This is a collection of thoughts on securing a modern Apple Mac computer using macOS (formerly OS X) 10.12 "Sierra", as well as steps to improving online privacy.
This guide is targeted to “power users” who wish to adopt enterprise-standard security, but is also suitable for novice users with an interest in improving their privacy and security on a Mac.
A system is only as secure as its administrator is capable of making it. There is no one single technology, software, nor technique to guarantee perfect computer security; a modern operating system and computer is very complex, and requires numerous incremental changes to meaningfully improve one's security and privacy posture.
I am not responsible if you break a Mac by following any of these steps.
If you wish to make a correction or improvement, please send a pull request or open an issue.
This guide is also available in 简体中文.
- Basics
- Firmware
- Preparing and Installing macOS
- First boot
- Admin and standard user accounts
- Full disk encryption
- Firewall
- Services
- Spotlight Suggestions
- Homebrew
- DNS
- Captive portal
- Certificate authorities
- OpenSSL
- Curl
- Web
- PGP/GPG
- OTR
- Tor
- VPN
- Viruses and malware
- System Integrity Protection
- Gatekeeper and XProtect
- Passwords
- Backup
- Wi-Fi
- SSH
- Physical access
- System monitoring
- Binary Whitelisting
- Miscellaneous
- Related software
- Additional resources
The standard best security practices apply:
-
Create a threat model
- What are you trying to protect and from whom? Is your adversary a three letter agency (if so, you may want to consider using OpenBSD instead), a nosy eavesdropper on the network, or determined apt orchestrating a campaign against you?
- Study and recognize threats and how to reduce attack surface against them.
-
Keep the system up to date
- Patch, patch, patch your system and software.
- macOS system updates can be completed using the App Store application, or the
softwareupdate
command-line utility - neither requires registering an Apple account. - Subscribe to announcement mailing lists (e.g., Apple security-announce) for programs you use often.
-
Encrypt sensitive data
- In addition to full disk encryption, create one or many encrypted containers to store passwords, keys, personal documents, and other data at rest.
- This will mitigate damage in case of compromise and data exfiltration.
-
Frequent backups
- Create regular backups of your data and be ready to reimage in case of compromise.
- Always encrypt before copying backups to external media or the "cloud".
- Verify backups work by testing them regularly, for example by accessing certain files or performing a hash based comparison.
-
Click carefully
- Ultimately, the security of a system can be reduced to its administrator.
- Care should be taken when installing new software. Always prefer free and open source software (which macOS is not).
Setting a firmware password prevents your Mac from starting up from any device other than your startup disk. It may also be set to be required on each boot.
This feature can be helpful if your laptop is stolen, as the only way to reset the firmware password is through an Apple Store, or by using an SPI programmer, such as Bus Pirate or other flash IC programmer.
-
Start up pressing
Command
R
keys to boot to Recovery Mode mode. -
When the Recovery window appears, choose Firmware Password Utility from the Utilities menu.
-
In the Firmware Utility window that appears, select Turn On Firmware Password.
-
Enter a new password, then enter the same password in the Verify field.
-
Select Set Password.
-
Select Quit Firmware Utility to close the Firmware Password Utility.
-
Select the Apple menu and choose Restart or Shutdown.
The firmware password will activate at next boot. To validate the password, hold Alt
during boot - you should be prompted to enter the password.
The firmware password can also be managed with the firmwarepasswd
utility while booted into the OS. For example, to prompt for the firmware password when attempting to boot from a different volume:
$ sudo firmwarepasswd -setpasswd -setmode command
Enter a password and reboot.
Using a Dediprog SF600 to dump and flash a 2013 MacBook SPI Flash chip to remove a firmware password, sans Apple
See HT204455, LongSoft/UEFITool and chipsec/chipsec for more information.
There are several ways to install a fresh copy of macOS.
The simplest way is to boot into Recovery Mode by holding Command
R
keys at boot. A system image can be downloaded and applied directly from Apple. However, this way exposes the serial number and other identifying information over the network in plaintext.
Packet capture of an unencrypted HTTP conversation during macOS recovery
Another way is to download macOS Sierra from the App Store or some other place and create a custom, installable system image.
The macOS Sierra installer application is code signed, which should be verified to make sure you received a legitimate copy, using the codesign
command:
$ codesign -dvv /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app
Executable=/Applications/Install macOS Sierra.app/Contents/MacOS/InstallAssistant
Identifier=com.apple.InstallAssistant.Sierra
Format=app bundle with Mach-O thin (x86_64)
CodeDirectory v=20200 size=297 flags=0x200(kill) hashes=5+5 location=embedded
Signature size=4167
Authority=Apple Mac OS Application Signing
Authority=Apple Worldwide Developer Relations Certification Authority
Authority=Apple Root CA
Info.plist entries=30
TeamIdentifier=K36BKF7T3D
Sealed Resources version=2 rules=7 files=137
Internal requirements count=1 size=124
macOS installers can be made with the createinstallmedia
utility included in Install macOS Sierra.app/Contents/Resources/
. See Create a bootable installer for macOS, or run the utility without arguments to see how it works.
Note Apple's installer does not appear to work across OS versions. If you want to build a 10.12 image, for example, the following steps must be run on a 10.12 machine!
To create a bootable USB macOS installer, mount a USB drive, and erase and partition it, then use the createinstallmedia
utility:
$ diskutil list
[Find disk matching correct size, usually "disk2"]
$ diskutil unmountDisk /dev/disk2
$ diskutil partitionDisk /dev/disk2 1 JHFS+ Installer 100%
$ cd /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app
$ sudo ./Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia --volume /Volumes/Installer --applicationpath /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Sierra.app --nointeraction
Erasing Disk: 0%... 10%... 20%... 30%... 100%...
Copying installer files to disk...
Copy complete.
Making disk bootable...
Copying boot files...
Copy complete.
Done.
To create a custom, installable image which can be restored to a Mac, you will need to find the file InstallESD.dmg
, which is also inside Install macOS Sierra.app
.
With Finder, right click on the app, select Show Package Contents and navigate to Contents > SharedSupport to find the file InstallESD.dmg
.
You can verify the following cryptographic hashes to ensure you have the same copy with openssl sha1 InstallESD.dmg
or shasum -a 1 InstallESD.dmg
or shasum -a 256 InstallESD.dmg
(in Finder, you can drag the file into a Terminal window to provide the full path).
To determine which macOS versions and builds originally shipped with or are available for your Mac, see HT204319.
See InstallESD_Hashes.csv in this repository for a list of current and previous file hashes. You can also Google the cryptographic hashes to ensure the file is genuine and has not been tampered with.
To create the image, use MagerValp/AutoDMG, or to create it manually, mount and install the operating system to a temporary image:
$ hdiutil attach -mountpoint /tmp/install_esd ./InstallESD.dmg
$ hdiutil create -size 32g -type SPARSE -fs HFS+J -volname "macOS" -uid 0 -gid 80 -mode 1775 /tmp/output.sparseimage
$ hdiutil attach -mountpoint /tmp/os -owners on /tmp/output.sparseimage
$ sudo installer -pkg /tmp/install_esd/Packages/OSInstall.mpkg -tgt /tmp/os -verbose
This part will take a while, so be patient. You can tail -F /var/log/install.log
in another Terminal window to check progress.
(Optional) Install additional software, such as Wireshark:
$ hdiutil attach Wireshark\ 2.2.0\ Intel\ 64.dmg
$ sudo installer -pkg /Volumes/Wireshark/Wireshark\ 2.2.0\ Intel\ 64.pkg -tgt /tmp/os
$ hdiutil unmount /Volumes/Wireshark
See MagerValp/AutoDMG/wiki/Packages-Suitable-for-Deployment for caveats and chilcote/outset to instead processes packages and scripts at first boot.
When you're done, detach, convert and verify the image:
$ hdiutil detach /tmp/os
$ hdiutil detach /tmp/install_esd
$ hdiutil convert -format UDZO /tmp/output.sparseimage -o ~/sierra.dmg
$ asr imagescan --source ~/sierra.dmg
Now sierra.dmg
is ready to be applied to one or multiple Macs. One could futher customize the image to include premade users, applications, preferences, etc.
This image can be installed using another Mac in Target Disk Mode or from a bootable USB installer.
To use Target Disk Mode, boot up the Mac you wish to image while holding the T
key and connect it to another Mac using a Firewire, Thunderbolt or USB-C cable.
If you don't have another Mac, boot to a USB installer, with sierra.dmg
and other required files copied to it, by holding the Option key at boot.
Run diskutil list
to identify the connected Mac's disk, usually /dev/disk2
(Optional) Securely erase the disk with a single pass (if previously FileVault-encrypted, the disk must first be unlocked and mounted as /dev/disk3s2
):
$ sudo diskutil secureErase freespace 1 /dev/disk3s2
Partition the disk to Journaled HFS+:
$ sudo diskutil unmountDisk /dev/disk2
$ sudo diskutil partitionDisk /dev/disk2 1 JHFS+ macOS 100%
Restore the image to the new volume:
$ sudo asr restore --source ~/sierra.dmg --target /Volumes/macOS --erase --buffersize 4m
You can also use the Disk Utility application to erase the connected Mac's disk, then restore sierra.dmg
to the newly created partition.
If you've followed these steps correctly, the target Mac should now have a new install of macOS Sierra.
If you want to transfer any files, copy them to a shared folder like /Users/Shared
on the mounted disk image, e.g. cp Xcode_8.0.dmg /Volumes/macOS/Users/Shared
Finished restore install from USB recovery boot
We're not done yet! Unless you have built the image with AutoDMG, or installed macOS to a second partition on your Mac, you will need to create a recovery partition (in order to use full disk encryption). You can do so using MagerValp/Create-Recovery-Partition-Installer or using the following manual steps:
Download the file RecoveryHDUpdate.dmg.
