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nix-mineral

NixOS module for convenient system hardening. Rather than be named after a mineral, it's named after the word "mineral."

WARNING

nix-mineral is Alpha software! Loss of data or functionality may occur, especially on non-fixed releases, and user cooperation in debugging is expected!

Scope

Reasonably harden NixOS in a way that can be quickly deployed by the end user. Threat model assumes non-governmental adversaries, and anonymity is not considered.

If you think the Feds are out to get you specifically, it's time to smash your hard drive and disappear.

Features

A non-comprehensive list of features in nix-mineral

Defaults

  • Hardened sysctl
  • Hardened boot parameters
  • Disable editor in systemd-boot to prevent unauthorized modification of boot parameters
  • Empty securetty and enable pam_securetty.so to prevent root login on TTY
  • Use Whonix machine-id to reduce identifiers
  • Use Kicksecure Bluetooth configuration to automatically turn off bluetooth when unneeded
  • Comprehensive module blacklist to reduce attack surface, based on Kicksecure and secureblue
  • Mount option hardening on /home, /tmp, /var, /boot, and /dev/shm
  • hidepid on /proc to hide processes between users
  • Enable minimal firewall and block all incoming connections on all ports
  • Randomize MAC address in NetworkManager for increased privacy
  • Enable AppArmor and kill all processes that have an AppArmor profile but aren't confined
  • Disable core dumps
  • Increase hashing rounds in /etc/shadow (for new passwords only)
  • Require wheel to use su
  • Enforce 4 second delay on failed logins
  • Disallow root login in OpenSSH
  • Enable and require DNSSEC in systemd-resolved
  • Enable USBGuard to prevent BadUSB attacks
  • Enable jitterentropy-rngd and jitterentropy kernel module for additional entropy
  • Make all files in /home/$USER unreadable except by the owner
  • Make all files in /etc/nixos unreadable and uneditable except by root, since configuration files can sometimes end up owned by unprivileged users
  • Enable zram to reduce need to swap (potentially sensitive data) to disk
  • Require user to be in wheel to use nix

Overrides

Optional overrides are provided to quickly tweak nix-mineral to conform to different environments and workloads, such as by integrating USBGuard with GNOME, relaxing restrictions to allow Linux gaming, replacing systemd-timesyncd with a secure chrony configuration, and more.

See nm-overrides.nix

Usage

Automatic Installation (fetchgit)

(Can be used with flake and non-flake configurations, but if you are using flakes the next, flake specific method is objectively simpler and better for you in every way.)

You can also use fetchFromGithub, fetchTarball or fetchUrl to your preference.

Example with fetchgit:

{ pkgs, ... }:
let
  nix-mineral = pkgs.fetchgit {
    url = "https://github.com/cynicsketch/nix-mineral.git";

    # now add one of the following:
    # a specific tag 
    ref = "refs/tags/v0.1.6-alpha"; # Modify this tag as desired. Tags can be found here: https://github.com/cynicsketch/nix-mineral/tags. You will have to manually change this to the latest tagged release when/if you want to update.
    # or a specific commit hash
    rev = "cfaf4cf15c7e6dc7f882c471056b57ea9ea0ee61";  
    # or the HEAD
    ref = "HEAD"; # This will always fetch from the head of main, however this does not garuntee successful configuration evaluation in future - if we change something and you rebuild purely, your evaluation will fail because the sha256 hash will have changed (so may require manually changing every time you evaluate, to get a successful evaluation).

    # After changing any of the above, you to update the hash. 

    # Now the sha256 hash of the repository. This can be found with the nix-prefetch-url command, or (the simpler method) you can place an incorrect, but valid hash here, and nix will fail to evaluate and tell you the hash it expected (which you can then change this value to).
    # NOTE: this can be ommitted if you are evaluating/building impurely.
    sha256 = "1mac9cnywpc4a0x1f5n45yn4yhady1affdmkimt2lg8rcw65ajh2";
  };
in
{
  imports = [
    "${nix-mineral}/nix-mineral.nix"
    # Other imports ...
  ];
  # The rest of your configuration ...
}

Usage With Flakes

While you can use both of the other methods with flakes, it may be a little easier (and allow for easier updates and version pinning) by using this method.

Add nix-mineral as a non-flake input to your flake:

{
  inputs = {
    # ...
    nix-mineral = {
      url = "github:cynicsketch/nix-mineral"; # Refers to the main branch and is updated to the latest commit when you use "nix flake update" 
      # url = "github:cynicsketch/nix-mineral/v0.1.6-alpha" # Refers to a specific tag and follows that tag until you change it 
      # url = "github:cynicsketch/nix-mineral/cfaf4cf15c7e6dc7f882c471056b57ea9ea0ee61" # Refers to a specific commit and follows that until you change it 
      flake = false;
    };
    # ...
  };
}

Import nix-mineral.nix from the repository path:

{
  imports = [
    "${inputs.nix-mineral}/nix-mineral.nix"
    # Other imports ...
  ];
  # The rest of your configuration ...
}

You can then use the nm-overrides config option to tweak the overrides to your liking.

Manual Installation

(Can be used with flake and non-flake configurations)

You may want to use this method if you prefer to be in control of your own configuration, or if you need to direcly edit nix-mineral.nix to remove/add your own options, however, this method requires manual updates if anything is changed in this repository. You could also fork this repository and use your fork with the automatic options to acheive the same effect.

Extract the contents of the .zip provided in the releases to /etc/nixos (or download from main using the <> Code -> Download Zip dropdown), and import nix-mineral.nix into your configuration. Edit nm-overrides.nix to suit your use case or add the options to your configuration elsewhere, as the defaults are unlikely to be adequate.

In configuration.nix:

{
  imports = [ 
    ./nix-mineral.nix 
    # Other imports ...
  ];
  # The rest of your configuration ...
}

Example directory structure

Some individual modules may be missing in this example, but should show roughly what /etc/nixos/ would look like.

$ tree /etc/nixos

/etc/nixos
├── configuration.nix
├── hardware-configuration.nix
├── nix-mineral.nix
├── nm-overrides
│   ├── compatibility
│   │   ├── allow-unsigned-modules.nix
│   │   ├── binfmt-misc.nix
│   │   ├── busmaster-bit.nix
│   │   ├── io-uring.nix
│   │   ├── ip-forward.nix
│   │   └── no-lockdown.nix
│   ├── desktop
│   │   ├── allow-multilib.nix
│   │   ├── allow-unprivileged-userns.nix
│   │   ├── doas-sudo-wrapper.nix
│   │   ├── hideproc-relaxed.nix
│   │   ├── home-exec.nix
│   │   ├── nix-allow-all-users.nix
│   │   ├── tmp-exec.nix
│   │   ├── usbguard-allow-at-boot.nix
│   │   ├── usbguard-disable.nix
│   │   ├── usbguard-gnome-integration.nix
│   │   ├── var-lib-exec.nix
│   │   └── yama-relaxed.nix
│   ├── performance
│   │   ├── allow-smt.nix
│   │   ├── iommu-passthrough.nix
│   │   ├── no-mitigations.nix
│   │   └── no-pti.nix
│   ├── security
│   │   ├── hardened-malloc.nix
│   │   ├── lock-root.nix
│   │   ├── minimum-swappiness.nix
│   │   ├── sysrq-sak.nix
│   │   └── tcp-timestamp-disable.nix
│   └── software-choice
│       ├── doas-no-sudo.nix
│       ├── hardened-kernel.nix
│       ├── no-firewall.nix
│       └── secure-chrony.nix
└── nm-overrides.nix

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Conveniently and reasonably harden NixOS.

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