linux/Documentation/admin-guide/perf-security.rst
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   3Perf events and tool security
   4=============================
   5
   6Overview
   7--------
   8
   9Usage of Performance Counters for Linux (perf_events) [1]_ , [2]_ , [3]_
  10can impose a considerable risk of leaking sensitive data accessed by
  11monitored processes. The data leakage is possible both in scenarios of
  12direct usage of perf_events system call API [2]_ and over data files
  13generated by Perf tool user mode utility (Perf) [3]_ , [4]_ . The risk
  14depends on the nature of data that perf_events performance monitoring
  15units (PMU) [2]_ and Perf collect and expose for performance analysis.
  16Collected system and performance data may be split into several
  17categories:
  18
  191. System hardware and software configuration data, for example: a CPU
  20   model and its cache configuration, an amount of available memory and
  21   its topology, used kernel and Perf versions, performance monitoring
  22   setup including experiment time, events configuration, Perf command
  23   line parameters, etc.
  24
  252. User and kernel module paths and their load addresses with sizes,
  26   process and thread names with their PIDs and TIDs, timestamps for
  27   captured hardware and software events.
  28
  293. Content of kernel software counters (e.g., for context switches, page
  30   faults, CPU migrations), architectural hardware performance counters
  31   (PMC) [8]_ and machine specific registers (MSR) [9]_ that provide
  32   execution metrics for various monitored parts of the system (e.g.,
  33   memory controller (IMC), interconnect (QPI/UPI) or peripheral (PCIe)
  34   uncore counters) without direct attribution to any execution context
  35   state.
  36
  374. Content of architectural execution context registers (e.g., RIP, RSP,
  38   RBP on x86_64), process user and kernel space memory addresses and
  39   data, content of various architectural MSRs that capture data from
  40   this category.
  41
  42Data that belong to the fourth category can potentially contain
  43sensitive process data. If PMUs in some monitoring modes capture values
  44of execution context registers or data from process memory then access
  45to such monitoring modes requires to be ordered and secured properly.
  46So, perf_events performance monitoring and observability operations are
  47the subject for security access control management [5]_ .
  48
  49perf_events access control
  50-------------------------------
  51
  52To perform security checks, the Linux implementation splits processes
  53into two categories [6]_ : a) privileged processes (whose effective user
  54ID is 0, referred to as superuser or root), and b) unprivileged
  55processes (whose effective UID is nonzero). Privileged processes bypass
  56all kernel security permission checks so perf_events performance
  57monitoring is fully available to privileged processes without access,
  58scope and resource restrictions.
  59
  60Unprivileged processes are subject to a full security permission check
  61based on the process's credentials [5]_ (usually: effective UID,
  62effective GID, and supplementary group list).
  63
  64Linux divides the privileges traditionally associated with superuser
  65into distinct units, known as capabilities [6]_ , which can be
  66independently enabled and disabled on per-thread basis for processes and
  67files of unprivileged users.
  68
  69Unprivileged processes with enabled CAP_PERFMON capability are treated
  70as privileged processes with respect to perf_events performance
  71monitoring and observability operations, thus, bypass *scope* permissions
  72checks in the kernel. CAP_PERFMON implements the principle of least
  73privilege [13]_ (POSIX 1003.1e: 2.2.2.39) for performance monitoring and
  74observability operations in the kernel and provides a secure approach to
  75performance monitoring and observability in the system.
  76
  77For backward compatibility reasons the access to perf_events monitoring and
  78observability operations is also open for CAP_SYS_ADMIN privileged
  79processes but CAP_SYS_ADMIN usage for secure monitoring and observability
  80use cases is discouraged with respect to the CAP_PERFMON capability.
  81If system audit records [14]_ for a process using perf_events system call
  82API contain denial records of acquiring both CAP_PERFMON and CAP_SYS_ADMIN
  83capabilities then providing the process with CAP_PERFMON capability singly
  84is recommended as the preferred secure approach to resolve double access
  85denial logging related to usage of performance monitoring and observability.
  86
  87Prior Linux v5.9 unprivileged processes using perf_events system call
  88are also subject for PTRACE_MODE_READ_REALCREDS ptrace access mode check
  89[7]_ , whose outcome determines whether monitoring is permitted.
  90So unprivileged processes provided with CAP_SYS_PTRACE capability are
  91effectively permitted to pass the check. Starting from Linux v5.9
  92CAP_SYS_PTRACE capability is not required and CAP_PERFMON is enough to
  93be provided for processes to make performance monitoring and observability
  94operations.
  95
  96Other capabilities being granted to unprivileged processes can
  97effectively enable capturing of additional data required for later
  98performance analysis of monitored processes or a system. For example,
  99CAP_SYSLOG capability permits reading kernel space memory addresses from
 100/proc/kallsyms file.
 101
 102Privileged Perf users groups
 103---------------------------------
 104
 105Mechanisms of capabilities, privileged capability-dumb files [6]_,
 106file system ACLs [10]_ and sudo [15]_ utility can be used to create
 107dedicated groups of privileged Perf users who are permitted to execute
 108performance monitoring and observability without limits. The following
 109steps can be taken to create such groups of privileged Perf users.