RecoveryHDUpdate.dmg
SHA-256: f6a4f8ac25eaa6163aa33ac46d40f223f40e58ec0b6b9bf6ad96bdbfc771e12c
SHA-1: 1ac3b7059ae0fcb2877d22375121d4e6920ae5ba
Attach and expand the installer, then run it:
$ hdiutil attach RecoveryHDUpdate.dmg
$ pkgutil --expand /Volumes/Mac\ OS\ X\ Lion\ Recovery\ HD\ Update/RecoveryHDUpdate.pkg /tmp/recovery
$ hdiutil attach /tmp/recovery/RecoveryHDUpdate.pkg/RecoveryHDMeta.dmg
$ /tmp/recovery/RecoveryHDUpdate.pkg/Scripts/Tools/dmtest ensureRecoveryPartition /Volumes/macOS/ /Volumes/Recovery\ HD\ Update/BaseSystem.dmg 0 0 /Volumes/Recovery\ HD\ Update/BaseSystem.chunklist
Replace /Volumes/macOS
with the path to the target disk mode-booted Mac as necessary.
This step will take several minutes. Run diskutil list
again to make sure Recovery HD now exists on /dev/disk2
or equivalent identifier.
Once you're done, eject the disk with hdiutil unmount /Volumes/macOS
and power down the target disk mode-booted Mac.
To install macOS as a virtual machine (vm) using VMware Fusion, follow the instructions above to create an image. You will not need to download and create a recovery partition manually.
VMware-Fusion-8.5.2-4635224.dmg
SHA-256: f6c54b98c9788d1df94d470661eedff3e5d24ca4fb8962fac5eb5dc56de63b77
SHA-1: 37ec465673ab802a3f62388d119399cb94b05408
For the Installation Method, select Install OS X from the recovery partition. Customize any memory or CPU requirements and complete setup. The guest vm should boot into Recovery Mode by default.
In Recovery Mode, select a language, then Utilities > Terminal from the menubar.
In the guest vm, type ifconfig | grep inet
- you should see a private address like 172.16.34.129
On the host Mac, type ifconfig | grep inet
- you should see a private gateway address like 172.16.34.1
From the host Mac, serve the installable image to the guest vm by editing /etc/apache2/httpd.conf
and adding the following line to the top (using the gateway address assigned to the host Mac and port 80):
Listen 172.16.34.1:80
On the host Mac, link the image to the default Apache Web server directory:
$ sudo ln ~/sierra.dmg /Library/WebServer/Documents
From the host Mac, start Apache in the foreground:
$ sudo httpd -X
From the guest VM, install the disk image to the volume over the local network using asr
:
-bash-3.2# asr restore --source http://172.16.34.1/sierra.dmg --target /Volumes/Macintosh\ HD/ --erase --buffersize 4m
Validating target...done
Validating source...done
Erase contents of /dev/disk0s2 (/Volumes/Macintosh HD)? [ny]: y
Retrieving scan information...done
Validating sizes...done
Restoring ....10....20....30....40....50....60....70....80....90....100
Verifying ....10....20....30....40....50....60....70....80....90....100
Remounting target volume...done
When it's finished, stop the Apache Web server on the host Mac by pressing Control
C
at the sudo httpd -X
window and remove the image copy with sudo rm /Library/WebServer/Documents/sierra.dmg
In the guest vm, select Startup Disk from the top-left corner Apple menu, select the hard drive and restart. You may wish to disable the Network Adapter in VMware for the initial guest vm boot.
Take and Restore from saved guest vm snapshots before and after attempting risky browsing, for example, or use a guest vm to install and operate questionable software.
Note Before setting up macOS, consider disconnecting networking and configuring a firewall(s) first. However, late 2016 MacBooks with Touch Bar hardware require online OS activation.
On first boot, hold Command
Option
P
R
keys to clear NVRAM.
When macOS first starts, you'll be greeted by Setup Assistant.
When creating your account, use a strong password without a hint.
If you enter your real name at the account setup process, be aware that your computer's name and local hostname will comprise that name (e.g., John Appleseed's MacBook) and thus will appear on local networks and in various preference files. You can change them both in System Preferences > Sharing or with the following commands:
$ sudo scutil --set ComputerName your_computer_name
$ sudo scutil --set LocalHostName your_hostname
The first user account is always an admin account. Admin accounts are members of the admin group and have access to sudo
, which allows them to usurp other accounts, in particular root, and gives them effective control over the system. Any program that the admin executes can potentially obtain the same access, making this a security risk. Utilities like sudo
have weaknesses that can be exploited by concurrently running programs and many panes in System Preferences are unlocked by default [p. 61–62] for admin accounts. It is considered a best practice by Apple and others [p. 41–42] to use a separate standard account for day-to-day work and use the admin account for installations and system configuration.
It is not strictly required to ever log into the admin account via the macOS login screen. The system will prompt for authentication when required and Terminal can do the rest. To that end, Apple provides some recommendations for hiding the admin account and its home directory. This can be an elegant solution to avoid having a visible 'ghost' account. The admin account can also be removed from FileVault.
-
Only administrators can install applications in
/Applications
(local directory). Finder and Installer will prompt a standard user with an authentication dialog. Many applications can be installed in~/Applications
instead (the directory can be created manually). As a rule of thumb: applications that do not require admin access – or do not complain about not being installed in/Applications
– should be installed in the user directory, the rest in the local directory. Mac App Store applications are still installed in/Applications
and require no additional authentication. -
sudo
is not available in shells of the standard user, which requires usingsu
orlogin
to enter a shell of the admin account. This can make some maneuvers trickier and requires some basic experience with command-line interfaces. -
System Preferences and several system utilities (e.g. Wi-Fi Diagnostics) will require root privileges for full functionality. Many panels in System Preferences are locked and need to be unlocked separately by clicking on the lock icon. Some applications will simply prompt for authentication upon opening, others must be opened by an admin account directly to get access to all functions (e.g. Console).
-
There are third-party applications that will not work correctly because they assume that the user account is an admin. These programs may have to be executed by logging into the admin account, or by using the
open
utility.
Accounts can be created and managed in System Preferences. On settled systems, it is generally easier to create a second admin account and then demote the first account. This avoids data migration. Newly installed systems can also just add a standard account. Demoting an account can be done either from the the new admin account in System Preferences – the other account must be logged out – or by executing these commands (it may not be necessary to execute both, see issue #179):
$ sudo dscl . -delete /Groups/admin GroupMembership <username>
$ sudo dscl . -delete /Groups/admin GroupMembers <GeneratedUID>
You can find the “GeneratedUID” of your account with:
$ dscl . -read /Users/<username> GeneratedUID
See also this post for more information about how macOS determines group membership.
FileVault provides full disk (technically, full volume) encryption on macOS.
FileVault encryption protects data at rest and hardens (but not always prevents) someone with physical access from stealing data or tampering with your Mac.
With much of the cryptographic operations happening efficiently in hardware, the performance penalty for FileVault is not noticeable.
The security of FileVault greatly depends on the pseudo random number generator (PRNG).
The random device implements the Yarrow pseudo random number generator algorithm and maintains its entropy pool. Additional entropy is fed to the generator regularly by the SecurityServer daemon from random jitter measurements of the kernel.
SecurityServer is also responsible for periodically saving some entropy to disk and reloading it during startup to provide entropy in early system operation.
See man 4 random
for more information.
The PRNG can be manually seeded with entropy by writing to /dev/random before enabling FileVault. This can be done by simply using the Mac for a little while before activating FileVault.
To manually seed entropy before enabling FileVault:
$ cat > /dev/random
[Type random letters for a long while, then press Control-D]
Enable FileVault with sudo fdesetup enable
or through System Preferences > Security & Privacy and reboot.
If you can remember your password, there's no reason to save the recovery key. However, your encrypted data will be lost forever if you can't remember the password or recovery key.
If you want to know more about how FileVault works, see the paper Infiltrate the Vault: Security Analysis and Decryption of Lion Full Disk Encryption (pdf) and related presentation (pdf). Also see IEEE Std 1619-2007 “The XTS-AES Tweakable Block Cipher” (pdf).
You may wish to enforce hibernation and evict FileVault keys from memory instead of traditional sleep to memory:
$ sudo pmset -a destroyfvkeyonstandby 1
$ sudo pmset -a hibernatemode 25
All computers have firmware of some type—EFI, BIOS—to help in the discovery of hardware components and ultimately to properly bootstrap the computer using the desired OS instance. In the case of Apple hardware and the use of EFI, Apple stores relevant information within EFI to aid in the functionality of macOS. For example, the FileVault key is stored in EFI to transparently come out of standby mode.
Organizations especially sensitive to a high-attack environment, or potentially exposed to full device access when the device is in standby mode, should mitigate this risk by destroying the FileVault key in firmware. Doing so doesn’t destroy the use of FileVault, but simply requires the user to enter the password in order for the system to come out of standby mode.
If you choose to evict FileVault keys in standby mode, you should also modify your standby and power nap settings. Otherwise, your machine may wake while in standby mode and then power off due to the absence of the FileVault key. See issue #124 for more information. These settings can be changed with:
$ sudo pmset -a powernap 0
$ sudo pmset -a standby 0
$ sudo pmset -a standbydelay 0
$ sudo pmset -a autopoweroff 0
For more information, see Best Practices for Deploying FileVault 2 (pdf) and paper Lest We Remember: Cold Boot Attacks on Encryption Keys (pdf)
Before connecting to the Internet, it's a good idea to first configure a firewall.
There are several types of firewall available for macOS.
Built-in, basic firewall which blocks incoming connections only.
Note, this firewall does not have the ability to monitor, nor block outgoing connections.
It can be controlled by the Firewall tab of Security & Privacy in System Preferences, or with the following commands.
