLONE_NEWNET
are used or will be used to prevent sending of signals from a compromised renderer, and network access.
Attacking this point from another angle: any complicated software will inevitably have bugs, and a certain subset of bugs are security bugs. Note that any web browser is certainly a complicated piece of software :) Therefore, any web browser is always going to be having security bugs. And indeed, IE, Opera, Firefox, Safari and Chrome are issuing regular security updates. For some reason, the media reports on each and every patch as if it is a surprising or relevant event. The real question, of course, is what you do in the face of the above realization. The Chromium story is two powerful mitigations: sandboxing to reduce severity away from Critical, and a very fast and agile update system to close any window of risk.