Summary
If a server.ca
file is present in LXD_DIR
at LXD start up, LXD is in "PKI mode". In this mode, all clients must have certificates that have been signed by the CA.
The LXD configuration option core.trust_ca_certificates
defaults to false
. This means that although the client certificate has been signed by the CA, LXD will additionally add the certificate to the trust store and verify it via mTLS.
When a restricted certificate is added to the trust store in this mode, it's restrictions are not honoured, and the client has full access to LXD.
Details
When authorization was refactored to allow for generalisation (at the time for TLS, RBAC, and OpenFGA, see #12313), PKI mode did not account for the core.trust_ca_certificates
configuration option. When this option is enabled, all CA-signed client certificates are given full access to LXD. This cherry-pick from Incus was added to LXD to fix the issue.
The cherry-pick fixed the immediate issue and allowed full access to LXD for CA-signed client certificates when core.trust_ca_certificates
is enabled, but did not consider the behaviour of LXD when core.trust_ca_certificates
is disabled.
When core.trust_ca_certificates
is false, restrictions that are applied to a certificate should be honoured. Instead, they are being ignored due to the presence of a server.ca
file in LXD_DIR
.
PoC
# Install/initialize LXD
$ snap install lxd --channel 5.21/stable
$ lxd init --auto
$ lxc config set core.https_address=127.0.0.1:8443
# Use easyrsa for configuring CA: https://github.com/OpenVPN/easy-rsa
$ cp -R /usr/share/easy-rsa "/tmp/pki"
$ export EASYRSA_KEY_SIZE=4096
$ cd /tmp/pki
$ ./easyrsa init-pki
$ echo "lxd" | ./easyrsa build-ca nopass
$ ./easyrsa build-client-full lxd-client nopass
$ cp pki/ca.crt /var/snap/lxd/common/lxd/server.ca
$ cp pki/issued/lxd-client.crt ~/snap/lxd/common/config/client.crt
$ cp pki/private/lxd-client.key ~/snap/lxd/common/config/client.key
# Restart daemon.
$ systemctl reload snap.lxd.daemon
# Add a restricted certificate to the trust store.
$ token="$(lxc config trust add --name ca-test --quiet --restricted)"
$ lxc remote add tls "${token}"
# Our client has a CA-signed certificate, but it is restricted, so the client should not be able to view server config.
$ lxc config get tls: core.https_address
127.0.0.1:8443
Impact
I believe this vulnerability is low impact because PKI mode is:
- Not the standard or recommended mode of operation for LXD.
- While
core.trust_ca_certificates
defaults to false, we believe that users who enable PKI mode will generally have core.trust_ca_certificates
enabled to allow for passwordless PKI with CRL revocation (see #3832). When this mode is enabled, all clients with CA-signed certificates have root access* anyway.
*Note: If a restricted certificate is added before core.trust_ca_certificates
is enabled, the certificate becomes unrestricted. We believe this was the original intention of the PR, but this should be changed to disallow any unintended permission change.
Summary
If a
server.ca
file is present inLXD_DIR
at LXD start up, LXD is in "PKI mode". In this mode, all clients must have certificates that have been signed by the CA.The LXD configuration option
core.trust_ca_certificates
defaults tofalse
. This means that although the client certificate has been signed by the CA, LXD will additionally add the certificate to the trust store and verify it via mTLS.When a restricted certificate is added to the trust store in this mode, it's restrictions are not honoured, and the client has full access to LXD.
Details
When authorization was refactored to allow for generalisation (at the time for TLS, RBAC, and OpenFGA, see #12313), PKI mode did not account for the
core.trust_ca_certificates
configuration option. When this option is enabled, all CA-signed client certificates are given full access to LXD. This cherry-pick from Incus was added to LXD to fix the issue.The cherry-pick fixed the immediate issue and allowed full access to LXD for CA-signed client certificates when
core.trust_ca_certificates
is enabled, but did not consider the behaviour of LXD whencore.trust_ca_certificates
is disabled.When
core.trust_ca_certificates
is false, restrictions that are applied to a certificate should be honoured. Instead, they are being ignored due to the presence of aserver.ca
file inLXD_DIR
.PoC
Impact
I believe this vulnerability is low impact because PKI mode is:
core.trust_ca_certificates
defaults to false, we believe that users who enable PKI mode will generally havecore.trust_ca_certificates
enabled to allow for passwordless PKI with CRL revocation (see #3832). When this mode is enabled, all clients with CA-signed certificates have root access* anyway.*Note: If a restricted certificate is added before
core.trust_ca_certificates
is enabled, the certificate becomes unrestricted. We believe this was the original intention of the PR, but this should be changed to disallow any unintended permission change.