Enable the firewall:
$ sudo /usr/libexec/ApplicationFirewall/socketfilterfw --setglobalstate on
Enable logging:
$ sudo /usr/libexec/ApplicationFirewall/socketfilterfw --setloggingmode on
You may also wish to enable stealth mode:
$ sudo /usr/libexec/ApplicationFirewall/socketfilterfw --setstealthmode on
Computer hackers scan networks so they can attempt to identify computers to attack. You can prevent your computer from responding to some of these scans by using stealth mode. When stealth mode is enabled, your computer does not respond to ICMP ping requests, and does not answer to connection attempts from a closed TCP or UDP port. This makes it more difficult for attackers to find your computer.
Finally, you may wish to prevent built-in software as well as code-signed, downloaded software from being whitelisted automatically:
$ sudo /usr/libexec/ApplicationFirewall/socketfilterfw --setallowsigned off
$ sudo /usr/libexec/ApplicationFirewall/socketfilterfw --setallowsignedapp off
Applications that are signed by a valid certificate authority are automatically added to the list of allowed apps, rather than prompting the user to authorize them. Apps included in macOS are signed by Apple and are allowed to receive incoming connections when this setting is enabled. For example, since iTunes is already signed by Apple, it is automatically allowed to receive incoming connections through the firewall.
If you run an unsigned app that is not listed in the firewall list, a dialog appears with options to Allow or Deny connections for the app. If you choose "Allow", macOS signs the application and automatically adds it to the firewall list. If you choose "Deny", macOS adds it to the list but denies incoming connections intended for this app.
After interacting with socketfilterfw
, you may want to restart (or terminate) the process:
$ sudo pkill -HUP socketfilterfw
Programs such as Little Snitch, Hands Off, Radio Silence and Security Growler provide a good balance of usability and security.
Example of Little Snitch-monitored session
LittleSnitch-3.7.1.dmg
SHA-256: e6332ee70385f459d9803b0a582d5344bb9dab28bcd56e247ae69866cc321802
SHA-1: d5d602c0f76cd73051792dff0ac334bbdc66ae32
These programs are capable of monitoring and blocking incoming and outgoing network connections. However, they may require the use of a closed source kernel extension.
If the number of choices of allowing/blocking network connections is overwhelming, use Silent Mode with connections allowed, then periodically check your settings to gain understanding of what various applications are doing.
It is worth noting that these firewalls can be bypassed by programs running as root or through OS vulnerabilities (pdf), but they are still worth having - just don't expect absolute protection. However, some malware actually deletes itself and doesn't execute if Little Snitch, or other security software, is installed.
For more on how Little Snitch works, see the Network Kernel Extensions Programming Guide and Shut up snitch! – reverse engineering and exploiting a critical Little Snitch vulnerability.
A highly customizable, powerful, but also most complicated firewall exists in the kernel. It can be controlled with pfctl
and various configuration files.
pf can also be controlled with a GUI application such as IceFloor or Murus.
There are many books and articles on the subject of pf firewall. Here's is just one example of blocking traffic by IP address.
Add the following into a file called pf.rules
:
set block-policy drop
set fingerprints "/etc/pf.os"
set ruleset-optimization basic
set skip on lo0
scrub in all no-df
table <blocklist> persist
block in log
block in log quick from no-route to any
pass out proto tcp from any to any keep state
pass out proto udp from any to any keep state
block log on en0 from {<blocklist>} to any
Use the following commands:
sudo pfctl -e -f pf.rules
to enable the firewallsudo pfctl -d
to disable the firewallsudo pfctl -t blocklist -T add 1.2.3.4
to add hosts to a blocklistsudo pfctl -t blocklist -T show
to view the blocklistsudo ifconfig pflog0 create
to create an interface for loggingsudo tcpdump -ni pflog0
to dump the packets
Unless you're already familiar with packet filtering, spending too much time configuring pf is not recommended. It is also probably unnecessary if your Mac is behind a NAT on a secured home network, for example.
For an example of using pf to audit "phone home" behavior of user and system-level processes, see fix-macosx/net-monitor.
Before you connect to the Internet, you may wish to disable some system services, which use up resources or phone home to Apple.
See fix-macosx/yosemite-phone-home, l1k/osxparanoia and karek314/macOS-home-call-drop for further recommendations.
Services on macOS are managed by launchd. See (launchd.info)[http://launchd.info/], as well as Apple's Daemons and Services Programming Guide and Technical Note TN2083
You can also run KnockKnock that shows more information about startup items.
- Use
launchctl list
to view running user agents - Use
sudo launchctl list
to view running system daemons - Specify the service name to examine it, e.g.
launchctl list com.apple.Maps.mapspushd
- Use
defaults read
to examine job plists in/System/Library/LaunchDaemons
and/System/Library/LaunchAgents
- Use
man
,strings
and Google to learn about what the agent/daemon runs
For example, to learn what a system launch daemon or agent does, start with:
$ defaults read /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.apsd.plist
Look at the Program
or ProgramArguments
section to see which binary is run, in this case apsd
. To find more information about that, look at the man page with man apsd
For example, if you're not interested in Apple Push Notifications, disable the service:
$ sudo launchctl unload -w /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.apsd.plist
Note Unloading services may break usability of some applications. Read the manual pages and use Google to make sure you understand what you're doing first.
Be careful about disabling any system daemons you don't understand, as it may render your system unbootable. If you break your Mac, use single user mode to fix it.
Use Console and Activity Monitor applications if you notice your Mac heating up, feeling sluggish, or generally misbehaving, as it may have resulted from your tinkering.
To view currently disabled services:
$ find /var/db/com.apple.xpc.launchd/ -type f -print -exec defaults read {} \; 2>/dev/null
Annotated lists of launch daemons and agents, the respective program executed, and the programs' hash sums are included in this repository.
(Optional) Run the read_launch_plists.py
script and diff
output to check for any discrepancies on your system, e.g.:
$ diff <(python read_launch_plists.py) <(cat 16A323_launchd.csv)
See also cirrusj.github.io/Yosemite-Stop-Launch for descriptions of services and Provisioning OS X and Disabling Unnecessary Services for another explanation.
Disable Spotlight Suggestions in both the Spotlight preferences and Safari's Search preferences to avoid your search queries being sent to Apple.
Also disable Bing Web Searches in the Spotlight preferences to avoid your search queries being sent to Microsoft.
See fix-macosx.com for detailed instructions.
If you've upgraded to OS X 10.10 "Yosemite" and you're using the default settings, each time you start typing in Spotlight (to open an application or search for a file on your computer), your local search terms and location are sent to Apple and third parties (including Microsoft).
Note This Web site and instructions may no longer work on macOS Sierra - see issue 164.
To download, view and apply their suggested fixes:
$ curl -O https://fix-macosx.com/fix-macosx.py
$ less fix-macosx.py
$ python fix-macosx.py
All done. Make sure to log out (and back in) for the changes to take effect.
Speaking of Microsoft, you may want to see https://fix10.isleaked.com/ just for fun.
Consider using Homebrew to make software installations easier and to update userland tools (see Apple’s great GPL purge).
Note If you have not already installed Xcode or Command Line Tools, use xcode-select --install
to download and install them from Apple.
To install Homebrew:
$ mkdir homebrew && curl -L https://github.com/Homebrew/brew/tarball/master | tar xz --strip 1 -C homebrew
Edit PATH
in your shell or shell rc file to use ~/homebrew/bin
and ~/homebrew/sbin
. For example, echo 'PATH=$PATH:~/homebrew/sbin:~/homebrew/bin' >> .zshrc
, then change your login shell to Z shell with chsh -s /bin/zsh
, open a new Terminal window and run brew update
.
Homebrew uses SSL/TLS to talk with GitHub and verifies checksums of downloaded packages, so it's fairly secure.
Remember to periodically run brew update
and brew upgrade
on trusted and secure networks to download and install software updates. To get information on a package before installation, run brew info <package>
and check its recipe online.
According to Homebrew's Anonymous Aggregate User Behaviour Analytics, Homebrew gathers anonymous aggregate user behaviour analytics and reporting these to Google Analytics.
To opt out of Homebrew's analytics, you can set export HOMEBREW_NO_ANALYTICS=1
in your environment or shell rc file, or use brew analytics off
.
You may also wish to enable additional security options, such as HOMEBREW_NO_INSECURE_REDIRECT=1
and HOMEBREW_CASK_OPTS=--require-sha
.
Use the hosts file to block known malware, advertising or otherwise unwanted domains.
Edit the hosts file as root, for example with sudo vi /etc/hosts
. The hosts file can also be managed with the GUI app 2ndalpha/gasmask.
To block a domain, append 0 example.com
or 0.0.0.0 example.com
or 127.0.0.1 example.com
to /etc/hosts
There are many lists of domains available online which you can paste in, just make sure each line starts with 0
, 0.0.0.0
, 127.0.0.1
, and the line 127.0.0.1 localhost
is included.
For hosts lists, see someonewhocares.org, l1k/osxparanoia/blob/master/hosts, StevenBlack/hosts and gorhill/uMatrix/hosts-files.json.
To append a raw list:
$ curl "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/StevenBlack/hosts/master/hosts" | sudo tee -a /etc/hosts
$ wc -l /etc/hosts
31998
$ egrep -ve "^#|^255.255.255|^0.0.0.0|^127.0.0.0|^0 " /etc/hosts
::1 localhost
fe80::1%lo0 localhost
[should not return any other IP addresses]
See man hosts
and FreeBSD Configuration Files for more information.
Among other features, dnsmasq is able to cache replies, prevent upstreaming queries for unqualified names, and block entire TLDs.
Use in combination with DNSCrypt to additionally encrypt outgoing DNS traffic.
