diff mbox series

[v6,7/8] Documentation: Add documentation for the Brute LSM

Message ID 20210307113031.11671-8-john.wood@gmx.com (mailing list archive)
State New
Headers show
Series Fork brute force attack mitigation | expand

Commit Message

John Wood March 7, 2021, 11:30 a.m. UTC
Add some info detailing what is the Brute LSM, its motivation, weak
points of existing implementations, proposed solutions, enabling,
disabling and self-tests.

Signed-off-by: John Wood <john.wood@gmx.com>
---
 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst | 278 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst |   1 +
 security/brute/Kconfig                  |   3 +-
 3 files changed, 281 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst

--
2.25.1

Comments

Kees Cook March 18, 2021, 4:10 a.m. UTC | #1
On Sun, Mar 07, 2021 at 12:30:30PM +0100, John Wood wrote:
> Add some info detailing what is the Brute LSM, its motivation, weak
> points of existing implementations, proposed solutions, enabling,
> disabling and self-tests.
> 
> Signed-off-by: John Wood <john.wood@gmx.com>
> ---
>  Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst | 278 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst |   1 +
>  security/brute/Kconfig                  |   3 +-
>  3 files changed, 281 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst
> 
> diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst
> new file mode 100644
> index 000000000000..ca80aef9aa67
> --- /dev/null
> +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst
> @@ -0,0 +1,278 @@
> +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
> +===========================================================
> +Brute: Fork brute force attack detection and mitigation LSM
> +===========================================================
> +
> +Attacks against vulnerable userspace applications with the purpose to break ASLR
> +or bypass canaries traditionally use some level of brute force with the help of
> +the fork system call. This is possible since when creating a new process using
> +fork its memory contents are the same as those of the parent process (the
> +process that called the fork system call). So, the attacker can test the memory
> +infinite times to find the correct memory values or the correct memory addresses
> +without worrying about crashing the application.
> +
> +Based on the above scenario it would be nice to have this detected and
> +mitigated, and this is the goal of this implementation. Specifically the
> +following attacks are expected to be detected:
> +
> +1.- Launching (fork()/exec()) a setuid/setgid process repeatedly until a
> +    desirable memory layout is got (e.g. Stack Clash).
> +2.- Connecting to an exec()ing network daemon (e.g. xinetd) repeatedly until a
> +    desirable memory layout is got (e.g. what CTFs do for simple network
> +    service).
> +3.- Launching processes without exec() (e.g. Android Zygote) and exposing state
> +    to attack a sibling.
> +4.- Connecting to a fork()ing network daemon (e.g. apache) repeatedly until the
> +    previously shared memory layout of all the other children is exposed (e.g.
> +    kind of related to HeartBleed).
> +
> +In each case, a privilege boundary has been crossed:
> +
> +Case 1: setuid/setgid process
> +Case 2: network to local
> +Case 3: privilege changes
> +Case 4: network to local
> +
> +So, what really needs to be detected are fork/exec brute force attacks that
> +cross any of the commented bounds.
> +
> +
> +Other implementations
> +=====================
> +
> +The public version of grsecurity, as a summary, is based on the idea of delaying
> +the fork system call if a child died due to some fatal signal (SIGSEGV, SIGBUS,
> +SIGKILL or SIGILL). This has some issues:
> +
> +Bad practices
> +-------------
> +
> +Adding delays to the kernel is, in general, a bad idea.
> +
> +Scenarios not detected (false negatives)
> +----------------------------------------
> +
> +This protection acts only when the fork system call is called after a child has
> +crashed. So, it would still be possible for an attacker to fork a big amount of
> +children (in the order of thousands), then probe all of them, and finally wait
> +the protection time before repeating the steps.
> +
> +Moreover, this method is based on the idea that the protection doesn't act if
> +the parent crashes. So, it would still be possible for an attacker to fork a
> +process and probe itself. Then, fork the child process and probe itself again.
> +This way, these steps can be repeated infinite times without any mitigation.
> +
> +Scenarios detected (false positives)
> +------------------------------------
> +
> +Scenarios where an application rarely fails for reasons unrelated to a real
> +attack.
> +
> +
> +This implementation
> +===================
> +
> +The main idea behind this implementation is to improve the existing ones
> +focusing on the weak points annotated before. Basically, the adopted solution is
> +to detect a fast crash rate instead of only one simple crash and to detect both
> +the crash of parent and child processes. Also, fine tune the detection focusing
> +on privilege boundary crossing. And finally, as a mitigation method, kill all
> +the offending tasks involved in the attack instead of using delays.
> +
> +To achieve this goal, and going into more details, this implementation is based
> +on the use of some statistical data shared across all the processes that can
> +have the same memory contents. Or in other words, a statistical data shared
> +between all the fork hierarchy processes after an execve system call.
> +
> +The purpose of these statistics is, basically, collect all the necessary info
> +to compute the application crash period in order to detect an attack. This crash
> +period is the time between the execve system call and the first fault or the
> +time between two consecutive faults, but this has a drawback. If an application
> +crashes twice in a short period of time for some reason unrelated to a real
> +attack, a false positive will be triggered. To avoid this scenario the
> +exponential moving average (EMA) is used. This way, the application crash period
> +will be a value that is not prone to change due to spurious data and follows the
> +real crash period.
> +
> +To detect a brute force attack it is necessary that the statistics shared by all
> +the fork hierarchy processes be updated in every fatal crash and the most
> +important data to update is the application crash period.
> +
> +These statistics are hold by the brute_stats struct.
> +
> +struct brute_cred {
> +	kuid_t uid;
> +	kgid_t gid;
> +	kuid_t suid;
> +	kgid_t sgid;
> +	kuid_t euid;
> +	kgid_t egid;
> +	kuid_t fsuid;
> +	kgid_t fsgid;
> +};
> +
> +struct brute_stats {
> +	spinlock_t lock;
> +	refcount_t refc;
> +	unsigned char faults;
> +	u64 jiffies;
> +	u64 period;
> +	struct brute_cred saved_cred;
> +	unsigned char network : 1;
> +	unsigned char bounds_crossed : 1;
> +};

