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README.md
Santa
Santa is a binary whitelisting/blacklisting system for macOS. It consists of a kernel extension that monitors for executions, a userland daemon that makes execution decisions based on the contents of a SQLite database, a GUI agent that notifies the user in case of a block decision and a command-line utility for managing the system and synchronizing the database with a server.
It is named Santa because it keeps track of binaries that are naughty or nice.
Santa is a project of Google's Macintosh Operations Team.
Docs
The Santa docs are stored in the Docs directory. A Read the Docs instance is available here: https://santa.readthedocs.io.
The docs include deployment options, details on how parts of Santa work and instructions for developing Santa itself.
Get Help
If you have questions or otherwise need help getting started, the santa-dev group is a great place.
If you believe you have a bug, feel free to report an issue and we'll respond as soon as we can.
Admin-Related Features
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Multiple modes: In the default MONITOR mode, all binaries except those marked as blacklisted will be allowed to run, whilst being logged and recorded in the events database. In LOCKDOWN mode, only whitelisted binaries are allowed to run.
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Event logging: When the kext is loaded, all binary launches are logged. When in either mode, all unknown or denied binaries are stored in the database to enable later aggregation.
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Certificate-based rules, with override levels: Instead of relying on a binary's hash (or 'fingerprint'), executables can be whitelisted/blacklisted by their signing certificate. You can therefore trust/block all binaries by a given publisher that were signed with that cert across version updates. A binary can only be whitelisted by its certificate if its signature validates correctly, but a rule for a binary's fingerprint will override a decision for a certificate; i.e. you can whitelist a certificate while blacklisting a binary signed with that certificate, or vice-versa.
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Path-based rules (via NSRegularExpression/ICU): This allows a similar feature to that found in Managed Client (the precursor to configuration profiles, which used the same implementation mechanism), Application Launch Restrictions via the mcxalr binary. This implementation carries the added benefit of being configurable via regex, and not relying on LaunchServices. As detailed in the wiki, when evaluating rules this holds the lowest precedence.
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Failsafe cert rules: You cannot put in a deny rule that would block the certificate used to sign launchd, a.k.a. pid 1, and therefore all components used in macOS. The binaries in every OS update (and in some cases entire new versions) are therefore auto-whitelisted. This does not affect binaries from Apple's App Store, which use various certs that change regularly for common apps. Likewise, you cannot blacklist Santa itself, and Santa uses a distinct separate cert than other Google apps.
Intentions and Expectations
No single system or process will stop all attacks, or provide 100% security. Santa is written with the intention of helping protect users from themselves. People often download malware and trust it, giving the malware credentials, or allowing unknown software to exfiltrate more data about your system. As a centrally managed component, Santa can help stop the spread of malware among a large fleet of machines. Independently, Santa can aid in analyzing what is running on your computer.
Santa is part of a defense-in-depth strategy, and you should continue to protect hosts in whatever other ways you see fit.
Security and Performance-Related Features
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In-kernel caching: whitelisted binaries are cached in the kernel so the processing required to make a request is only done if the binary isn't already cached.
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Userland components validate each other: each of the userland components (the daemon, the GUI agent and the command-line utility) communicate with each other using XPC and check that their signing certificates are identical before any communication is accepted.
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Kext uses only KPIs: the kernel extension only uses provided kernel programming interfaces to do its job. This means that the kext code should continue to work across OS versions.
Known Issues
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Santa only blocks execution (execve and variants), it doesn't protect against dynamic libraries loaded with dlopen, libraries on disk that have been replaced, or libraries loaded using
DYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES
. As of version 0.9.1 we do address __PAGEZERO missing issues that were exploited in some versions of macOS. We are working on also protecting against similar avenues of attack. -
Kext communication security: the kext will only accept a connection from a single client at a time and said client must be running as root. We haven't yet found a good way to ensure the kext only accepts connections from a valid client.
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Database protection: the SQLite database is installed with permissions so that only the root user can read/write it. We're considering approaches to secure this further.
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Scripts: Santa is currently written to ignore any execution that isn't a binary. This is because after weighing the administration cost vs the benefit, we found it wasn't worthwhile. Additionally, a number of applications make use of temporary generated scripts, which we can't possibly whitelist and not doing so would cause problems. We're happy to revisit this (or at least make it an option) if it would be useful to others.
Sync Servers
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The
santactl
command-line client includes a flag to synchronize with a management server, which uploads events that have occurred on the machine and downloads new rules. There are several open-source servers you can sync with:- Upvote - An AppEngine-based server that implements social voting to make managing a large fleet easier.
- Moroz - A simple golang server that serves hardcoded rules from simple configuration files.
- Zentral - A centralized service that pulls data from multiple sources and deploy configurations to multiple services.
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Alternatively,
santactl
can configure rules locally (without a sync server).
Screenshots
A tool like Santa doesn't really lend itself to screenshots, so here's a video instead.
Kext Signing
Kernel extensions on macOS 10.9 and later must be signed using an Apple-provided Developer ID certificate with a kernel extension flag. Without it, the only way to load an extension is to enable kext-dev-mode or disable SIP, depending on the OS version.
There are two possible solutions for this, for distribution purposes:
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Use a pre-built, pre-signed version of the kext that we supply. Each time changes are made to the kext code we will update the pre-built version that you can make use of. This doesn't prevent you from making changes to the non-kext parts of Santa and distributing those. If you make changes to the kext and make a pull request, we can merge them in and distribute a new version of the pre-signed kext.
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Apply for your own kext signing certificate. Apple will only grant this for broad distribution within an organization, they won't issue them just for testing purposes.
Contributing
Patches to this project are very much welcome. Please see the CONTRIBUTING file.
Disclaimer
This is not an official Google product.