paxrat is a utility to set PaX flags on a set of binaries.
Subgraph OS uses paxrat to maintain the PaX flags while running in installed
and live mode. It should also work out of the box on other Debian-based
operating systems. Other Linux variants have not been tested but in theory it
should also work provided the paths in the config file are correct (as well as
the hard-coded path to the paxctl
binary).
paxrat is designed to address a number of use cases currently not supported by other utilities with a similar purpose.
It supports the following use cases:
- Running in file-systems that support extended file attributes as well as those that don't (such as SquashFS in a live disc or docker container)
- Runnable as a hook to a package manager such as dpkg
- Runnable in inotify-based watcher mode to set flags when files have changed such as during system updates (similar to paxctld)
- Setting flags on a batch of binaries or just one
paxrat configuration is provided via a JSON file that lists each binary, the
PaX flags, and a nonroot
setting to specify whether the target binary is
not root-owned (paxrat will not set PaX flags on non-root owned binaries unless
this is set to true
). By default paxrat will look for binary divertions using
dpkg-divert
, this can be disabled by using the nodivert
setting.
The default configuration file for paxrat is located in
/etc/paxrat/paxrat.conf
. Running paxrat with no configuration file argument
will automatically use this file to set PaX flags.
paxrat also supports optional configuration files from the
/etc/paxrat/conf.d/
directory files. This is for user created configuration.
paxrat must be run with no -c
argument to use the files in this directory.
The following is an example configuration:
{
"/usr/lib/iceweasel/iceweasel": {
"flags": "pm"
},
"/usr/lib/iceweasel/plugin-container": {
"flags": "m"
},
"/home/user/.local/share/torbrowser/tbb/x86_64/tor-browser_en-US/Browser/firefox": {
"flags": "pm",
"nonroot": true
}
}
When paxrat is run without a configuration file (without -c
) argument, it will use
the configuration file found in /etc/paxrat/paxrat.conf
to set PaX flags.
It will also scan /etc/paxrat/conf.d/
for additional configuration files. The
/etc/paxrat/conf.d/
directory can be used for user configurations. This is
the preferred mode of operation.
$ sudo paxrat
$ sudo paxrat -s pm -b /usr/lib/iceweasel/iceweasel
$ sudo paxrat -c paxrat.conf
$ sudo paxrat -c paxrat.conf -t
$ sudo paxrat -c paxrat.conf -w