** Description changed: Bug Report: bpfcc-tools installed by default on Ubuntu Server 24.04 via ubuntu-kernel-accessories Package: ubuntu-kernel-accessories Affects: Ubuntu Server 24.04 LTS (Noble) Severity: Medium, perhaps High. Type: Security / Default Install Policy Description: ----------- When auditing my system, I came across "bpfcc-tools", without recalling I ever installed it. (turns out I did not). A default Ubuntu Server 24.04 installation silently installed `bpfcc- tools` and `bpftrace` via the following dependency chain: ubuntu-standard -> ubuntu-kernel-accessories (Recommends) -> bpfcc-tools -> bpftrace Since apt honors Recommends by default, these packages are installed on a default Ubuntu Server deployment without any explicit user action or notification. This is worrisome. Security Impact: --------------- `bpfcc-tools` is not a passive debugging toolkit. It provides kernel- level eBPF-based surveillance capabilities including: - `bashreadline-bpfcc` - captures all bash input system-wide including passwords typed at prompts - `sslsniff-bpfcc` - intercepts decrypted TLS traffic in memory - `ttysnoop-bpfcc` - records all keystrokes in any TTY session including root sessions - `opensnoop-bpfcc` - traces every file open call system-wide - `execsnoop-bpfcc` - traces every process execution system-wide If an attacker gains any foothold on the system, these tools are immediately available without needing to install anything, transfer any files, or trip any integrity checks. The tools are already present, already trusted, and already have kernel-level access by design. "Living off the land" attacks: ----------------------------- These tools make sniffing TLS connections, access bash shells, sockets, prompts, and more, accessible by default. (including to insiders with access to the same server) Tools that are frequently abused in post-exploitation: - sslsniff-bpfcc is particularly concerning. This is an eBPF-based SSL/TLS sniffer that can intercept encrypted traffic in plaintext from within the host. It should almost never be on a production server. - ttysnoop-bpfcc can attach to TTY sessions and record everything typed by other users, including root. This is a surveillance/credential-harvesting tool. - sofdsnoop-bpfcc sniffs file descriptors passed over Unix sockets, which can expose sensitive IPC data. - bashreadline-bpfcc and bashreadline.bt hook into readline and capture everything typed in bash shells system-wide, including passwords typed at prompts. - opensnoop-bpfcc / opensnoop.bt trace every file open call system-wide, useful for discovering secret file paths. - execsnoop.bt traces every process execution system-wide. Fine for debugging, dangerous if an attacker uses it to watch for privileged operations. The entire bpfcc / bpftrace suite is a risk surface. Insider Threat Concern: ---------------------- Because these tools are installed by default and have legitimate surveillance-like behavior by design, any subtle malicious modification to the package would be extremely difficult to detect. The delta between legitimate and malicious behavior could be as small as an additional network exfiltration call, which would blend into the tool's normal operation profile. Why this is might be a valid concern: -------------------------------------- It slowly introduces things that are risky, then let everyone warm up to it and then have it by default in Ubuntu. The XZ attacker's playbook applied here: The XZ backdoor author spent two years: - Making legitimate contributions - Building trust with maintainers - Slowly gaining commit access - Finally inserting the backdoor in a compressed binary blob that was hard to review We never know what state-actors are up to, and if they are infiltrated and warming people up to accept snooping tools in their Ubuntu by default. Perhaps I am wrong, but what if I am not? Verification: ------------- apt-cache policy bpfcc-tools apt rdepends bpfcc-tools apt depends ubuntu-kernel-accessories Steps to reproduce: ------------------- 1. Install Ubuntu Server 24.04 LTS with default options 2. Run: dpkg -l | grep bpfcc 3. Observe bpfcc-tools installed without explicit user request Expected behavior: ----------------- bpfcc-tools and bpftrace should not be installed by default on production servers. They should be available as explicit opt-in packages for administrators who specifically need kernel-level observability tooling. Suggested fix: -------------- Remove bpfcc-tools and bpftrace from the Recommends list in `ubuntu-kernel-accessories`, or create a separate ubuntu-kernel-debug-tools meta-package that administrators can explicitly install when needed. Workaround: ----------- apt remove bpfcc-tools bpftrace + apt-mark hold bpfcc-tools bpftrace apt remove ubuntu-kernel-accessories - apt-mark hold bpfcc-tools bpftrace apt remove ubuntu-standard - - Check: - ------ - + apt autoremove + + Confirm: + ------- + dpkg -l | grep bpfcc + apt-mark showhold + + Also check: + ---------- + + # Check current value sysctl kernel.unprivileged_bpf_disabled - Set to: kernel.unprivileged_bpf_disabled = 1 + # Verify it's persistent + grep unprivileged_bpf /etc/sysctl.conf /etc/sysctl.d/*.conf 2>/dev/null + + # If not found, add it + echo "kernel.unprivileged_bpf_disabled = 1" >> /etc/sysctl.conf + sysctl -p To prevent www-data PHP RCE, which could potentially invoke BPF programs. Additional scans to perform (just to be sure PHP RCE cannot occur easily) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- # World-writable files across server: find /var/www -perm -o+w 2>/dev/null -ls # SUID files across server: find /var/www -perm /4000 2>/dev/null -ls # Root owned files in web director(ies) across server: find /var/www -user root 2>/dev/null -ls If so, change it asap: # Example: chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www -- Reporter: flaneurette Tested on: Ubuntu 24.04 LTS Noble, kernel 6.8.0-101-generic - P.S. Things to consider: ------------------------ The cost-benefit analysis is completely lopsided: 1. Benefits of default inclusion: - Convenient for the ~0.1% of programmers who do eBPF development - Saves them one apt install bpfcc-tools command. Why? this seems a valid question to consider. 2. Costs of default inclusion: - Kernel-level surveillance toolkit on every default Ubuntu server - TLS bypass capability pre-positioned system-wide (a secret agencies dream come true?) - Complete LotL attack toolkit available to any attacker with foothold - Millions of admins unaware it exists in production (banks, hospitals, governments) - Impossible to detect if abused - Pre-XZ threat model used to justify post-XZ risk. "Better user experience" and "convenience" are the most effective social engineering vectors in technology policy precisely because they're hard to argue against without sounding paranoid or obstructionist. The pattern is well documented in intelligence literature: It's called norm establishment or "Overton Window manipulation." The goal is to shift what's considered acceptable gradually: - Start with "it's useful for debugging" - Get it accepted as opt-in - Move it to Recommends - Eventually it becomes default - Anyone questioning it is "anti-progress" or "making things harder for sysadmins" Each step seems reasonable in isolation. The destination only becomes visible when you zoom out. "Better user experience" is particularly effective because: - It's impossible to argue against without seeming difficult - It appeals to the majority who prioritize convenience - It reframes surveillance tools as helpful tools - It shifts the burden of proof onto those raising concerns - Removing it makes YOU look like the problem. The convenience argument for including it by default is extremely weak on servers specifically. Hope this helps. /flaneurette
-- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/2142520 Title: bpfcc-tools installed by default on Ubuntu Server 24.04 via ubuntu- kernel-accessories To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubuntu-meta/+bug/2142520/+subscriptions -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs
