NAME¶
mac_ifoff —
interface silencing policy
SYNOPSIS¶
To compile the interface silencing policy into your kernel, place the following
lines in your kernel configuration file:
options MAC
options MAC_IFOFF
Alternately, to load the interface silencing policy module at boot time, place
the following line in your kernel configuration file:
options MAC
and in
loader.conf(5):
DESCRIPTION¶
The
mac_ifoff interface silencing module
allows administrators to enable and disable incoming and outgoing data flow on
system network interfaces via the
sysctl(8)
interface.
To disable network traffic over the loopback
(
lo(4)) interface, set the
sysctl(8) OID
security.mac.ifoff.lo_enabled to 0 (default
1).
To enable network traffic over other interfaces, set the
sysctl(8) OID
security.mac.ifoff.other_enabled to 1
(default 0).
To allow BPF traffic to be received, even while other traffic is disabled, set
the
sysctl(8) OID
security.mac.ifoff.bpfrecv_enabled to 1
(default 0).
No labels are defined.
SEE ALSO¶
mac(4),
mac_bsdextended(4),
mac_lomac(4),
mac_mls(4),
mac_none(4),
mac_partition(4),
mac_portacl(4),
mac_seeotheruids(4),
mac_test(4),
mac(9)
HISTORY¶
The
mac_ifoff policy module first appeared in
FreeBSD 5.0 and was developed by the TrustedBSD
Project.
AUTHORS¶
This software was contributed to the
FreeBSD Project by
Network Associates Labs, the Security Research Division of Network Associates
Inc. under DARPA/SPAWAR contract N66001-01-C-8035 (“CBOSS”), as
part of the DARPA CHATS research program.
BUGS¶
See
mac(9) concerning appropriateness for
production use. The TrustedBSD MAC Framework is considered experimental in
FreeBSD.
While the MAC Framework design is intended to support the containment of the
root user, not all attack channels are currently protected by entry point
checks. As such, MAC Framework policies should not be relied on, in isolation,
to protect against a malicious privileged user.