 110
 1111. Create perf_users group of privileged Perf users, assign perf_users
 112   group to Perf tool executable and limit access to the executable for
 113   other users in the system who are not in the perf_users group:
 114
 115::
 116
 117   # groupadd perf_users
 118   # ls -alhF
 119   -rwxr-xr-x  2 root root  11M Oct 19 15:12 perf
 120   # chgrp perf_users perf
 121   # ls -alhF
 122   -rwxr-xr-x  2 root perf_users  11M Oct 19 15:12 perf
 123   # chmod o-rwx perf
 124   # ls -alhF
 125   -rwxr-x---  2 root perf_users  11M Oct 19 15:12 perf
 126
 1272. Assign the required capabilities to the Perf tool executable file and
 128   enable members of perf_users group with monitoring and observability
 129   privileges [6]_ :
 130
 131::
 132
 133   # setcap "cap_perfmon,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog=ep" perf
 134   # setcap -v "cap_perfmon,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog=ep" perf
 135   perf: OK
 136   # getcap perf
 137   perf = cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog,cap_perfmon+ep
 138
 139If the libcap [16]_ installed doesn't yet support "cap_perfmon", use "38" instead,
 140i.e.:
 141
 142::
 143
 144   # setcap "38,cap_ipc_lock,cap_sys_ptrace,cap_syslog=ep" perf
 145
 146Note that you may need to have 'cap_ipc_lock' in the mix for tools such as
 147'perf top', alternatively use 'perf top -m N', to reduce the memory that
 148it uses for the perf ring buffer, see the memory allocation section below.
 149
 150Using a libcap without support for CAP_PERFMON will make cap_get_flag(caps, 38,
 151CAP_EFFECTIVE, &val) fail, which will lead the default event to be 'cycles:u',
 152so as a workaround explicitly ask for the 'cycles' event, i.e.:
 153
 154::
 155
 156  # perf top -e cycles
 157
 158To get kernel and user samples with a perf binary with just CAP_PERFMON.
 159
 160As a result, members of perf_users group are capable of conducting
 161performance monitoring and observability by using functionality of the
 162configured Perf tool executable that, when executes, passes perf_events
 163subsystem scope checks.
 164
 165In case Perf tool executable can't be assigned required capabilities (e.g.
 166file system is mounted with nosuid option or extended attributes are
 167not supported by the file system) then creation of the capabilities
 168privileged environment, naturally shell, is possible. The shell provides
 169inherent processes with CAP_PERFMON and other required capabilities so that
 170performance monitoring and observability operations are available in the
 171environment without limits. Access to the environment can be open via sudo
 172utility for members of perf_users group only. In order to create such
 173environment:
 174
 1751. Create shell script that uses capsh utility [16]_ to assign CAP_PERFMON
 176   and other required capabilities into ambient capability set of the shell
 177   process, lock the process security bits after enabling SECBIT_NO_SETUID_FIXUP,
 178   SECBIT_NOROOT and SECBIT_NO_CAP_AMBIENT_RAISE bits and then change
 179   the process identity to sudo caller of the script who should essentially
 180   be a member of perf_users group:
 181
 182::
 183
 184   # ls -alh /usr/local/bin/perf.shell
 185   -rwxr-xr-x. 1 root root 83 Oct 13 23:57 /usr/local/bin/perf.shell
 186   # cat /usr/local/bin/perf.shell
 187   exec /usr/sbin/capsh --iab=^cap_perfmon --secbits=239 --user=$SUDO_USER -- -l
 188
 1892. Extend sudo policy at /etc/sudoers file with a rule for perf_users group:
 190
 191::
 192
 193   # grep perf_users /etc/sudoers
 194   %perf_users    ALL=/usr/local/bin/perf.shell
 195
 1963. Check that members of perf_users group have access to the privileged
 197   shell and have CAP_PERFMON and other required capabilities enabled
 198   in permitted, effective and ambient capability sets of an inherent process:
 199
 200::
 201
 202  $ id
 203  uid=1003(capsh_test) gid=1004(capsh_test) groups=1004(capsh_test),1000(perf_users) context=unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023
 204  $ sudo perf.shell
 205  [sudo] password for capsh_test:
 206  $ grep Cap /proc/self/status
 207  CapInh:        0000004000000000
 208  CapPrm:        0000004000000000
 209  CapEff:        0000004000000000
 210  CapBnd:        000000ffffffffff
 211  CapAmb:        0000004000000000
 212  $ capsh --decode=0000004000000000
 213  0x0000004000000000=cap_perfmon
 214
 215As a result, members of perf_users group have access to the privileged
 216environment where they can use tools employing performance monitoring APIs
 217governed by CAP_PERFMON Linux capability.
 218
 219This specific access control management is only available to superuser
 220or root running processes with CAP_SETPCAP, CAP_SETFCAP [6]_
 221capabilities.