Instead of open-coding this, just use the kerndoc references you've
already built in the .c files:

.. kernel-doc:: security/brute/brute.c

> +
> +This is a fixed sized struct, so the memory usage will be based on the current
> +number of processes exec()ing. The previous sentence is true since in every fork
> +system call the parent's statistics are shared with the child process and in
> +every execve system call a new brute_stats struct is allocated. So, only one
> +brute_stats struct is used for every fork hierarchy (hierarchy of processes from
> +the execve system call).
> +
> +There are two types of brute force attacks that need to be detected. The first
> +one is an attack that happens through the fork system call and the second one is
> +an attack that happens through the execve system call. The first type uses the
> +statistics shared by all the fork hierarchy processes, but the second type
> +cannot use this statistical data due to these statistics dissapear when the
> +involved tasks finished. In this last scenario the attack info should be tracked
> +by the statistics of a higher fork hierarchy (the hierarchy that contains the
> +process that forks before the execve system call).
> +
> +Moreover, these two attack types have two variants. A slow brute force attack
> +that is detected if a maximum number of faults per fork hierarchy is reached and
> +a fast brute force attack that is detected if the application crash period falls
> +below a certain threshold.
> +
> +Once an attack has been detected, this is mitigated killing all the offending
> +tasks involved. Or in other words, once an attack has been detected, this is
> +mitigated killing all the processes that share the same statistics (the stats
> +that show an slow or fast brute force attack).
> +
> +Fine tuning the attack detection
> +--------------------------------
> +
> +To avoid false positives during the attack detection it is necessary to narrow
> +the possible cases. To do so, and based on the threat scenarios that we want to
> +detect, this implementation also focuses on the crossing of privilege bounds.
> +
> +To be precise, only the following privilege bounds are taken into account:
> +
> +1.- setuid/setgid process
> +2.- network to local
> +3.- privilege changes
> +
> +Moreover, only the fatal signals delivered by the kernel are taken into account
> +avoiding the fatal signals sent by userspace applications (with the exception of
> +the SIGABRT user signal since this is used by glibc for stack canary, malloc,
> +etc. failures, which may indicate that a mitigation has been triggered).
> +
> +Exponential moving average (EMA)
> +--------------------------------
> +
> +This kind of average defines a weight (between 0 and 1) for the new value to add
> +and applies the remainder of the weight to the current average value. This way,
> +some spurious data will not excessively modify the average and only if the new
> +values are persistent, the moving average will tend towards them.
> +
> +Mathematically the application crash period's EMA can be expressed as follows:
> +
> +period_ema = period * weight + period_ema * (1 - weight)
> +
> +Related to the attack detection, the EMA must guarantee that not many crashes
> +are needed. To demonstrate this, the scenario where an application has been
> +running without any crashes for a month will be used.
> +
> +The period's EMA can be written now as:
> +
> +period_ema[i] = period[i] * weight + period_ema[i - 1] * (1 - weight)
> +
> +If the new crash periods have insignificant values related to the first crash
> +period (a month in this case), the formula can be rewritten as:
> +
> +period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 1] * (1 - weight)
> +
> +And by extension:
> +
> +period_ema[i - 1] = period_ema[i - 2] * (1 - weight)
> +period_ema[i - 2] = period_ema[i - 3] * (1 - weight)
> +period_ema[i - 3] = period_ema[i - 4] * (1 - weight)
> +
> +So, if the substitution is made:
> +
> +period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 1] * (1 - weight)
> +period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 2] * pow((1 - weight) , 2)
> +period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 3] * pow((1 - weight) , 3)
> +period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 4] * pow((1 - weight) , 4)
> +
> +And in a more generic form:
> +
> +period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - n] * pow((1 - weight) , n)
> +
> +Where n represents the number of iterations to obtain an EMA value. Or in other