If you don't wish to use DNSCrypt, you should at least use DNS not provided by your ISP. Two popular alternatives are Google DNS and OpenDNS.
(Optional) DNSSEC is a set of extensions to DNS which provide to DNS clients (resolvers) origin authentication of DNS data, authenticated denial of existence, and data integrity. All answers from DNSSEC protected zones are digitally signed. The signed records are authenticated via a chain of trust, starting with a set of verified public keys for the DNS root-zone. The current root-zone trust anchors may be downloaded from IANA website. There are a number of resources on DNSSEC, but probably the best one is dnssec.net website.
Install Dnsmasq (DNSSEC is optional):
$ brew install dnsmasq --with-dnssec
$ cp ~/homebrew/opt/dnsmasq/dnsmasq.conf.example ~/homebrew/etc/dnsmasq.conf
Edit the configuration:
$ vim ~/homebrew/etc/dnsmasq.conf
Examine all the options. Here are a few recommended settings to enable:
# Forward queries to DNSCrypt on localhost port 5355
server=127.0.0.1#5355
# Uncomment to forward queries to Google Public DNS
#server=8.8.8.8
# Never forward plain names
domain-needed
# Examples of blocking TLDs or subdomains
address=/.onion/0.0.0.0
address=/.local/0.0.0.0
address=/.mycoolnetwork/0.0.0.0
address=/.facebook.com/0.0.0.0
# Never forward addresses in the non-routed address spaces
bogus-priv
# Reject private addresses from upstream nameservers
stop-dns-rebind
# Query servers in order
strict-order
# Set the size of the cache
# The default is to keep 150 hostnames
cache-size=8192
# Optional logging directives
log-async
log-dhcp
log-facility=/var/log/dnsmasq.log
# Uncomment to log all queries
#log-queries
# Uncomment to enable DNSSEC
#dnssec
#trust-anchor=.,19036,8,2,49AAC11D7B6F6446702E54A1607371607A1A41855200FD2CE1CDDE32F24E8FB5
#dnssec-check-unsigned
Install and start the program (sudo is required to bind to privileged port 53):
$ sudo brew services start dnsmasq
To set Dnsmasq as your local DNS server, open System Preferences > Network and select the active interface, then the DNS tab, select + and add 127.0.0.1
, or use:
$ sudo networksetup -setdnsservers "Wi-Fi" 127.0.0.1
Make sure Dnsmasq is correctly configured:
$ scutil --dns
DNS configuration
resolver #1
search domain[0] : whatever
nameserver[0] : 127.0.0.1
flags : Request A records, Request AAAA records
reach : Reachable, Local Address, Directly Reachable Address
$ networksetup -getdnsservers "Wi-Fi"
127.0.0.1
Note Some VPN software overrides DNS settings on connect. See issue #24 for more information.
Test DNSSEC validation succeeds for signed zones:
$ dig +dnssec icann.org
Reply should have NOERROR
status and contain ad
flag. For instance,
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 47039
;; flags: qr rd ra ad; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 2, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1
Test DNSSEC validation fails for zones that are signed improperly:
$ dig www.dnssec-failed.org
Reply should have SERVFAIL
status. For instance,
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: SERVFAIL, id: 15190
;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 0, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1
Use dnscrypt to encrypt DNS traffic to the provider of choice.
If you prefer a GUI application, see alterstep/dnscrypt-osxclient.
Install DNSCrypt from Homebrew:
$ brew install dnscrypt-proxy
If using in combination with Dnsmasq, find the file homebrew.mxcl.dnscrypt-proxy.plist
$ find ~/homebrew -name homebrew.mxcl.dnscrypt-proxy.plist
/Users/drduh/homebrew/Cellar/dnscrypt-proxy/1.7.0/homebrew.mxcl.dnscrypt-proxy.plist
Edit it to have the line:
<string>--local-address=127.0.0.1:5355</string>
Below the line:
<string>/usr/local/opt/dnscrypt-proxy/sbin/dnscrypt-proxy</string>
Append a local-address line to use DNScrypt on a port other than 53, like 5355
This can also be done using Homebrew, by installing gnu-sed
and using the gsed
command:
$ sudo gsed -i "/sbin\\/dnscrypt-proxy<\\/string>/a<string>--local-address=127.0.0.1:5355<\\/string>\n" $(find ~/homebrew -name homebrew.mxcl.dnscrypt-proxy.plist)
By default, the resolvers-list
will point to the dnscrypt version specific resolvers file. When dnscrypt is updated, this version may no longer exist, and if it does, may point to an outdated file. This can be fixed by changing the resolvers file in /Library/LaunchDaemons/homebrew.mxcl.dnscrypt-proxy.plist
to the symlinked version in /usr/local/share
:
<string>--resolvers-list=/usr/local/share/dnscrypt-proxy/dnscrypt-resolvers.csv</string>
Start DNSCrypt:
$ brew services start dnscrypt-proxy
Make sure DNSCrypt is running:
$ sudo lsof -Pni UDP:5355
COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
dnscrypt- 83 nobody 7u IPv4 0x1773f85ff9f8bbef 0t0 UDP 127.0.0.1:5355
$ ps A | grep '[d]nscrypt'
83 ?? Ss 0:00.27 /Users/drduh/homebrew/opt/dnscrypt-proxy/sbin/dnscrypt-proxy --local-address=127.0.0.1:5355 --ephemeral-keys --resolvers-list=/Users/drduh/homebrew/opt/dnscrypt-proxy/share/dnscrypt-proxy/dnscrypt-resolvers.csv --resolver-name=dnscrypt.eu-dk --user=nobody
By default, dnscrypt-proxy runs on localhost (127.0.0.1), port 53, and under the "nobody" user using the dnscrypt.eu-dk DNSCrypt-enabled resolver. If you would like to change these settings, you will have to edit the plist file (e.g., --resolver-address, --provider-name, --provider-key, etc.)
This can be accomplished by editing homebrew.mxcl.dnscrypt-proxy.plist
You can run your own dnscrypt server (see also drduh/Debian-Privacy-Server-Guide#dnscrypt) from a trusted location or use one of many public servers instead.
Confirm outgoing DNS traffic is encrypted:
$ sudo tcpdump -qtni en0
IP 10.8.8.8.59636 > 77.66.84.233.443: UDP, length 512
IP 77.66.84.233.443 > 10.8.8.8.59636: UDP, length 368
$ dig +short -x 77.66.84.233
resolver2.dnscrypt.eu
See also What is a DNS leak, the mDNSResponder manual page and ipv6-test.com.
When macOS connects to new networks, it probes the network and launches a Captive Portal assistant utility if connectivity can't be determined.
An attacker could trigger the utility and direct a Mac to a site with malware without user interaction, so it's best to disable this feature and log in to captive portals using your regular Web browser, provided you have first disable any custom dns and/or proxy settings.
$ sudo defaults write /Library/Preferences/SystemConfiguration/com.apple.captive.control Active -bool false
See also Apple OS X Lion Security: Captive Portal Hijacking Attack, Apple's secret "wispr" request, How to disable the captive portal window in Mac OS Lion, and An undocumented change to Captive Network Assistant settings in OS X 10.10 Yosemite.
macOS comes with over 200 root authority certificates installed from for-profit corporations like Apple, Verisign, Thawte, Digicert and government agencies from China, Japan, Netherlands, U.S., and more! These Certificate Authorities (CAs) are capable of issuing SSL/TLS certificates for any domain, code signing certificates, etc.
For more information, see Certification Authority Trust Tracker, Analysis of the HTTPS certificate ecosystem (pdf), and You Won’t Be Needing These Any More: On Removing Unused Certificates From Trust Stores (pdf).
You can inspect system root certificates in Keychain Access, under the System Roots tab or by using the security
command line tool and /System/Library/Keychains/SystemRootCertificates.keychain
file.
You can disable certificate authorities through Keychain Access by marking them as Never Trust and closing the window:
The risk of a man in the middle attack in which a coerced or compromised certificate authority trusted by your system issues a fake/rogue SSL certificate is quite low, but still possible.
The version of OpenSSL in Sierra is 0.9.8zh
which is not current. It doesn't support TLS 1.1 or newer, elliptic curve ciphers, and more.
Apple declares OpenSSL deprecated in their Cryptographic Services Guide document. Their version also has patches which may surprise you.
If you're going to use OpenSSL on your Mac, download and install a recent version of OpenSSL with brew install openssl
. Note, linking brew to be used in favor of /usr/bin/openssl
may interfere with building software. See issue #39.
Compare the TLS protocol and cipher between the homebrew version and the system version of OpenSSL:
$ ~/homebrew/bin/openssl version; echo | ~/homebrew/bin/openssl s_client -connect github.com:443 2>&1 | grep -A2 SSL-Session
OpenSSL 1.0.2j 26 Sep 2016
SSL-Session:
Protocol : TLSv1.2
Cipher : ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256
$ /usr/bin/openssl version; echo | /usr/bin/openssl s_client -connect github.com:443 2>&1 | grep -A2 SSL-Session
OpenSSL 0.9.8zh 14 Jan 2016
SSL-Session:
Protocol : TLSv1
Cipher : AES128-SHA
See also Comparison of TLS implementations, How's My SSL, Qualys SSL Labs Tools and for detailed explanations and with latest vulnerabilities tests ssl-checker.online-domain-tools.com.
The version of Curl which comes with macOS uses Secure Transport for SSL/TLS validation.
If you prefer to use OpenSSL, install with brew install curl --with-openssl
and ensure it's the default with brew link --force curl
Here are several recommended options to add to ~/.curlrc
(see man curl
for more):
user-agent = "Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; rv:45.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/45.0"
referer = ";auto"
connect-timeout = 10
progress-bar
max-time = 90
verbose
show-error
remote-time
ipv4
Consider using Privoxy as a local proxy to filter Web browsing traffic.
