-
10 votes
-
An iOS zero-click radio proximity exploit odyssey
9 votes -
Inside the Cit0Day breach collection (now loaded into Have I Been Pwned and Pwned Passwords)
9 votes -
Google should rotate their email DKIM keys periodically and publish past secret keys, in order to remove the unintended capability for authenticating years-old emails
16 votes -
Installing and analyzing every package in PyPI to look for malicious activity
6 votes -
Researching the potential of using machine learning to predict random number generation
11 votes -
Chrome will soon have its own dedicated certificate root store
8 votes -
In which a foolish developer tries DevOps: critique my VPS provisioning script!
I'm attempting to provision two mirror staging and production environments for a future SaaS application that we're close to launching as a company, and I'd like to get some feedback on the...
I'm attempting to provision two mirror staging and production environments for a future SaaS application that we're close to launching as a company, and I'd like to get some feedback on the provisioning script I've created that takes a default VPS from our hosting provider, DigitalOcean, and readies it for being a secure hosting environment for our application instance (which runs inside Docker, and persists data to an unrelated managed database).
I'm sticking with a simple infrastructure architecture at the moment: A single VPS which runs both nginx and the application instance inside a containerised docker service as mentioned earlier. There's no load balancers or server duplication at this point. @Emerald_Knight very kindly provided me in the Tildes Discord with some overall guidance about what to aim for when configuring a server (limit damage as best as possible, limit access when an attack occurs)—so I've tried to be thoughtful and integrate that paradigm where possible (disabling root login, etc).
I’m not a DevOps or sysadmin-oriented person by trade—I stick to programming most of the time—but this role falls to me as the technical person in this business; so the last few days has been a lot of reading and readying. I’ll run through the provisioning flow step by step. Oh, and for reference, Ubuntu 20.04 LTS.
First step is self-explanatory.
#!/bin/sh # Name of the user to create and grant privileges to. USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT= sudo apt-get -qq update sudo apt install -qq --yes nginx sudo systemctl restart nginx
Next, create my sudo user, add them to the groups needed, require a password change on first login, then copy across any provided authorised keys from the root user which you can configure to be seeded to the VPS in the DigitalOcean management console.
useradd --create-home --shell "/bin/bash" --groups sudo,www-data "${USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT}" passwd --delete $USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT chage --lastday 0 $USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT HOME_DIR="$(eval echo ~${USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT})" mkdir --parents "${HOME_DIR}/.ssh" cp /root/.ssh/authorized_keys "${HOME_DIR}/.ssh" chmod 700 ~/.ssh chmod 600 ~/.ssh/authorized_keys chown --recursive "${USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT}":"${USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT}" "${HOME_DIR}/.ssh" sudo chmod 775 -R /var/www sudo chown -R $USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT /var/www rm -rf /var/www/html
Installation of docker, and run it as a service, ensure the created user is added to the docker group.
sudo apt-get install -qq --yes \ apt-transport-https \ ca-certificates \ curl \ gnupg-agent \ software-properties-common curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu/gpg | sudo apt-key add - sudo apt-key fingerprint 0EBFCD88 sudo add-apt-repository --yes \ "deb [arch=amd64] https://download.docker.com/linux/ubuntu \ $(lsb_release -cs) \ stable" sudo apt-get -qq update sudo apt install -qq --yes docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io # Only add a group if it does not exist sudo getent group docker || sudo groupadd docker sudo usermod -aG docker $USERNAME_OF_ACCOUNT # Enable docker sudo systemctl enable docker sudo curl -L "https://github.com/docker/compose/releases/download/1.27.4/docker-compose-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m)" -o /usr/local/bin/docker-compose sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-compose sudo ln -s /usr/local/bin/docker-compose /usr/bin/docker-compose docker-compose --version
Disable root logins and any form of password-based authentication by altering
sshd_config
.sed -i '/^PermitRootLogin/s/yes/no/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config sed -i '/^PasswordAuthentication/s/yes/no/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config sed -i '/^ChallengeResponseAuthentication/s/yes/no/' /etc/ssh/sshd_config
Configure the firewall and fail2ban.
sudo ufw default deny incoming sudo ufw default allow outgoing sudo ufw allow ssh sudo ufw allow http sudo ufw allow https sudo ufw reload sudo ufw --force enable && sudo ufw status verbose sudo apt-get -qq install --yes fail2ban sudo systemctl enable fail2ban sudo systemctl start fail2ban
Swapfiles.
sudo fallocate -l 1G /swapfile && ls -lh /swapfile sudo chmod 0600 /swapfile && ls -lh /swapfile sudo mkswap /swapfile sudo swapon /swapfile && sudo swapon --show echo '/swapfile none swap sw 0 0' | sudo tee -a /etc/fstab
Unattended updates, and restart the ssh daemon.
sudo apt install -qq unattended-upgrades sudo systemctl restart ssh
Some questions
You can assume these questions are cost-benefit focused, i.e. is it worth my time to investigate this, versus something else that may have better gains given my limited time.
- Obviously, any critiques of the above provisioning process are appreciated—both on the micro level of criticising particular lines, or zooming out and saying “well why don’t you do this instead…”. I can’t know what I don’t know.