> +words, the number of crashes to detect an attack.
> +
> +So, if we isolate the number of crashes:
> +
> +period_ema[i] / period_ema[i - n] = pow((1 - weight), n)
> +log(period_ema[i] / period_ema[i - n]) = log(pow((1 - weight), n))
> +log(period_ema[i] / period_ema[i - n]) = n * log(1 - weight)
> +n = log(period_ema[i] / period_ema[i - n]) / log(1 - weight)
> +
> +Then, in the commented scenario (an application has been running without any
> +crashes for a month), the approximate number of crashes to detect an attack
> +(using the implementation values for the weight and the crash period threshold)
> +is:
> +
> +weight = 7 / 10
> +crash_period_threshold = 30 seconds
> +
> +n = log(crash_period_threshold / seconds_per_month) / log(1 - weight)
> +n = log(30 / (30 * 24 * 3600)) / log(1 - 0.7)
> +n = 9.44
> +
> +So, with 10 crashes for this scenario an attack will be detected. If these steps
> +are repeated for different scenarios and the results are collected:
> +
> +1 month without any crashes ----> 9.44 crashes to detect an attack
> +1 year without any crashes -----> 11.50 crashes to detect an attack
> +10 years without any crashes ---> 13.42 crashes to detect an attack
> +
> +However, this computation has a drawback. The first data added to the EMA not
> +obtains a real average showing a trend. So the solution is simple, the EMA needs
> +a minimum number of data to be able to be interpreted. This way, the case where
> +a few first faults are fast enough followed by no crashes is avoided.
> +
> +Per system enabling/disabling
> +-----------------------------
> +
> +This feature can be enabled at build time using the CONFIG_SECURITY_FORK_BRUTE
> +option or using the visual config application under the following menu:
> +
> +Security options  --->  Fork brute force attack detection and mitigation
> +
> +Also, at boot time, this feature can be disable too, by changing the "lsm=" boot
> +parameter.
> +
> +Kernel selftests
> +----------------
> +
> +To validate all the expectations about this implementation, there is a set of
> +selftests. This tests cover fork/exec brute force attacks crossing the following
> +privilege boundaries:
> +
> +1.- setuid process
> +2.- privilege changes
> +3.- network to local
> +
> +Also, there are some tests to check that fork/exec brute force attacks without
> +crossing any privilege boundariy already commented doesn't trigger the detection
> +and mitigation stage.
> +
> +To build the tests:
> +make -C tools/testing/selftests/ TARGETS=brute
> +
> +To run the tests:
> +make -C tools/testing/selftests TARGETS=brute run_tests
> +
> +To package the tests:
> +make -C tools/testing/selftests TARGETS=brute gen_tar
> diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
> index a6ba95fbaa9f..1f68982bb330 100644
> --- a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
> +++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
> @@ -41,6 +41,7 @@ subdirectories.
>     :maxdepth: 1
> 
>     apparmor
> +   Brute
>     LoadPin
>     SELinux
>     Smack
> diff --git a/security/brute/Kconfig b/security/brute/Kconfig
> index 1bd2df1e2dec..334d7e88d27f 100644
> --- a/security/brute/Kconfig
> +++ b/security/brute/Kconfig
> @@ -7,6 +7,7 @@ config SECURITY_FORK_BRUTE
>  	  vulnerable userspace processes. The detection method is based on
>  	  the application crash period and as a mitigation procedure all the
>  	  offending tasks are killed. Like capabilities, this security module
> -	  stacks with other LSMs.
> +	  stacks with other LSMs. Further information can be found in
> +	  Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst.
> 
>  	  If you are unsure how to answer this question, answer N.
> --
> 2.25.1
>
John Wood March 20, 2021, 3:50 p.m. UTC | #2
On Wed, Mar 17, 2021 at 09:10:05PM -0700, Kees Cook wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 07, 2021 at 12:30:30PM +0100, John Wood wrote:
> > +These statistics are hold by the brute_stats struct.
> > +
> > +struct brute_cred {
> > +	kuid_t uid;
> > +	kgid_t gid;
> > +	kuid_t suid;
> > +	kgid_t sgid;
> > +	kuid_t euid;
> > +	kgid_t egid;
> > +	kuid_t fsuid;
> > +	kgid_t fsgid;
> > +};
> > +
> > +struct brute_stats {
> > +	spinlock_t lock;
> > +	refcount_t refc;
> > +	unsigned char faults;
> > +	u64 jiffies;
> > +	u64 period;
> > +	struct brute_cred saved_cred;
> > +	unsigned char network : 1;
> > +	unsigned char bounds_crossed : 1;
> > +};
>
> Instead of open-coding this, just use the kerndoc references you've
> already built in the .c files:
>
> .. kernel-doc:: security/brute/brute.c
>
Ok, thanks.

