SECURELEVEL(7) OpenBSD Reference Manual SECURELEVEL(7)NAMEsecurelevel - securelevel and its effects
DESCRIPTION
The OpenBSD kernel provides four levels of system security:
-1 Permanently insecure mode
- init(8) will not attempt to raise the securelevel
- may only be set with sysctl(8) while the system is insecure
- otherwise identical to securelevel 0
0 Insecure mode
- used during bootstrapping and while the system is single-user
- all devices may be read or written subject to their permissions
- system file flags may be cleared with chflags(2)
1 Secure mode
- default mode when system is multi-user
- securelevel may no longer be lowered except by init
- /dev/mem and /dev/kmem may not be written to
- raw disk devices of mounted file systems are read-only
- system immutable and append-only file flags may not be removed
- kernel modules may not be loaded or unloaded
- the fs.posix.setuid sysctl(8) variable may not be changed
- the net.inet.ip.sourceroute sysctl(8) variable may not be
changed
- the machdep.kbdreset sysctl(8) variable may not be changed
- the ddb.console and ddb.panic sysctl(8) variables may not be
raised
- the machdep.allowaperture sysctl(8) variable may not be raised
- gpioctl(8) may only access GPIO pins configured at system
startup
2 Highly secure mode
- all effects of securelevel 1
- raw disk devices are always read-only whether mounted or not
- settimeofday(2) and clock_settime(2) may not set the time
backwards or close to overflow
- pf(4) filter and NAT rules may not be altered
Securelevel provides convenient means of ``locking down'' a system to a
degree suited to its environment. It is normally set at boot via the
rc.securelevel(8) script, or the superuser may raise securelevel at any
time by modifying the kern.securelevel sysctl(8) variable. However, only
init(8) may lower it once the system has entered secure mode. A kernel
built with option INSECURE in the config file will default to permanently
insecure mode.
Highly secure mode may seem Draconian, but is intended as a last line of
defence should the superuser account be compromised. Its effects
preclude circumvention of file flags by direct modification of a raw disk
device, or erasure of a file system by means of newfs(8). Further, it
can limit the potential damage of a compromised ``firewall'' by
prohibiting the modification of packet filter rules. Preventing the
system clock from being set backwards aids in post-mortem analysis and
helps ensure the integrity of logs. Precision timekeeping is not
affected because the clock may still be slowed.
Because securelevel can be modified with the in-kernel debugger ddb(4), a
convenient means of locking it off (if present) is provided at
securelevels 1 and 2. This is accomplished by setting ddb.console and
ddb.panic to 0 with the sysctl(8) utility.
FILES
/etc/rc.securelevel commands that run before the security level changes
SEE ALSOoptions(4), init(8), rc(8), sysctl(8)HISTORY
The securelevel manual page first appeared in OpenBSD 2.6.
BUGS
The list of securelevel's effects may not be comprehensive.
OpenBSD 4.9 May 9, 2009 OpenBSD 4.9