| Linux 2.4.2 Secure Attention Key (SAK) handling |
| 18 March 2001, Andrew Morton |
| |
| An operating system's Secure Attention Key is a security tool which is |
| provided as protection against trojan password capturing programs. It |
| is an undefeatable way of killing all programs which could be |
| masquerading as login applications. Users need to be taught to enter |
| this key sequence before they log in to the system. |
| |
| From the PC keyboard, Linux has two similar but different ways of |
| providing SAK. One is the ALT-SYSRQ-K sequence. You shouldn't use |
| this sequence. It is only available if the kernel was compiled with |
| sysrq support. |
| |
| The proper way of generating a SAK is to define the key sequence using |
| `loadkeys'. This will work whether or not sysrq support is compiled |
| into the kernel. |
| |
| SAK works correctly when the keyboard is in raw mode. This means that |
| once defined, SAK will kill a running X server. If the system is in |
| run level 5, the X server will restart. This is what you want to |
| happen. |
| |
| What key sequence should you use? Well, CTRL-ALT-DEL is used to reboot |
| the machine. CTRL-ALT-BACKSPACE is magical to the X server. We'll |
| choose CTRL-ALT-PAUSE. |
| |
| In your rc.sysinit (or rc.local) file, add the command |
| |
| echo "control alt keycode 101 = SAK" | /bin/loadkeys |
| |
| And that's it! Only the superuser may reprogram the SAK key. |
| |
| |
| NOTES |
| ===== |
| |
| 1: Linux SAK is said to be not a "true SAK" as is required by |
| systems which implement C2 level security. This author does not |
| know why. |
| |
| |
| 2: On the PC keyboard, SAK kills all applications which have |
| /dev/console opened. |
| |
| Unfortunately this includes a number of things which you don't |
| actually want killed. This is because these applications are |
| incorrectly holding /dev/console open. Be sure to complain to your |
| Linux distributor about this! |
| |
| You can identify processes which will be killed by SAK with the |
| command |
| |
| # ls -l /proc/[0-9]*/fd/* | grep console |
| l-wx------ 1 root root 64 Mar 18 00:46 /proc/579/fd/0 -> /dev/console |
| |
| Then: |
| |
| # ps aux|grep 579 |
| root 579 0.0 0.1 1088 436 ? S 00:43 0:00 gpm -t ps/2 |
| |
| So `gpm' will be killed by SAK. This is a bug in gpm. It should |
| be closing standard input. You can work around this by finding the |
| initscript which launches gpm and changing it thusly: |
| |
| Old: |
| |
| daemon gpm |
| |
| New: |
| |
| daemon gpm < /dev/null |
| |
| Vixie cron also seems to have this problem, and needs the same treatment. |
| |
| Also, one prominent Linux distribution has the following three |
| lines in its rc.sysinit and rc scripts: |
| |
| exec 3<&0 |
| exec 4>&1 |
| exec 5>&2 |
| |
| These commands cause *all* daemons which are launched by the |
| initscripts to have file descriptors 3, 4 and 5 attached to |
| /dev/console. So SAK kills them all. A workaround is to simply |
| delete these lines, but this may cause system management |
| applications to malfunction - test everything well. |
| |