A signed installation package for privoxy can be downloaded from silvester.org.uk or Sourceforge. The signed package is more secure than the Homebrew version, and attracts full support from the Privoxy project.
Alternatively, install and start privoxy using Homebrew:
$ brew install privoxy
$ brew services start privoxy
By default, privoxy listens on local TCP port 8118.
Set the system http proxy for your active network interface 127.0.0.1
and 8118
(This can be done through System Preferences > Network > Advanced > Proxies):
$ sudo networksetup -setwebproxy "Wi-Fi" 127.0.0.1 8118
(Optional) Set the system https proxy, which still allows for domain name filtering, with:
$ sudo networksetup -setsecurewebproxy "Wi-Fi" 127.0.0.1 8118
Confirm the proxy is set:
$ scutil --proxy
<dictionary> {
ExceptionsList : <array> {
0 : *.local
1 : 169.254/16
}
FTPPassive : 1
HTTPEnable : 1
HTTPPort : 8118
HTTPProxy : 127.0.0.1
}
Visit http://p.p/ in a browser, or with Curl:
$ ALL_PROXY=127.0.0.1:8118 curl -I http://p.p/
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 2401
Content-Type: text/html
Cache-Control: no-cache
Privoxy already comes with many good rules, however you can also write your own.
Edit ~/homebrew/etc/privoxy/user.action
to filter elements by domain or with regular expressions.
Here are some examples:
{ +block{social networking} }
www.facebook.com/(extern|plugins)/(login_status|like(box)?|activity|fan)\.php
.facebook.com
{ +block{unwanted images} +handle-as-image }
.com/ads/
/.*1x1.gif
/.*fb-icon.[jpg|gif|png]
/assets/social-.*
/cleardot.gif
/img/social.*
ads.*.co.*/
ads.*.com/
{ +redirect{s@http://@https://@} }
.google.com
.wikipedia.org
code.jquery.com
imgur.com
Verify Privoxy is blocking and redirecting:
$ ALL_PROXY=127.0.0.1:8118 curl ads.foo.com/ -IL
HTTP/1.1 403 Request blocked by Privoxy
Content-Type: image/gif
Content-Length: 64
Cache-Control: no-cache
$ ALL_PROXY=127.0.0.1:8118 curl imgur.com/ -IL
HTTP/1.1 302 Local Redirect from Privoxy
Location: https://imgur.com/
Content-Length: 0
Date: Sun, 09 Oct 2016 18:48:19 GMT
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
You can replace ad images with pictures of kittens, for example, by starting the a local Web server and redirecting blocked requests to localhost.
The Web browser poses the largest security and privacy risk, as its fundamental job is to download and execute untrusted code from the Internet.
Use Google Chrome for most of your browsing. It offers separate profiles, good sandboxing, frequent updates (including Flash, although you should disable it - see below), and carries impressive credentials.
Chrome also comes with a great PDF viewer.
If you don't want to use Chrome, Firefox is an excellent browser as well. Or simply use both. See discussion in issues #2, #90.
If using Firefox, see TheCreeper/PrivacyFox for recommended privacy preferences. Also be sure to check out NoScript for Mozilla-based browsers, which allows whitelist-based, pre-emptive script blocking.
Create at least three profiles, one for browsing trusted Web sites (email, banking), another for mostly trusted Web sites (link aggregators, news sites), and a third for a completely cookie-less and script-less experience.
-
One profile without cookies or Javascript enabled (e.g., turned off in
chrome://settings/content
) which should be the preferred profile to visiting untrusted Web sites. However, many pages will not load at all without Javascript enabled. -
One profile with uMatrix or uBlock Origin (or both). Use this profile for visiting mostly trusted Web sites. Take time to learn how these firewall extensions work. Other frequently recommended extensions are Privacy Badger, HTTPSEverywhere and CertPatrol (Firefox only).
-
One or more profile(s) for secure and trusted browsing needs, such as banking and email only.
The idea is to separate and compartmentalize data, so that an exploit or privacy violation in one "session" does not necessarily affect data in another.
In each profile, visit chrome://plugins/
and disable Adobe Flash Player. If you must use Flash, visit chrome://settings/contents
to enable Let me choose when to run plugin content, under the Plugins section (also known as click-to-play).
Take some time to read through Chromium Security and Chromium Privacy.
For example you may wish to disable DNS prefetching (see also DNS Prefetching and Its Privacy Implications (pdf)).
Also be aware of WebRTC, which may reveal your local or public (if connected to VPN) IP address(es). This can be disabled with extensions such as uBlock Origin and rentamob/WebRTC-Leak-Prevent.
Many Chromium-derived browsers are not recommended. They are usually closed source, poorly maintained, have bugs, and make dubious claims to protect privacy. See The Private Life of Chromium Browsers.
Safari is not recommended. The code is a mess and security vulnerabilities are frequent, and slower to patch (see discussion on Hacker News). Security does not appear to be a priority for Safari. If you do use it, at least disable the Open "safe" files after downloading option in Preferences, and be aware of other privacy nuances.
Other miscellaneous browsers, such as Brave, are not evaluated in this guide, so are neither recommended nor actively discouraged from use.
For more information about security conscious browsing, see HowTo: Privacy & Security Conscious Browsing, browserleaks.com and EFF Panopticlick.
Adobe Flash, Oracle Java, Adobe Reader, Microsoft Silverlight (Netflix now works with HTML5) and other plugins are security risks and should not be installed.
If they are necessary, only use them in a disposable virtual machine and subscribe to security announcements to make sure you're always patched.
See Hacking Team Flash Zero-Day, Java Trojan BackDoor.Flashback, Acrobat Reader: Security Vulnerabilities, and Angling for Silverlight Exploits, for example.
PGP is a standard for encrypting email end to end. That means only the chosen recipients can decrypt a message, unlike regular email which is read and forever archived by providers.
GPG, or GNU Privacy Guard, is a GPL licensed program compliant with the standard.
GPG is used to verify signatures of software you download and install, as well as symmetrically or asymmetrically encrypt files and text.
Install from Homebrew with brew install gnupg2
.
If you prefer a graphical application, download and install GPG Suite.
Here are several recommended options to add to ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
:
auto-key-locate keyserver
keyserver hkps://hkps.pool.sks-keyservers.net
keyserver-options no-honor-keyserver-url
keyserver-options ca-cert-file=/etc/sks-keyservers.netCA.pem
keyserver-options no-honor-keyserver-url
keyserver-options debug
keyserver-options verbose
personal-cipher-preferences AES256 AES192 AES CAST5
personal-digest-preferences SHA512 SHA384 SHA256 SHA224
default-preference-list SHA512 SHA384 SHA256 SHA224 AES256 AES192 AES CAST5 ZLIB BZIP2 ZIP Uncompressed
cert-digest-algo SHA512
s2k-digest-algo SHA512
s2k-cipher-algo AES256
charset utf-8
fixed-list-mode
no-comments
no-emit-version
keyid-format 0xlong
list-options show-uid-validity
verify-options show-uid-validity
with-fingerprint
Install the keyservers CA certificate:
$ curl -O https://sks-keyservers.net/sks-keyservers.netCA.pem
$ sudo mv sks-keyservers.netCA.pem /etc
These settings will configure GnuPG to use SSL when fetching new keys and prefer strong cryptographic primitives.
See also ioerror/duraconf/configs/gnupg/gpg.conf. You should also take some time to read OpenPGP Best Practices.
If you don't already have a keypair, create one using gpg --gen-key
. Also see drduh/YubiKey-Guide.
Read online guides and practice encrypting and decrypting email to yourself and your friends. Get them interested in this stuff!
OTR stands for off-the-record and is a cryptographic protocol for encrypting and authenticating conversations over instant messaging.
You can use OTR on top of any existing XMPP chat service, even Google Hangouts (which only encrypts conversations between users and the server using TLS).
The first time you start a conversation with someone new, you'll be asked to verify their public key fingerprint. Make sure to do this in person or by some other secure means (e.g. GPG encrypted mail).
A popular macOS GUI client for XMPP and other chat protocols is Adium
Consider downloading the beta version which uses OAuth2, making logging in to Google accounts more secure.
Adium_1.5.11b3.dmg
SHA-256: 999e1931a52dc327b3a6e8492ffa9df724a837c88ad9637a501be2e3b6710078
SHA-1: ca804389412f9aeb7971ade6812f33ac739140e6
Remember to disable logging for OTR chats with Adium.
A good console-based XMPP client is profanity, which can be installed with brew install profanity
For improved anonymity, check out Tor Messenger, although it is still in beta, as well as Ricochet (which has recently received a thorough security audit (pdf)), which both use the Tor network rather than relying on messaging servers.
If you want to know how OTR works, read the paper Off-the-Record Communication, or, Why Not To Use PGP (pdf)
Tor is an anonymizing proxy which can be used for browsing the Web.
Download Tor Browser from the offical Tor Project Web site.
Do not attempt to configure other browsers or applications to use Tor as you will likely make a mistake which will compromise your anonymity.
Download both the dmg
and asc
signature files, then verify the disk image has been signed by Tor developers:
$ cd Downloads
$ file Tor*
TorBrowser-6.0.5-osx64_en-US.dmg: bzip2 compressed data, block size = 900k
TorBrowser-6.0.5-osx64_en-US.dmg.asc: PGP signature Signature (old)
$ gpg Tor*asc
gpg: assuming signed data in `TorBrowser-6.0.5-osx64_en-US.dmg'
gpg: Signature made Fri Sep 16 07:51:52 2016 EDT using RSA key ID D40814E0
gpg: Can't check signature: public key not found
$ gpg --recv 0xD40814E0
gpg: requesting key D40814E0 from hkp server keys.gnupg.net
gpg: key 93298290: public key "Tor Browser Developers (signing key) <[email protected]>" imported
gpg: no ultimately trusted keys found
gpg: Total number processed: 1
gpg: imported: 1 (RSA: 1)
$ gpg Tor*asc
gpg: assuming signed data in 'TorBrowser-6.0.5-osx64_en-US.dmg'
gpg: Signature made Fri Sep 16 07:51:52 2016 EDT using RSA key ID D40814E0
gpg: Good signature from "Tor Browser Developers (signing key) <[email protected]>" [unknown]
gpg: WARNING: This key is not certified with a trusted signature!
gpg: There is no indication that the signature belongs to the owner.
