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Add content from: Research Update: Enhanced src/linux-hardening/privilege-esca...
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@ -69,6 +69,92 @@ sudo find /proc -maxdepth 3 -type l -name time -exec ls -l {} \; 2>/dev/null |
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nsenter -T TARGET_PID --pid /bin/bash
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```
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## Manipulating Time Offsets
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Starting with Linux 5.6, two clocks can be virtualised per time namespace:
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* `CLOCK_MONOTONIC`
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* `CLOCK_BOOTTIME`
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Their per-namespace deltas are exposed (and can be modified) through the file `/proc/<PID>/timens_offsets`:
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```
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$ sudo unshare -Tr --mount-proc bash # -T creates a new timens, -r drops capabilities
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$ cat /proc/$$/timens_offsets
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monotonic 0
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boottime 0
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```
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The file contains two lines – one per clock – with the offset in **nanoseconds**. Processes that hold **CAP_SYS_TIME** _in the time namespace_ can change the value:
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```
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# advance CLOCK_MONOTONIC by two days (172 800 s)
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echo "monotonic 172800000000000" > /proc/$$/timens_offsets
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# verify
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$ cat /proc/$$/uptime # first column uses CLOCK_MONOTONIC
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172801.37 13.57
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```
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If you need the wall clock (`CLOCK_REALTIME`) to change as well you still have to rely on classic mechanisms (`date`, `hwclock`, `chronyd`, …); it is **not** namespaced.
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### `unshare(1)` helper flags (util-linux ≥ 2.38)
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```
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sudo unshare -T \
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--monotonic="+24h" \
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--boottime="+7d" \
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--mount-proc \
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bash
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```
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The long options automatically write the chosen deltas to `timens_offsets` right after the namespace is created, saving a manual `echo`.
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---
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## OCI & Runtime support
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* The **OCI Runtime Specification v1.1** (Nov 2023) added a dedicated `time` namespace type and the `linux.timeOffsets` field so that container engines can request time virtualisation in a portable way.
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* **runc >= 1.2.0** implements that part of the spec. A minimal `config.json` fragment looks like:
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```json
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{
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"linux": {
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"namespaces": [
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{"type": "time"}
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],
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"timeOffsets": {
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"monotonic": 86400,
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"boottime": 600
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}
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}
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}
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```
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Then run the container with `runc run <id>`.
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> NOTE: runc **1.2.6** (Feb 2025) fixed an "exec into container with private timens" bug that could lead to a hang and potential DoS. Make sure you are on ≥ 1.2.6 in production.
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---
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## Security considerations
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1. **Required capability** – A process needs **CAP_SYS_TIME** inside its user/time namespace to change the offsets. Dropping that capability in the container (default in Docker & Kubernetes) prevents tampering.
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2. **No wall-clock changes** – Because `CLOCK_REALTIME` is shared with the host, attackers cannot spoof certificate lifetimes, JWT expiry, etc. via timens alone.
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3. **Log / detection evasion** – Software that relies on `CLOCK_MONOTONIC` (e.g. rate-limiters based on uptime) can be confused if the namespace user adjusts the offset. Prefer `CLOCK_REALTIME` for security-relevant timestamps.
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4. **Kernel attack surface** – Even with `CAP_SYS_TIME` removed, the kernel code remains accessible; keep the host patched. Linux 5.6 → 5.12 received multiple timens bug-fixes (NULL-deref, signedness issues).
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### Hardening checklist
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* Drop `CAP_SYS_TIME` in your container runtime default profile.
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* Keep runtimes updated (runc ≥ 1.2.6, crun ≥ 1.12).
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* Pin util-linux ≥ 2.38 if you rely on the `--monotonic/--boottime` helpers.
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* Audit in-container software that reads **uptime** or **CLOCK_MONOTONIC** for security-critical logic.
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## References
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* man7.org – Time namespaces manual page: <https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/time_namespaces.7.html>
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* OCI blog – "OCI v1.1: new time and RDT namespaces" (Nov 15 2023): <https://opencontainers.org/blog/2023/11/15/oci-spec-v1.1>
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{{#include ../../../../banners/hacktricks-training.md}}
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