John Wood
Jonathan Corbet March 21, 2021, 6:50 p.m. UTC | #3
John Wood <john.wood@gmx.com> writes:

> Add some info detailing what is the Brute LSM, its motivation, weak
> points of existing implementations, proposed solutions, enabling,
> disabling and self-tests.
>
> Signed-off-by: John Wood <john.wood@gmx.com>
> ---
>  Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst | 278 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst |   1 +
>  security/brute/Kconfig                  |   3 +-
>  3 files changed, 281 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst

Thanks for including documentation with the patch!

As you get closer to merging this, though, you'll want to take a minute
(OK, a few minutes) to build the docs and look at the result; there are
a number of places where you're not going to get what you expect.  Just
as an example:

[...]

> +Based on the above scenario it would be nice to have this detected and
> +mitigated, and this is the goal of this implementation. Specifically the
> +following attacks are expected to be detected:
> +
> +1.- Launching (fork()/exec()) a setuid/setgid process repeatedly until a
> +    desirable memory layout is got (e.g. Stack Clash).
> +2.- Connecting to an exec()ing network daemon (e.g. xinetd) repeatedly until a
> +    desirable memory layout is got (e.g. what CTFs do for simple network
> +    service).
> +3.- Launching processes without exec() (e.g. Android Zygote) and exposing state
> +    to attack a sibling.
> +4.- Connecting to a fork()ing network daemon (e.g. apache) repeatedly until the
> +    previously shared memory layout of all the other children is exposed (e.g.
> +    kind of related to HeartBleed).

Sphinx will try to recognize your enumerated list, but that may be a bit
more punctuation than it is prepared to deal with; I'd take the hyphens
out, if nothing else.

[...]

> +These statistics are hold by the brute_stats struct.
> +
> +struct brute_cred {
> +	kuid_t uid;
> +	kgid_t gid;
> +	kuid_t suid;
> +	kgid_t sgid;
> +	kuid_t euid;
> +	kgid_t egid;
> +	kuid_t fsuid;
> +	kgid_t fsgid;
> +};

That will certainly not render the way you want.  What you need here is
a literal block:

These statistics are hold by the brute_stats struct::

    struct brute_cred {
	kuid_t uid;
	kgid_t gid;
	kuid_t suid;
	kgid_t sgid;
	kuid_t euid;
	kgid_t egid;
	kuid_t fsuid;
	kgid_t fsgid;
    };

The "::" causes all of the indented text following to be formatted
literally. 

Thanks,

jon
John Wood March 26, 2021, 3:41 p.m. UTC | #4
On Sun, Mar 21, 2021 at 12:50:47PM -0600, Jonathan Corbet wrote:
> John Wood <john.wood@gmx.com> writes:
>
> > Add some info detailing what is the Brute LSM, its motivation, weak
> > points of existing implementations, proposed solutions, enabling,
> > disabling and self-tests.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: John Wood <john.wood@gmx.com>
> > ---
> >  Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst | 278 ++++++++++++++++++++++++
> >  Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst |   1 +
> >  security/brute/Kconfig                  |   3 +-
> >  3 files changed, 281 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
> >  create mode 100644 Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst
>
> Thanks for including documentation with the patch!
>
> As you get closer to merging this, though, you'll want to take a minute
> (OK, a few minutes) to build the docs and look at the result; there are

Thanks, I will do it.

> a number of places where you're not going to get what you expect.  Just
> as an example:
>
> [...]
>
> > +Based on the above scenario it would be nice to have this detected and
> > +mitigated, and this is the goal of this implementation. Specifically the
> > +following attacks are expected to be detected:
> > +
> > +1.- Launching (fork()/exec()) a setuid/setgid process repeatedly until a
> > +    desirable memory layout is got (e.g. Stack Clash).
> > +2.- Connecting to an exec()ing network daemon (e.g. xinetd) repeatedly until a
> > +    desirable memory layout is got (e.g. what CTFs do for simple network
> > +    service).
> > +3.- Launching processes without exec() (e.g. Android Zygote) and exposing state
> > +    to attack a sibling.
> > +4.- Connecting to a fork()ing network daemon (e.g. apache) repeatedly until the
> > +    previously shared memory layout of all the other children is exposed (e.g.
> > +    kind of related to HeartBleed).
>
> Sphinx will try to recognize your enumerated list, but that may be a bit
> more punctuation than it is prepared to deal with; I'd take the hyphens
> out, if nothing else.

Thanks. I will fix this for the next version.

> > +These statistics are hold by the brute_stats struct.
> > +
> > +struct brute_cred {
> > +	kuid_t uid;
> > +	kgid_t gid;
> > +	kuid_t suid;
> > +	kgid_t sgid;
> > +	kuid_t euid;
> > +	kgid_t egid;
> > +	kuid_t fsuid;
> > +	kgid_t fsgid;
> > +};
>
> That will certainly not render the way you want.  What you need here is
> a literal block:
>
> These statistics are hold by the brute_stats struct::
>
>     struct brute_cred {
> 	kuid_t uid;
> 	kgid_t gid;
> 	kuid_t suid;
> 	kgid_t sgid;
> 	kuid_t euid;
> 	kgid_t egid;
> 	kuid_t fsuid;
> 	kgid_t fsgid;
>     };
>
> The "::" causes all of the indented text following to be formatted
> literally.