Primary key fingerprint: EF6E 286D DA85 EA2A 4BA7 DE68 4E2C 6E87 9329 8290
Subkey fingerprint: BA1E E421 BBB4 5263 180E 1FC7 2E1A C68E D408 14E0
Make sure Good signature from "Tor Browser Developers (signing key) <[email protected]>"
appears in the output. The warning about the key not being certified is benign, as it has not yet been manually assigned trust.
See How to verify signatures for packages for more information.
To finish installing Tor Browser, open the disk image and drag the it into the Applications folder, or with:
$ hdiutil mount TorBrowser-6.0.5-osx64_en-US.dmg
$ cp -rv /Volumes/Tor\ Browser/TorBrowser.app /Applications
It is also possible to verify the Tor application's code signature was made by with The Tor Project's Apple developer ID MADPSAYN6T:
$ codesign -dvv /Applications/TorBrowser.app
Executable=/Applications/TorBrowser.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox
Identifier=org.mozilla.tor browser
Format=app bundle with Mach-O thin (x86_64)
CodeDirectory v=20200 size=247 flags=0x0(none) hashes=5+3 location=embedded
Library validation warning=OS X SDK version before 10.9 does not support Library Validation
Signature size=4247
Authority=Developer ID Application: The Tor Project, Inc (MADPSAYN6T)
Authority=Developer ID Certification Authority
Authority=Apple Root CA
Signed Time=Nov 30, 2016, 10:40:34 AM
Info.plist entries=21
TeamIdentifier=MADPSAYN6T
Sealed Resources version=2 rules=12 files=130
Internal requirements count=1 size=184
To view certificate details, extract it with codesign
and decode it with openssl
:
$ codesign -d --extract-certificates /Applications/TorBrowser.app
Executable=/Applications/TorBrowser.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox
$ file codesign*
codesign0: data
codesign1: data
codesign2: data
$ openssl x509 -inform der -in codesign0 -subject -issuer -startdate -enddate -noout
subject= /UID=MADPSAYN6T/CN=Developer ID Application: The Tor Project, Inc (MADPSAYN6T)/OU=MADPSAYN6T/O=The Tor Project, Inc/C=US
issuer= /CN=Developer ID Certification Authority/OU=Apple Certification Authority/O=Apple Inc./C=US
notBefore=Apr 12 22:40:13 2016 GMT
notAfter=Apr 13 22:40:13 2021 GMT
$ openssl x509 -inform der -in codesign0 -fingerprint -noout
SHA1 Fingerprint=95:80:54:F1:54:66:F3:9C:C2:D8:27:7A:29:21:D9:61:11:93:B3:E8
$ openssl x509 -inform der -in codesign0 -fingerprint -sha256 -noout
SHA256 Fingerprint=B5:0D:47:F0:3E:CB:42:B6:68:1C:6F:38:06:2B:C2:9F:41:FA:D6:54:F1:29:D3:E4:DD:9C:C7:49:35:FF:F5:D9
Tor traffic is encrypted to the exit node (i.e., cannot be read by a passive network eavesdropper), but Tor use can be identified - for example, TLS handshake "hostnames" will show up in plaintext:
$ sudo tcpdump -An "tcp" | grep "www"
listening on pktap, link-type PKTAP (Apple DLT_PKTAP), capture size 262144 bytes
.............". ...www.odezz26nvv7jeqz1xghzs.com.........
.............#.!...www.bxbko3qi7vacgwyk4ggulh.com.........
.6....m.....>...:.........|../* Z....W....X=..6...C../....................................0...0..0.......'....F./0.. *.H........0%1#0!..U....www.b6zazzahl3h3faf4x2.com0...160402000000Z..170317000000Z0'1%0#..U....www.tm3ddrghe22wgqna5u8g.net0..0..
See Tor Protocol Specification and Tor/TLSHistory for more information.
You may wish to additionally obfuscate Tor traffic using a pluggable transport, such as Yawning/obfs4proxy or SRI-CSL/stegotorus.
This can be done by setting up your own Tor relay or finding an existing private or public bridge to serve as an obfuscating entry node.
For extra security, use Tor inside a VirtualBox or VMware virtualized GNU/Linux or BSD machine.
Finally, remember the Tor network provides anonymity, which is not necessarily synonymous with privacy. The Tor network does not guarantee protection against a global observer capable of traffic analysis and correlation. See also Seeking Anonymity in an Internet Panopticon (pdf) and Traffic Correlation on Tor by Realistic Adversaries (pdf).
Also see Invisible Internet Project (I2P) and its Tor comparison.
If you use your Mac on untrusted networks - airports, cafes, etc. - your network traffic is being monitored and possibly tampered with.
It is a good idea to use a VPN which encrypts all outgoing network traffic (i.e., not split tunnel) with a provider you trust. For an example of how to set up and host your own VPN, see drduh/Debian-Privacy-Server-Guide.
Don't just blindly sign up for a VPN service without understanding the full implications and how your traffic will be routed. If you don't understand how the VPN works or are not familiar with the software used, you are probably better off without it.
When choosing a VPN service or setting up your own, be sure to research the protocols, key exchange algorithms, authentication mechanisms, and type of encryption being used. Some protocols, such as PPTP, should be avoided in favor of OpenVPN, for example.
Some clients may send traffic over the next available interface when VPN is interrupted or disconnected. See scy/8122924 for an example on how to allow traffic only over VPN.
Another set of scripts to lock down your system so it will only access the internet via a VPN can be found as part of the Voodoo Privacy project - sarfata/voodooprivacy and there is an updated guide to setting up an IPSec VPN on a virtual machine (hwdsl2/setup-ipsec-vpn) or a docker container (hwdsl2/docker-ipsec-vpn-server).
There is an ever-increasing amount of Mac malware in the wild. Macs aren't immune from viruses and malicious software!
Some malware comes bundled with both legitimate software, such as the Java bundling Ask Toolbar, and some with illegitimate software, such as Mac.BackDoor.iWorm bundled with pirated programs. Malwarebytes Anti-Malware for Mac is an excellent program for ridding oneself of "garden-variety" malware and other "crapware".
See Methods of malware persistence on Mac OS X (pdf) and Malware Persistence on OS X Yosemite to learn about how garden-variety malware functions.
You could periodically run a tool like Knock Knock to examine persistent applications (e.g. scripts, binaries). But by then, it is probably too late. Maybe applications such as Block Block and Ostiarius will help. See warnings and caveats in issue #90 first, however. Using an application such as Little Flocker can also protect parts of the filesystem from unauthorized writes similar to how Little Snitch protects the network (note, however, the software is still in beta and should be used with caution).
Anti-virus programs are a double-edged sword -- not useful for advanced users and will likely increase attack surface against sophisticated threats, however possibly useful for catching "garden variety" malware on novice users' Macs. There is also the additional processing overhead to consider.
See Sophail: Applied attacks against Antivirus (pdf), Analysis and Exploitation of an ESET Vulnerability, a trivial Avast RCE, Popular Security Software Came Under Relentless NSA and GCHQ Attacks, and AVG: "Web TuneUP" extension multiple critical vulnerabilities.
Therefore, the best anti-virus is Common Sense 2017. See more discussion in issue #44.
Local privilege escalation bugs are plenty on macOS, so always be careful when downloading and running untrusted programs or trusted programs from third party websites or downloaded over HTTP (example).
Have a look at The Safe Mac for past and current Mac security news.
Also check out Hacking Team malware for Mac OS: root installation for MacOS, Support driver for Mac Agent and RCS Agent for Mac, which is a good example of advanced malware with capabilities to hide from userland (e.g., ps
, ls
), for example. For more, see A Brief Analysis of an RCS Implant Installer and reverse.put.as
System Integrity Protection (SIP) is a security feature since OS X 10.11 "El Capitan". It is enabled by default, but can be disabled, which may be necessary to change some system settings, such as deleting root certificate authorities or unloading certain launch daemons. Keep this feature on, as it is by default.
From What's New in OS X 10.11:
A new security policy that applies to every running process, including privileged code and code that runs out of the sandbox. The policy extends additional protections to components on disk and at run-time, only allowing system binaries to be modified by the system installer and software updates. Code injection and runtime attachments to system binaries are no longer permitted.
Also see What is the “rootless” feature in El Capitan, really?
Some MacBook hardware has shipped with SIP disabled. To verify SIP is enabled, use the command csrutil status
, which should return: System Integrity Protection status: enabled.
Otherwise, enable SIP through Recovery Mode.
Gatekeeper and the quarantine system try to prevent unsigned or "bad" programs and files from running and opening.
XProtect prevents the execution of known bad files and outdated plugin versions, but does nothing to cleanup or stop existing malware.
Both offer trivial protection against common risks and are fine at default settings.
See also Mac Malware Guide : How does Mac OS X protect me? and Gatekeeper, XProtect and the Quarantine attribute.
Note Quarantine stores information about downloaded files in ~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.LaunchServices.QuarantineEventsV2
, which may pose a privacy risk. To examine the file, simply use strings
or the following command:
$ echo 'SELECT datetime(LSQuarantineTimeStamp + 978307200, "unixepoch") as LSQuarantineTimeStamp, LSQuarantineAgentName, LSQuarantineOriginURLString, LSQuarantineDataURLString from LSQuarantineEvent;' | sqlite3 /Users/$USER/Library/Preferences/com.apple.LaunchServices.QuarantineEventsV2
See here for more information.