- Is it worth investigating tools such as
ss
orlynis
(https://github.com/CISOfy/lynis) to perform server auditing? I don’t have to meet any compliance requirements at this point. - Do I get any meaningful increase in security by implementing 2FA on login here using google authenticator? As far as I can see, as long as I'm using best practices to actually
ssh
into our boxes, then the likeliest risk profile for unwanted access probably isn’t via the authentication mechanism I use personally to access my servers. - Am I missing anything here? Beyond the provisioning script itself, I adhere to best practices around storing and generating passwords and ssh keys.
Some notes and comments
- Eventually I'll use the hosting provider's API to spin up and spin down VPS's on the fly via a custom management application, which gives me an opportunity to programmatically execute the provisioning script above and run some over pre- and post-provisioning things, like deployment of the application and so forth.
- Usage alerts and monitoring is configured within DigitalOcean's console, and alerts are sent to our business' Slack for me to action as needed. Currently, I’m settling on the following alerts:
- Server CPU utilisation greater than 80% for 5 minutes.
- Server memory usage greater than 80% for 5 minutes.
- I’m also looking at setting up daily fail2ban status alerts if needed.
9 votes -
Hacking Apple for 3 months - 55 vulnerabilities discovered, with $288,500 in bug bounties awarded
10 votes -
Ransomware attack at German hospital leads to death of patient
11 votes -
An exploration of Project Zero Issue 2046, a seemingly unexploitable and simple bug in the V8 JavaScript engine that turns out to be exploitable in a very complex manner
7 votes -
Threat modelling case study: bicycles
7 votes -
Reversing Lyft’s ride history API to analyze 6 years worth of rides
4 votes -
GitLab Support will no longer process MFA resets for free accounts as of August 15th, 2020 - make sure you have a valid backup recovery method set up
14 votes -
Twilio's TaskRouter JavaScript SDK was in a world-writeable S3 bucket, and had what appears to be a precursor to a payment-card skimmer inserted for about 12 hours
10 votes -
Exploiting Bitdefender Antivirus: RCE from any website
13 votes -
How the Nintendo Switch prevents downgrades by irreparably blowing its own fuses
17 votes -
The impending doom of expiring root Certificate Authorities and legacy clients
6 votes -
Critical RCE vulnerabilities in SaltStack result in server breaches for LineageOS, Ghost, DigiCert, and more
15 votes -
Building a secure DNS infrastructure like SecureDNS.eu
5 votes -
Explanation of how a one-line change in the Windows 10 kernel enabled a sandbox escape in Chrome/Edge/Firefox
6 votes -
Multiple vulnerabilities affecting the default Mail application on iOS since at least January 2018, with evidence of being exploited in targeted attacks
10 votes -
Notes on auth token persistence
5 votes -
The main Avast antivirus service contained a custom JavaScript interpreter, enabling wormable pre-auth RCEs. Avast has now disabled the emulator in response to a vulnerability report
13 votes -
Have I Been Pwned is no longer being sold, and Troy Hunt will continue running it independently
29 votes -
Let's Encrypt has issued one billion certificates
12 votes -
Defeating a Laptop's BIOS Password
13 votes -
Security researcher hacks SlickWraps, publishes a disclosure
8 votes -
Dangerous Domain Corp.com Goes Up for Sale
21 votes -
Reverse engineering Blind's API and client side encryption
4 votes -
LPE and RCE in OpenSMTPD (CVE-2020-7247)
6 votes -
Exploiting the Windows CryptoAPI vulnerability
6 votes -
Multiple vulnerabilities discovered in TikTok enabling sending arbitrary links through SMS, exposing private account data, and more
11 votes -
[CVE-2019-14899] Inferring and hijacking VPN-tunneled TCP connections
7 votes -
Email authentication: SPF, DKIM and DMARC out in the wild
8 votes -
Beware of shell globs
9 votes -
Kaspersky vulnerabilities: uninstalling any Chrome extension, tracking users in incognito or different browsers, and controlling functionality with links
9 votes -
Multiple Fortinet products communicate with FortiGuard services while only "encrypting" sensitive user data using XOR with a hardcoded key
9 votes -
Bad Binder: A use-after-free exploit in Binder in the Android kernel that was being exploited in the wild
5 votes -
Explanation and proof-of-concept exploitation of a vulnerability in the "docker cp" command that enabled full container escape and root control of the host
6 votes -
Announcing GitHub Security Lab: securing the world’s code, together
5 votes -
Bytecode Alliance: Building a secure by default, composable future for WebAssembly
9 votes -
The benefits of test-case reduction, and tools that can help do it automatically
3 votes -
Chrome 0-day exploit CVE-2019-13720 used a race condition and a Use-After-Free to install persistent malware on Windows
10 votes -
Certbot usability case study: Making it easier to get HTTPS certificates
12 votes -
Critical security issue identified in iTerm2 as part of Mozilla open source audit
12 votes -
How a double-free bug in WhatsApp for Android could be turned into a remote code execution vulnerability
6 votes -
New DDoS vector observed in the wild leveraging WS-Discovery for amplification, attacks hitting 35 Gbps
11 votes -
If you’re not using SSH certificates you’re doing SSH wrong
9 votes -
A very deep dive into iOS Exploit chains found in the wild
4 votes