Capability-based security

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Capability-based security is a concept in the design of secure computing systems. A capability (known in some systems as a key) is a communicable, unforgable token of authority. It refers to a value that references an object along with an associated set of access rights. A user program on a capability-based operating system must use a capability to access an object. Capability-based security refers to the principle of designing user programs such that they directly share capabilities with each other according to the principle of least privilege, and the operating system infrastructure necessary to make such transactions efficient and secure.

Although most operating systems implement a facility which resembles capabilities, they typically do not provide enough support to allow for the exchange of capabilities among possibly mutually untrusting entities to be the primary means of granting and distributing access rights throughout the system. A capability-based system, in contrast, is designed with that goal in mind.

Capabilities as discussed on this page should not be confused with POSIX 1e/2c "Capabilities". The latter are coarse-grained privileges that cannot be transferred between processes.

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[edit] Capabilities and capability-based security

Capabilities achieve their objective of improving system security by being used in place of forgeable references. A forgeable reference (for example, a path name) identifies an object, but does not specify which access rights are appropriate for that object and the user program which holds that reference. Consequently, any attempt to access the referenced object must be validated by the operating system, typically via the use of an access control list (ACL). In contrast, in a pure capability-based system, the mere fact that a user program possesses that capability entitles it to use the referenced object in accordance with the rights that are specified by that capability. In theory, a pure capability-based system removes the need for any access control list or similar mechanism by giving all entities all and only the capabilities they will actually need.

A capability is typically implemented as a privileged data structure that consists of a section that specifies access rights, and a section that uniquely identifies the object to be accessed. In practice, it is used much like a file descriptor in a traditional operating system, but to access every object on the system. Capabilities are typically stored by the operating system in a list, with some mechanism in place to prevent the program from directly modifying the contents of the capability (so as to forge access rights or change the object it points to).

Programs possessing capabilities can perform functions on them, such as passing them on to other programs, converting them to a less-privileged version, or deleting them. The operating system must ensure that only specific operations can occur to the capabilities in the system, in order to maintain the integrity of the security policy.

[edit] Introduction to capability-based security

(The following introduction assumes some basic knowledge of Unix systems.)

A capability is defined to be a protected object reference which, by virtue of its possession by a user process, grants that process the capability (hence the name) to interact with an object in certain ways. Those ways might include reading data associated with an object, modifying the object, executing the data in the object as a process, and other conceivable access rights. The capability logically consists of a reference that uniquely identifies a particular object and a set of one or more of these rights.

Suppose that, in a user process's memory space, there exists the following string:

    /etc/passwd

Although this uniquely identifies an object on the system, it does not specify access rights and hence is not a capability. Suppose there is instead the following two values:

    /etc/passwd
    O_RDWR

This identifies an object along with a set of access rights. It, however, is still not a capability because the user process's possession of these values says nothing about whether that access would actually be legitimate.

Now suppose that the user program successfully executes the following statement:

    int fd = open("/etc/passwd", O_RDWR);

The variable fd now contains the index of a file descriptor in the process's file descriptor table. This file descriptor is a capability. Its existence in the process's file descriptor table is sufficient to know that the process does indeed have legitimate access to the object. A key feature of this arrangement is that the file descriptor table is in kernel memory and cannot be directly manipulated by the user program.

[edit] Sharing of capabilities between processes

In traditional operating systems, programs often communicate with each other and with storage using references like those in the first two examples. Path names are often passed as command-line parameters, sent via sockets, and stored on disk. These references are not capabilities, and must be validated before they can be used. In these systems, a central question is "on whose authority is a given reference to be evaluated?" This becomes a critical issue especially for processes which must act on behalf of two different authority-bearing entities. They become susceptible to a programming error known as the Confused deputy problem, very frequently resulting in a security hole.

In a capability-based system, the capabilities themselves are passed between processes and storage using a mechanism that is known by the operating system to maintain the integrity of those capabilities.

Although many operating systems implement facilities very similar to capabilities through the use of file descriptors or file handles — for example, in BSD UNIX, file descriptors can be discarded (closed), inherited by child processes, and even sent to other processes via sockets — there are several obstacles that prevent all of the benefits of a pure capability-based system from being realized in a traditional operating system environment. Chief among these obstacles is the fact that entities which might hold capabilities (such as processes and files) cannot be made persistent in such a way that maintains the integrity of the secure information that a capability represents. The operating system cannot trust a user program to read back a capability and not tamper with the object reference or the access rights. Consequently, when a program wishes to regain access to an object that is referenced on disk, the operating system must have some way of validating that access request, and an access control list or similar mechanism is mandated.

One novel approach to solving this problem involves the use of an orthogonally persistent operating system. (This was realised in the Flex machine. See Ten15). In such a system, there is no need for entities to be discarded and their capabilities be invalidated, and hence require an ACL-like mechanism to restore those capabilities at a later time. The operating system maintains the integrity and security of the capabilities contained within all storage, both volatile and nonvolatile, at all times; in part by performing all serialization tasks by itself, rather than requiring user programs to do so, as is the case in most operating systems. Because user programs are relieved of this responsibility, there is no need to trust them to reproduce only legal capabilities, nor to validate requests for access using an access control mechanism.

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