To permanently disable this feature, clear the file and make it immutable:
$ :>~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.LaunchServices.QuarantineEventsV2
$ sudo chflags schg ~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.LaunchServices.QuarantineEventsV2
Furthermore, macOS attaches metadata (HFS+ extended attributes) to downloaded files, which can be viewed with the mdls
and xattr
commands:
$ ls -l@ ~/Downloads/TorBrowser-6.0.8-osx64_en-US.dmg
-rw-r--r--@ 1 drduh staff 59322237 Dec 1 12:00 TorBrowser-6.0.8-osx64_en-US.dmg
com.apple.metadata:kMDItemWhereFroms 186
com.apple.quarantine 68
$ mdls ~/Downloads/TorBrowser-6.0.8-osx64_en-US.dmg
_kMDItemOwnerUserID = 501
kMDItemContentCreationDate = 2016-12-01 12:00:00 +0000
kMDItemContentModificationDate = 2016-12-01 12:00:00 +0000
kMDItemContentType = "com.apple.disk-image-udif"
kMDItemContentTypeTree = (
"public.archive",
"public.item",
"public.data",
"public.disk-image",
"com.apple.disk-image",
"com.apple.disk-image-udif"
)
kMDItemDateAdded = 2016-12-01 12:00:00 +0000
kMDItemDisplayName = "TorBrowser-6.0.8-osx64_en-US.dmg"
kMDItemFSContentChangeDate = 2016-12-01 12:00:00 +0000
kMDItemFSCreationDate = 2016-12-01 12:00:00 +0000
kMDItemFSCreatorCode = ""
kMDItemFSFinderFlags = 0
kMDItemFSHasCustomIcon = (null)
kMDItemFSInvisible = 0
kMDItemFSIsExtensionHidden = 0
kMDItemFSIsStationery = (null)
kMDItemFSLabel = 0
kMDItemFSName = "TorBrowser-6.0.8-osx64_en-US.dmg"
kMDItemFSNodeCount = (null)
kMDItemFSOwnerGroupID = 5000
kMDItemFSOwnerUserID = 501
kMDItemFSSize = 60273898
kMDItemFSTypeCode = ""
kMDItemKind = "Disk Image"
kMDItemLogicalSize = 60273898
kMDItemPhysicalSize = 60276736
kMDItemWhereFroms = (
"https://dist.torproject.org/torbrowser/6.0.8/TorBrowser-6.0.8-osx64_en-US.dmg",
"https://www.torproject.org/projects/torbrowser.html.en"
)
$ xattr -l TorBrowser-6.0.8-osx64_en-US.dmg
com.apple.metadata:kMDItemWhereFroms:
00000000 62 70 6C 69 73 74 30 30 A2 01 02 5F 10 4D 68 74 |bplist00..._.Mht|
00000010 74 70 73 3A 2F 2F 64 69 73 74 2E 74 6F 72 70 72 |tps://dist.torpr|
00000020 6F 6A 65 63 74 2E 6F 72 67 2F 74 6F 72 62 72 6F |oject.org/torbro|
00000030 77 73 65 72 2F 36 2E 30 2E 38 2F 54 6F 72 42 72 |wser/6.0.8/TorBr|
00000040 6F 77 73 65 72 2D 36 2E 30 2E 38 2D 6F 73 78 36 |owser-6.0.8-osx6|
00000050 34 5F 65 6E 2D 55 53 2E 64 6D 67 5F 10 36 68 74 |4_en-US.dmg_.6ht|
00000060 74 70 73 3A 2F 2F 77 77 77 2E 74 6F 72 70 72 6F |tps://www.torpro|
00000070 6A 65 63 74 2E 6F 72 67 2F 70 72 6F 6A 65 63 74 |ject.org/project|
00000080 73 2F 74 6F 72 62 72 6F 77 73 65 72 2E 68 74 6D |s/torbrowser.htm|
00000090 6C 2E 65 6E 08 0B 5B 00 00 00 00 00 00 01 01 00 |l.en..[.........|
000000A0 00 00 00 00 00 00 03 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |................|
000000B0 00 00 00 00 00 00 94 |.......|
000000b7
com.apple.quarantine: 0081;58519ffa;Google Chrome.app;1F032CAB-F5A1-4D92-84EB-CBECA971B7BC
Metadata attributes can also be removed with the -d
flag:
$ xattr -d com.apple.metadata:kMDItemWhereFroms ~/Downloads/TorBrowser-6.0.5-osx64_en-US.dmg
$ xattr -d com.apple.quarantine ~/Downloads/TorBrowser-6.0.5-osx64_en-US.dmg
$ xattr -l ~/Downloads/TorBrowser-6.0.5-osx64_en-US.dmg
[No output after removal.]
You can generate strong passwords with OpenSSL:
$ openssl rand -base64 30
LK9xkjUEAemc1gV2Ux5xqku+PDmMmCbSTmwfiMRI
Or GPG:
$ gpg --gen-random -a 0 30
4/bGZL+yUEe8fOqQhF5V01HpGwFSpUPwFcU3aOWQ
Or /dev/urandom
output:
$ dd if=/dev/urandom bs=1 count=30 2>/dev/null | base64
CbRGKASFI4eTa96NMrgyamj8dLZdFYBaqtWUSxKe
With control over character sets:
$ LANG=C tr -dc 'a-zA-Z0-9' < /dev/urandom | fold -w 40 | head -n 1
jm0iKn7ngQST8I0mMMCbbi6SKPcoUWwCb5lWEjxK
$ LANG=C tr -dc 'DrDuh0-9' < /dev/urandom | fold -w 40 | head -n 1
686672u2Dh7r754209uD312hhh23uD7u41h3875D
You can also generate passwords, even memorable ones, using Keychain Access password assistant, or a command line equivalent like anders/pwgen.
Keychains are encrypted with a PBKDF2 derived key and are a pretty safe place to store credentials. See also Breaking into the OS X keychain. Also be aware that Keychain does not encrypt the names corresponding to password entries.
Alternatively, you can manage an encrypted passwords file yourself with GnuPG (shameless plug for my drduh/pwd.sh password manager script).
In addition to passwords, ensure eligible online accounts, such as GitHub, Google accounts, banking, have two factor authentication enabled.
Look to Yubikey for a two factor and private key (e.g., ssh, gpg) hardware token. See drduh/YubiKey-Guide and trmm.net/Yubikey. One of two Yubikey's slots can also be programmed to emit a long, static password (which can be used in combination with a short, memorized password, for example).
Always encrypt files locally before backing them up to external media or online services.
One way is to use a symmetric cipher with GPG and a password of your choosing.
To encrypt a directory:
$ tar zcvf - ~/Downloads | gpg -c > ~/Desktop/backup-$(date +%F-%H%M).tar.gz.gpg
To decrypt an archive:
$ gpg -o ~/Desktop/decrypted-backup.tar.gz -d ~/Desktop/backup-2015-01-01-0000.tar.gz.gpg && \
tar zxvf ~/Desktop/decrypted-backup.tar.gz
You may also create encrypted volumes using Disk Utility or hdiutil
:
$ hdiutil create ~/Desktop/encrypted.dmg -encryption -size 1g -volname "Name" -fs JHFS+
Also see the following applications and services: SpiderOak, Arq, Espionage, and restic.
macOS remembers access points it has connected to. Like all wireless devices, the Mac will broadcast all access point names it remembers (e.g., MyHomeNetwork) each time it looks for a network, such as when waking from sleep.
This is a privacy risk, so remove networks from the list in System Preferences > Network > Advanced when they're no longer needed.
Also see Signals from the Crowd: Uncovering Social Relationships through Smartphone Probes (pdf) and Wi-Fi told me everything about you (pdf).
Saved Wi-Fi information (SSID, last connection, etc.) can be found in /Library/Preferences/SystemConfiguration/com.apple.airport.preferences.plist
You may wish to spoof the MAC address of your network card before connecting to new and untrusted wireless networks to mitigate passive fingerprinting:
$ sudo ifconfig en0 ether $(openssl rand -hex 6 | sed 's%\(..\)%\1:%g; s%.$%%')
Note MAC addresses will reset to hardware defaults on each boot.
Also see feross/SpoofMAC.
Finally, WEP protection on wireless networks is not secure and you should favor connecting to WPA2 protected networks only to mitigate the risk of passive eavesdroppers.
For outgoing ssh connections, use hardware- or password-protected keys, set up remote hosts and consider hashing them for added privacy.
Here are several recommended options to add to ~/.ssh/config
:
Host *
PasswordAuthentication no
ChallengeResponseAuthentication no
HashKnownHosts yes
Note macOS Sierra permanently remembers SSH key passphrases by default. Append the option UseKeyChain no
to turn this feature off.
You can also use ssh to create an encrypted tunnel to send your traffic through, which is similar to a VPN.
For example, to use Privoxy on a remote host:
$ ssh -C -L 5555:127.0.0.1:8118 [email protected]
$ sudo networksetup -setwebproxy "Wi-Fi" 127.0.0.1 5555
$ sudo networksetup -setsecurewebproxy "Wi-Fi" 127.0.0.1 5555
Or to use an ssh connection as a SOCKS proxy:
$ ssh -NCD 3000 [email protected]
By default, macOS does not have sshd or Remote Login enabled.
To enable sshd and allow incoming ssh connections:
$ sudo launchctl load -w /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/ssh.plist
Or use the System Preferences > Sharing menu.
If you are going to enable sshd, at least disable password authentication and consider further hardening your configuration.