 222
 223Unprivileged users
 224-----------------------------------
 225
 226perf_events *scope* and *access* control for unprivileged processes
 227is governed by perf_event_paranoid [2]_ setting:
 228
 229-1:
 230     Impose no *scope* and *access* restrictions on using perf_events
 231     performance monitoring. Per-user per-cpu perf_event_mlock_kb [2]_
 232     locking limit is ignored when allocating memory buffers for storing
 233     performance data. This is the least secure mode since allowed
 234     monitored *scope* is maximized and no perf_events specific limits
 235     are imposed on *resources* allocated for performance monitoring.
 236
 237>=0:
 238     *scope* includes per-process and system wide performance monitoring
 239     but excludes raw tracepoints and ftrace function tracepoints
 240     monitoring. CPU and system events happened when executing either in
 241     user or in kernel space can be monitored and captured for later
 242     analysis. Per-user per-cpu perf_event_mlock_kb locking limit is
 243     imposed but ignored for unprivileged processes with CAP_IPC_LOCK
 244     [6]_ capability.
 245
 246>=1:
 247     *scope* includes per-process performance monitoring only and
 248     excludes system wide performance monitoring. CPU and system events
 249     happened when executing either in user or in kernel space can be
 250     monitored and captured for later analysis. Per-user per-cpu
 251     perf_event_mlock_kb locking limit is imposed but ignored for
 252     unprivileged processes with CAP_IPC_LOCK capability.
 253
 254>=2:
 255     *scope* includes per-process performance monitoring only. CPU and
 256     system events happened when executing in user space only can be
 257     monitored and captured for later analysis. Per-user per-cpu
 258     perf_event_mlock_kb locking limit is imposed but ignored for
 259     unprivileged processes with CAP_IPC_LOCK capability.
 260
 261Resource control
 262---------------------------------
 263
 264Open file descriptors
 265+++++++++++++++++++++
 266
 267The perf_events system call API [2]_ allocates file descriptors for
 268every configured PMU event. Open file descriptors are a per-process
 269accountable resource governed by the RLIMIT_NOFILE [11]_ limit
 270(ulimit -n), which is usually derived from the login shell process. When
 271configuring Perf collection for a long list of events on a large server
 272system, this limit can be easily hit preventing required monitoring
 273configuration. RLIMIT_NOFILE limit can be increased on per-user basis
 274modifying content of the limits.conf file [12]_ . Ordinarily, a Perf
 275sampling session (perf record) requires an amount of open perf_event
 276file descriptors that is not less than the number of monitored events
 277multiplied by the number of monitored CPUs.
 278
 279Memory allocation
 280+++++++++++++++++
 281
 282The amount of memory available to user processes for capturing
 283performance monitoring data is governed by the perf_event_mlock_kb [2]_
 284setting. This perf_event specific resource setting defines overall
 285per-cpu limits of memory allowed for mapping by the user processes to
 286execute performance monitoring. The setting essentially extends the
 287RLIMIT_MEMLOCK [11]_ limit, but only for memory regions mapped
 288specifically for capturing monitored performance events and related data.
 289
 290For example, if a machine has eight cores and perf_event_mlock_kb limit
 291is set to 516 KiB, then a user process is provided with 516 KiB * 8 =
 2924128 KiB of memory above the RLIMIT_MEMLOCK limit (ulimit -l) for
 293perf_event mmap buffers. In particular, this means that, if the user
 294wants to start two or more performance monitoring processes, the user is
 295required to manually distribute the available 4128 KiB between the
 296monitoring processes, for example, using the --mmap-pages Perf record
 297mode option. Otherwise, the first started performance monitoring process
 298allocates all available 4128 KiB and the other processes will fail to
 299proceed due to the lack of memory.
 300
 301RLIMIT_MEMLOCK and perf_event_mlock_kb resource constraints are ignored
 302for processes with the CAP_IPC_LOCK capability. Thus, perf_events/Perf
 303privileged users can be provided with memory above the constraints for
 304perf_events/Perf performance monitoring purpose by providing the Perf
 305executable with CAP_IPC_LOCK capability.
 306
 307Bibliography
 308------------
 309
 310.. [1] `<https://lwn.net/Articles/337493/>`_
 311.. [2] `<http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/perf_event_open.2.html>`_
 312.. [3] `<http://web.eece.maine.edu/~vweaver/projects/perf_events/>`_
 313.. [4] `<https://perf.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Main_Page>`_
 314.. [5] `<https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/security/credentials.html>`_
 315.. [6] `<http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/capabilities.7.html>`_
 316.. [7] `<http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/ptrace.2.html>`_
 317.. [8] `<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardware_performance_counter>`_
 318.. [9] `<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model-specific_register>`_
 319.. [10] `<http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man5/acl.5.html>`_
 320.. [11] `<http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getrlimit.2.html>`_
 321.. [12] `<http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man5/limits.conf.5.html>`_
 322.. [13] `<https://sites.google.com/site/fullycapable>`_
 323.. [14] `<http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man8/auditd.8.html>`_
 324.. [15] `<https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man8/sudo.8.html>`_
 325.. [16] `<https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/libs/libcap/libcap.git/>`_
 326