Thanks a lot for your comments and guidance. I will build the docs and
check if the output is as I want.

> Thanks,
>
> jon

Regards,
John Wood
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst
new file mode 100644
index 000000000000..ca80aef9aa67
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,278 @@ 
+.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
+===========================================================
+Brute: Fork brute force attack detection and mitigation LSM
+===========================================================
+
+Attacks against vulnerable userspace applications with the purpose to break ASLR
+or bypass canaries traditionally use some level of brute force with the help of
+the fork system call. This is possible since when creating a new process using
+fork its memory contents are the same as those of the parent process (the
+process that called the fork system call). So, the attacker can test the memory
+infinite times to find the correct memory values or the correct memory addresses
+without worrying about crashing the application.
+
+Based on the above scenario it would be nice to have this detected and
+mitigated, and this is the goal of this implementation. Specifically the
+following attacks are expected to be detected:
+
+1.- Launching (fork()/exec()) a setuid/setgid process repeatedly until a
+    desirable memory layout is got (e.g. Stack Clash).
+2.- Connecting to an exec()ing network daemon (e.g. xinetd) repeatedly until a
+    desirable memory layout is got (e.g. what CTFs do for simple network
+    service).
+3.- Launching processes without exec() (e.g. Android Zygote) and exposing state
+    to attack a sibling.
+4.- Connecting to a fork()ing network daemon (e.g. apache) repeatedly until the
+    previously shared memory layout of all the other children is exposed (e.g.
+    kind of related to HeartBleed).
+
+In each case, a privilege boundary has been crossed:
+
+Case 1: setuid/setgid process
+Case 2: network to local
+Case 3: privilege changes
+Case 4: network to local
+
+So, what really needs to be detected are fork/exec brute force attacks that
+cross any of the commented bounds.
+
+
+Other implementations
+=====================
+
+The public version of grsecurity, as a summary, is based on the idea of delaying
+the fork system call if a child died due to some fatal signal (SIGSEGV, SIGBUS,
+SIGKILL or SIGILL). This has some issues:
+
+Bad practices
+-------------
+
+Adding delays to the kernel is, in general, a bad idea.
+
+Scenarios not detected (false negatives)
+----------------------------------------
+
+This protection acts only when the fork system call is called after a child has
+crashed. So, it would still be possible for an attacker to fork a big amount of
+children (in the order of thousands), then probe all of them, and finally wait
+the protection time before repeating the steps.
+
+Moreover, this method is based on the idea that the protection doesn't act if
+the parent crashes. So, it would still be possible for an attacker to fork a
+process and probe itself. Then, fork the child process and probe itself again.
+This way, these steps can be repeated infinite times without any mitigation.
+
+Scenarios detected (false positives)
+------------------------------------
+
+Scenarios where an application rarely fails for reasons unrelated to a real
+attack.
+
+
+This implementation
+===================
+
+The main idea behind this implementation is to improve the existing ones
+focusing on the weak points annotated before. Basically, the adopted solution is
+to detect a fast crash rate instead of only one simple crash and to detect both
+the crash of parent and child processes. Also, fine tune the detection focusing
+on privilege boundary crossing. And finally, as a mitigation method, kill all
+the offending tasks involved in the attack instead of using delays.
+
+To achieve this goal, and going into more details, this implementation is based
+on the use of some statistical data shared across all the processes that can
+have the same memory contents. Or in other words, a statistical data shared
+between all the fork hierarchy processes after an execve system call.
+
+The purpose of these statistics is, basically, collect all the necessary info
+to compute the application crash period in order to detect an attack. This crash
