Awesome
<table> <tr> <td><strong>Package</strong></td> <td> <a href="https://pypi.python.org/pypi/maybe"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/maybe.svg"> </a> <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/os-linux-blue.svg"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/maybe.svg"> </td> </tr> <tr> <td><strong>Tests</strong></td> <td> <a href="https://travis-ci.org/p-e-w/maybe"> <img src="https://travis-ci.org/p-e-w/maybe.svg?branch=master"> </a> <a href="https://coveralls.io/github/p-e-w/maybe?branch=master"> <img src="https://coveralls.io/repos/github/p-e-w/maybe/badge.svg?branch=master"> </a> <a href="https://gemnasium.com/github.com/p-e-w/maybe"> <img src="https://gemnasium.com/badges/github.com/p-e-w/maybe.svg"> </a> </td> </tr> </table>rm -rf pic*
Are you sure? Are you one hundred percent sure?
maybe
...
... allows you to run a command and see what it does to your files without actually doing it! After reviewing the operations listed, you can then decide whether you really want these things to happen or not.
What is this sorcery?!?
maybe
runs processes under the control of ptrace (with the help of the excellent python-ptrace library). When it intercepts a system call that is about to make changes to the file system, it logs that call, and then modifies CPU registers to both redirect the call to an invalid syscall ID (effectively turning it into a no-op) and set the return value of that no-op call to one indicating success of the original call.
As a result, the process believes that everything it is trying to do is actually happening, when in reality nothing is.
That being said, maybe
should :warning: NEVER :warning: be used to run untrusted code on a system you care about! A process running under maybe
can still do serious damage to your system because only a handful of syscalls are blocked. It can also check whether an operation such as deleting a file succeeded using read-only syscalls, and alter its behavior accordingly. Therefore, a rerun without restrictions is not guaranteed to always produce the displayed operations.
Currently, maybe
is best thought of as an (alpha-quality) "what exactly will this command I typed myself do?" tool.
Installation
maybe
runs on Linux :penguin: and requires Python 2.7+/3.3+ :snake:. If you have the pip package manager, all you need to do is run
pip install maybe
either as a superuser or from a virtualenv environment. To develop maybe
, clone the repository and run
pip install -e .
in its main directory to install the package in editable mode.
Usage
maybe [options] command [argument ...]
Positional arguments
Argument | Description |
---|---|
command | the command to run under maybe 's control |
argument ... | argument(s) to pass to command |
Optional arguments
Argument | Description |
---|---|
-a OPERATION ... ,<br>--allow OPERATION ... <br> | allow the command to perform the specified operation(s). all other operations will be denied. possible values for OPERATION are: change_owner , change_permissions , create_directory , create_link , create_write_file , delete , move ; as well as any filter scopes defined by loaded plugins |
-d OPERATION ... ,<br>--deny OPERATION ... | deny the command the specified operation(s). all other operations will be allowed. see --allow for a list of possible values for OPERATION . --allow and --deny cannot be combined |
-p FILE ... ,<br>--plugin FILE ... | load the specified plugin script(s) |
-l , --list-only | list operations without header, indentation and rerun prompt |
--style-output {yes,no,auto} | colorize output using ANSI escape sequences (yes /no ) or automatically decide based on whether stdout is a terminal (auto , default) |
-v , --verbose | if specified once, print every filtered syscall. if specified twice, print every syscall, highlighting filtered syscalls |
--version | show program's version number and exit |
-h , --help | show a help message and exit |
Plugin API
By default, maybe
intercepts and blocks all syscalls that can make permanent modifications to the system. For more specialized syscall filtering needs, maybe
provides a simple yet powerful plugin API. Filter plugins are written in pure Python and use the same interfaces as maybe
's built-in filters.
The public API is composed of the following two members:
maybe.T
A Blessings Terminal
object that can be used to format console output (such as operation
as documented below). Output formatted with this object automatically complies with the --style-output
command line argument.
maybe.register_filter(syscall, filter_function, filter_scope=None)
Add the filter filter_function
to the filter registry. If the filter is enabled (which is the default, but can be altered with the --allow
and --deny
command line arguments), it intercepts all calls to syscall
made by the controlled process. filter_scope
determines the key to be used in conjunction with --allow
and --deny
to enable/disable the filter (multiple filters can share the same key). If filter_scope
is omitted or None
, the last part of the plugin's module name is used.
filter_function
itself must conform to the signature filter_function(process, args)
. process
is a Process
control object that can be used to inspect and manipulate the process, while args
is the list of arguments passed to the syscall in the order in which they appear in the syscall's signature. If an argument represents a (pointer to a) filename, the argument will be of type str
and contain the filename, otherwise it will be of type int
and contain the numerical value of the argument.
When called, filter_function
must return a tuple (operation, return_value)
. operation
can either be a string description of the operation that was prevented by the filter, to be printed after the process terminates, or None
, in which case nothing will be printed. return_value
can either be a numerical value, in which case the syscall invocation will be prevented and the return value received by the caller will be set to that value, or None
, in which case the invocation will be allowed to proceed as normal.
Example
Here, maybe
's plugin API is used to implement an exotic type of access control: Restricting read access based on the content of the file in question. If a file being opened for reading contains the word SECRET, the plugin blocks the open
/openat
syscall and returns an error.
read_secret_file.py
from os import O_WRONLY
from os.path import isfile
from maybe import T, register_filter
def filter_open(path, flags):
if path.startswith("/home/") and isfile(path) and not (flags & O_WRONLY):
with open(path, "r") as f:
if "SECRET" in f.read():
return "%s %s" % (T.red("read secret file"), T.underline(path)), -1
else:
return None, None
else:
return None, None
register_filter("open", lambda process, args:
filter_open(process.full_path(args[0]), args[1]))
register_filter("openat", lambda process, args:
filter_open(process.full_path(args[1], args[0]), args[2]))
Indeed, the plugin works as expected:
[user@localhost]$ maybe --plugin read_secret_file.py --deny read_secret_file -- bash
$ echo "This is a normal file." > file_1
$ echo "This is a SECRET file." > file_2
$ cat file_1
This is a normal file.
$ cat file_2
cat: file_2: Operation not permitted
License
Copyright © 2016-2017 Philipp Emanuel Weidmann (pew@worldwidemann.com)
Released under the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 3