xref: /openbsd-src/share/man/man7/securelevel.7 (revision 67d12a8b9b9eac8d9894bb1342c43b46be8ced8b)
1.\"     $OpenBSD: securelevel.7,v 1.15 2004/01/08 10:56:07 jmc Exp $
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3.\" Copyright (c) 2000 Hugh Graham
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26.Dd January 4, 2000
27.Dt SECURELEVEL 7
28.Os
29.Sh NAME
30.Nm securelevel
31.Nd securelevel and its effects
32.Sh SYNOPSIS
33The
34.Ox
35kernel provides four levels of system security:
36.Bl -tag -width flag
37.It \&-1 Em Permanently insecure mode
38.Bl -hyphen -compact
39.It
40.Xr init 8
41will not attempt to raise the securelevel
42.It
43may only be set with
44.Xr sysctl 8
45while the system is insecure
46.It
47otherwise identical to securelevel 0
48.El
49.It \ 0 Em Insecure mode
50.Bl -hyphen -compact
51.It
52used during bootstrapping and while the system is single-user
53.It
54all devices may be read or written subject to their permissions
55.It
56system file flags may be cleared
57.El
58.It \ 1 Em Secure mode
59.Bl -hyphen -compact
60.It
61default mode when system is multi-user
62.It
63securelevel may no longer be lowered except by init
64.It
65.Pa /dev/mem
66and
67.Pa /dev/kmem
68may not be written to
69.It
70raw disk devices of mounted file systems are read-only
71.It
72system immutable and append-only file flags may not be removed
73.It
74kernel modules may not be loaded or unloaded
75.It
76the
77.Va fs.posix.setuid
78.Xr sysctl 8
79variable may not be raised
80.It
81the
82.Va net.inet.ip.sourceroute
83.Xr sysctl 8
84variable may not be raised
85.El
86.It \ 2 Em Highly secure mode
87.Bl -hyphen -compact
88.It
89all effects of securelevel 1
90.It
91raw disk devices are always read-only whether mounted or not
92.It
93.Xr settimeofday 2
94and
95.Xr clock_settime 2
96may not set the time backwards or close to overflow
97.It
98.Xr pfctl 8
99may no longer alter filter or nat rules
100.It
101the
102.Va ddb.console
103and
104.Va ddb.panic
105.Xr sysctl 8
106variables may not be raised
107.El
108.El
109.Sh DESCRIPTION
110Securelevel provides convenient means of
111.Dq locking down
112a system to a degree suited to its environment.
113It is normally set at boot via the
114.Xr rc.securelevel 8
115script, or the superuser may raise securelevel at any time by modifying the
116.Va kern.securelevel
117.Xr sysctl 8
118variable.
119However, only
120.Xr init 8
121may lower it once the system has entered secure mode.
122A kernel built with
123.Cm option INSECURE
124in the config file will default to permanently insecure mode.
125.Pp
126Highly secure mode may seem Draconian, but is intended as a last line of
127defence should the superuser account be compromised.
128Its effects preclude
129circumvention of file flags by direct modification of a raw disk device,
130or erasure of a file system by means of
131.Xr newfs 8 .
132Further, it can limit the potential damage of a compromised
133.Dq firewall
134by prohibiting the modification of packet filter rules.
135Preventing
136the system clock from being set backwards aids in post-mortem analysis
137and helps ensure the integrity of logs.
138Precision timekeeping is not
139affected because the clock may still be slowed.
140.Pp
141Because securelevel can be modified with the in-kernel debugger
142.Xr ddb 4 ,
143a convenient means of locking it off (if present) is provided
144on highly secure systems.
145This is accomplished by setting
146.Va ddb.console
147and
148.Va ddb.panic
149to 0 with the
150.Xr sysctl 8
151utility.
152.Sh FILES
153.Bl -tag -width /etc/rc.securelevel -compact
154.It Pa /etc/rc.securelevel
155commands that run before the security level changes
156.El
157.Sh SEE ALSO
158.Xr chflags 2 ,
159.Xr settimeofday 2 ,
160.Xr mem 4 ,
161.Xr options 4 ,
162.Xr init 8 ,
163.Xr rc 8 ,
164.Xr sysctl 8
165.Sh HISTORY
166The
167.Nm
168manual page first appeared in
169.Ox 2.6 .
170.Sh BUGS
171The list of securelevel's effects may not be comprehensive.
172