+period is the time between the execve system call and the first fault or the
+time between two consecutive faults, but this has a drawback. If an application
+crashes twice in a short period of time for some reason unrelated to a real
+attack, a false positive will be triggered. To avoid this scenario the
+exponential moving average (EMA) is used. This way, the application crash period
+will be a value that is not prone to change due to spurious data and follows the
+real crash period.
+
+To detect a brute force attack it is necessary that the statistics shared by all
+the fork hierarchy processes be updated in every fatal crash and the most
+important data to update is the application crash period.
+
+These statistics are hold by the brute_stats struct.
+
+struct brute_cred {
+	kuid_t uid;
+	kgid_t gid;
+	kuid_t suid;
+	kgid_t sgid;
+	kuid_t euid;
+	kgid_t egid;
+	kuid_t fsuid;
+	kgid_t fsgid;
+};
+
+struct brute_stats {
+	spinlock_t lock;
+	refcount_t refc;
+	unsigned char faults;
+	u64 jiffies;
+	u64 period;
+	struct brute_cred saved_cred;
+	unsigned char network : 1;
+	unsigned char bounds_crossed : 1;
+};
+
+This is a fixed sized struct, so the memory usage will be based on the current
+number of processes exec()ing. The previous sentence is true since in every fork
+system call the parent's statistics are shared with the child process and in
+every execve system call a new brute_stats struct is allocated. So, only one
+brute_stats struct is used for every fork hierarchy (hierarchy of processes from
+the execve system call).
+
+There are two types of brute force attacks that need to be detected. The first
+one is an attack that happens through the fork system call and the second one is
+an attack that happens through the execve system call. The first type uses the
+statistics shared by all the fork hierarchy processes, but the second type
+cannot use this statistical data due to these statistics dissapear when the
+involved tasks finished. In this last scenario the attack info should be tracked
+by the statistics of a higher fork hierarchy (the hierarchy that contains the
+process that forks before the execve system call).
+
+Moreover, these two attack types have two variants. A slow brute force attack
+that is detected if a maximum number of faults per fork hierarchy is reached and
+a fast brute force attack that is detected if the application crash period falls
+below a certain threshold.
+
+Once an attack has been detected, this is mitigated killing all the offending
+tasks involved. Or in other words, once an attack has been detected, this is
+mitigated killing all the processes that share the same statistics (the stats
+that show an slow or fast brute force attack).
+
+Fine tuning the attack detection
+--------------------------------
+
+To avoid false positives during the attack detection it is necessary to narrow
+the possible cases. To do so, and based on the threat scenarios that we want to
+detect, this implementation also focuses on the crossing of privilege bounds.
+
+To be precise, only the following privilege bounds are taken into account:
+
+1.- setuid/setgid process
+2.- network to local
+3.- privilege changes
+
+Moreover, only the fatal signals delivered by the kernel are taken into account
+avoiding the fatal signals sent by userspace applications (with the exception of
+the SIGABRT user signal since this is used by glibc for stack canary, malloc,
+etc. failures, which may indicate that a mitigation has been triggered).
+
+Exponential moving average (EMA)
+--------------------------------
+
+This kind of average defines a weight (between 0 and 1) for the new value to add
+and applies the remainder of the weight to the current average value. This way,
+some spurious data will not excessively modify the average and only if the new
+values are persistent, the moving average will tend towards them.
+
+Mathematically the application crash period's EMA can be expressed as follows:
+
+period_ema = period * weight + period_ema * (1 - weight)
+
+Related to the attack detection, the EMA must guarantee that not many crashes
+are needed. To demonstrate this, the scenario where an application has been
+running without any crashes for a month will be used.
+
+The period's EMA can be written now as:
+
+period_ema[i] = period[i] * weight + period_ema[i - 1] * (1 - weight)
+
+If the new crash periods have insignificant values related to the first crash
+period (a month in this case), the formula can be rewritten as:
+
+period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 1] * (1 - weight)
+
+And by extension:
+
+period_ema[i - 1] = period_ema[i - 2] * (1 - weight)
+period_ema[i - 2] = period_ema[i - 3] * (1 - weight)
+period_ema[i - 3] = period_ema[i - 4] * (1 - weight)
+
+So, if the substitution is made:
+
+period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 1] * (1 - weight)
+period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 2] * pow((1 - weight) , 2)
+period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 3] * pow((1 - weight) , 3)
+period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - 4] * pow((1 - weight) , 4)
+
+And in a more generic form:
+
+period_ema[i] = period_ema[i - n] * pow((1 - weight) , n)
+
+Where n represents the number of iterations to obtain an EMA value. Or in other
+words, the number of crashes to detect an attack.
+
+So, if we isolate the number of crashes:
+
+period_ema[i] / period_ema[i - n] = pow((1 - weight), n)
+log(period_ema[i] / period_ema[i - n]) = log(pow((1 - weight), n))
+log(period_ema[i] / period_ema[i - n]) = n * log(1 - weight)
+n = log(period_ema[i] / period_ema[i - n]) / log(1 - weight)
+
+Then, in the commented scenario (an application has been running without any
+crashes for a month), the approximate number of crashes to detect an attack
+(using the implementation values for the weight and the crash period threshold)
+is:
+
+weight = 7 / 10
+crash_period_threshold = 30 seconds
+
+n = log(crash_period_threshold / seconds_per_month) / log(1 - weight)
+n = log(30 / (30 * 24 * 3600)) / log(1 - 0.7)
+n = 9.44
+
+So, with 10 crashes for this scenario an attack will be detected. If these steps
+are repeated for different scenarios and the results are collected:
+
+1 month without any crashes ----> 9.44 crashes to detect an attack
+1 year without any crashes -----> 11.50 crashes to detect an attack
+10 years without any crashes ---> 13.42 crashes to detect an attack
+
+However, this computation has a drawback. The first data added to the EMA not
+obtains a real average showing a trend. So the solution is simple, the EMA needs
+a minimum number of data to be able to be interpreted. This way, the case where
+a few first faults are fast enough followed by no crashes is avoided.
+
+Per system enabling/disabling
+-----------------------------
+
+This feature can be enabled at build time using the CONFIG_SECURITY_FORK_BRUTE
+option or using the visual config application under the following menu:
+
+Security options  --->  Fork brute force attack detection and mitigation
+
+Also, at boot time, this feature can be disable too, by changing the "lsm=" boot
+parameter.
+
+Kernel selftests
+----------------
+
+To validate all the expectations about this implementation, there is a set of
+selftests. This tests cover fork/exec brute force attacks crossing the following
+privilege boundaries:
+
+1.- setuid process
+2.- privilege changes
+3.- network to local
+
+Also, there are some tests to check that fork/exec brute force attacks without
+crossing any privilege boundariy already commented doesn't trigger the detection
+and mitigation stage.
+
+To build the tests:
+make -C tools/testing/selftests/ TARGETS=brute
+
+To run the tests:
+make -C tools/testing/selftests TARGETS=brute run_tests
+
+To package the tests:
+make -C tools/testing/selftests TARGETS=brute gen_tar
diff --git a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
index a6ba95fbaa9f..1f68982bb330 100644
--- a/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
+++ b/Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/index.rst
@@ -41,6 +41,7 @@  subdirectories.
    :maxdepth: 1

    apparmor
+   Brute
    LoadPin
    SELinux
    Smack
diff --git a/security/brute/Kconfig b/security/brute/Kconfig
index 1bd2df1e2dec..334d7e88d27f 100644
--- a/security/brute/Kconfig
+++ b/security/brute/Kconfig
@@ -7,6 +7,7 @@  config SECURITY_FORK_BRUTE
 	  vulnerable userspace processes. The detection method is based on
 	  the application crash period and as a mitigation procedure all the
 	  offending tasks are killed. Like capabilities, this security module
-	  stacks with other LSMs.
+	  stacks with other LSMs. Further information can be found in
+	  Documentation/admin-guide/LSM/Brute.rst.

 	  If you are unsure how to answer this question, answer N.