To /etc/sshd_config
, add:
PasswordAuthentication no
ChallengeResponseAuthentication no
UsePAM no
Confirm whether sshd is enabled or disabled:
$ sudo lsof -Pni TCP:22
Keep your Mac physically secure at all times. Don't leave it unattended in hotels and such.
A skilled attacker with unsupervised physical access to your computer can infect the boot ROM to install a keylogger and steal your password - see Thunderstrike, for example.
A helpful tool is usbkill, which is "an anti-forensic kill-switch that waits for a change on your USB ports and then immediately shuts down your computer".
Consider purchasing a privacy filter for your screen to thwart shoulder surfers.
macOS has a powerful OpenBSM auditing capability. You can use it to monitor process execution, network activity, and much more.
To tail audit logs, use the praudit
utility:
$ sudo praudit -l /dev/auditpipe
header,201,11,execve(2),0,Thu Sep 1 12:00:00 2015, + 195 msec,exec arg,/Applications/.evilapp/rootkit,path,/Applications/.evilapp/rootkit,path,/Applications/.evilapp/rootkit,attribute,100755,root,wheel,16777220,986535,0,subject,drduh,root,wheel,root,wheel,412,100005,50511731,0.0.0.0,return,success,0,trailer,201,
header,88,11,connect(2),0,Thu Sep 1 12:00:00 2015, + 238 msec,argument,1,0x5,fd,socket-inet,2,443,173.194.74.104,subject,drduh,root,wheel,root,wheel,326,100005,50331650,0.0.0.0,return,failure : Operation now in progress,4354967105,trailer,88
header,111,11,OpenSSH login,0,Thu Sep 1 12:00:00 2015, + 16 msec,subject_ex,drduh,drduh,staff,drduh,staff,404,404,49271,::1,text,successful login drduh,return,success,0,trailer,111,
See the manual pages for audit
, praudit
, audit_control
and other files in /etc/security
Note although man audit
says the -s
flag will synchronize the audit configuration, it appears necessary to reboot for changes to take effect.
See articles on ilostmynotes.blogspot.com and derflounder.wordpress.com for more information.
iosnoop
monitors disk I/O
opensnoop
monitors file opens
execsnoop
monitors execution of processes
errinfo
monitors failed system calls
dtruss
monitors all system calls
See man -k dtrace
for more information.
Note System Integrity Protection interferes with DTrace, so it may no longer be possible to use these tools.
ps -ef
lists information about all running processes.
You can also view processes with Activity Monitor.
launchctl list
and sudo launchctl list
list loaded and running user and system launch daemons and agents.
List open network files:
$ sudo lsof -Pni
List contents of various network-related data structures:
$ sudo netstat -atln
You can also use Wireshark from the command line.
Monitor DNS queries and replies:
$ tshark -Y "dns.flags.response == 1" -Tfields \
-e frame.time_delta \
-e dns.qry.name \
-e dns.a \
-Eseparator=,
Monitor HTTP requests and responses:
$ tshark -Y "http.request or http.response" -Tfields \
-e ip.dst \
-e http.request.full_uri \
-e http.request.method \
-e http.response.code \
-e http.response.phrase \
-Eseparator=/s
Monitor x509 certificates:
$ tshark -Y "ssl.handshake.certificate" -Tfields \
-e ip.src \
-e x509sat.uTF8String \
-e x509sat.printableString \
-e x509sat.universalString \
-e x509sat.IA5String \
-e x509sat.teletexString \
-Eseparator=/s -Equote=d
Also see the simple networking monitoring application BonzaiThePenguin/Loading.
google/santa is a security software developed for Google's corporate Macintosh fleet and open sourced.
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.
Santa uses the Kernel Authorization API to monitor and allow/disallow binaries from executing in the kernel. Binaries can be white- or black-listed by unique hash or signing developer certificate. Santa can be used to only allow trusted code execution, or to blacklist known malware from executing on a Mac, similar to Bit9 software for Windows.
Note Santa does not currently have a graphical user interface for managing rules. The following instructions are for advanced users only!
To install Santa, visit the Releases page and download the latest disk image, the mount it and install the contained package:
$ hdiutil mount ~/Downloads/santa-0.9.14.dmg
$ sudo installer -pkg /Volumes/santa-0.9.14/santa-0.9.14.pkg -tgt /
By default, Santa installs in "Monitor" mode (meaning, nothing gets blocked, only logged) and comes with two rules: one for Apple binaries and another for Santa software itself.
Verify Santa is running and its kernel module is loaded:
$ santactl status
>>> Daemon Info
Mode | Monitor
File Logging | No
Watchdog CPU Events | 0 (Peak: 0.00%)
Watchdog RAM Events | 0 (Peak: 0.00MB)
>>> Kernel Info
Kernel cache count | 0
>>> Database Info
Binary Rules | 0
Certificate Rules | 2
Events Pending Upload | 0
$ ps -ef | grep "[s]anta"
0 786 1 0 10:01AM ?? 0:00.39 /Library/Extensions/santa-driver.kext/Contents/MacOS/santad --syslog
$ kextstat | grep santa
119 0 0xffffff7f822ff000 0x6000 0x6000 com.google.santa-driver (0.9.14) 693D8E4D-3161-30E0-B83D-66A273CAE026 <5 4 3 1>
Create a blacklist rule to prevent iTunes from executing:
$ sudo santactl rule --blacklist --path /Applications/iTunes.app/
Added rule for SHA-256: e1365b51d2cb2c8562e7f1de36bfb3d5248de586f40b23a2ed641af2072225b3.
Try to launch iTunes - it will be blocked.
$ open /Applications/iTunes.app/
LSOpenURLsWithRole() failed with error -10810 for the file /Applications/iTunes.app.
To remove the rule:
$ sudo santactl rule --remove --path /Applications/iTunes.app/
Removed rule for SHA-256: e1365b51d2cb2c8562e7f1de36bfb3d5248de586f40b23a2ed641af2072225b3.
Open iTunes:
$ open /Applications/iTunes.app/
[iTunes will open successfully]
Create a new, example C program:
$ cat <<EOF > foo.c
> #include <stdio.h>
> main() { printf("Hello World\n”); }
> EOF
Compile the program with GCC (requires installation of Xcode or command-line tools):
$ gcc -o foo foo.c
$ file foo
foo: Mach-O 64-bit executable x86_64
$ codesign -d foo
foo: code object is not signed at all
Run it:
$ ./foo
Hello World
Toggle Santa into “Lockdown” mode, which only allows whitelisted binaries to run:
$ sudo defaults write /var/db/santa/config.plist ClientMode -int 2
Try to run the unsigned binary:
$ ./foo
bash: ./foo: Operation not permitted
Santa
The following application has been blocked from executing
because its trustworthiness cannot be determined.
Path: /Users/demouser/foo
Identifier: 4e11da26feb48231d6e90b10c169b0f8ae1080f36c168ffe53b1616f7505baed
Parent: bash (701)
To whitelist a specific binary, determine its SHA-256 sum:
$ santactl fileinfo /Users/demouser/foo
Path : /Users/demouser/foo
SHA-256 : 4e11da26feb48231d6e90b10c169b0f8ae1080f36c168ffe53b1616f7505baed
SHA-1 : 4506f3a8c0a5abe4cacb98e6267549a4d8734d82
Type : Executable (x86-64)
Code-signed : No
Rule : Blacklisted (Unknown)
Add a whitelist rule:
$ sudo santactl rule --whitelist --sha256 4e11da26feb48231d6e90b10c169b0f8ae1080f36c168ffe53b1616f7505baed
Added rule for SHA-256: 4e11da26feb48231d6e90b10c169b0f8ae1080f36c168ffe53b1616f7505baed.
Run it:
$ ./foo
Hello World
It's allowed and works!
Applications can also be whitelisted by developer certificate (so that new binary versions will not need to be manually whitelisted on each update). For example, download and run Google Chrome - it will be blocked by Santa in "Lockdown" mode:
$ curl -sO https://dl.google.com/chrome/mac/stable/GGRO/googlechrome.dmg
$ hdiutil mount googlechrome.dmg
$ cp -r /Volumes/Google\ Chrome/Google\ Chrome.app /Applications/
$ open /Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/
LSOpenURLsWithRole() failed with error -10810 for the file /Applications/Google Chrome.app.
Whitelist the application by its developer certificate (first item in the Signing Chain):
$ santactl fileinfo /Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/
Path : /Applications/Google Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google Chrome
SHA-256 : 0eb08224d427fb1d87d2276d911bbb6c4326ec9f74448a4d9a3cfce0c3413810
SHA-1 : 9213cbc7dfaaf7580f3936a915faa56d40479f6a
Bundle Name : Google Chrome
Bundle Version : 2883.87
Bundle Version Str : 55.0.2883.87
Type : Executable (x86-64)
Code-signed : Yes
Rule : Blacklisted (Unknown)
Signing Chain:
1. SHA-256 : 15b8ce88e10f04c88a5542234fbdfc1487e9c2f64058a05027c7c34fc4201153
SHA-1 : 85cee8254216185620ddc8851c7a9fc4dfe120ef
Common Name : Developer ID Application: Google Inc.
Organization : Google Inc.
Organizational Unit : EQHXZ8M8AV
Valid From : 2012/04/26 07:10:10 -0700
Valid Until : 2017/04/27 07:10:10 -0700
2. SHA-256 : 7afc9d01a62f03a2de9637936d4afe68090d2de18d03f29c88cfb0b1ba63587f
SHA-1 : 3b166c3b7dc4b751c9fe2afab9135641e388e186
Common Name : Developer ID Certification Authority
Organization : Apple Inc.
Organizational Unit : Apple Certification Authority
Valid From : 2012/02/01 14:12:15 -0800
Valid Until : 2027/02/01 14:12:15 -0800
3. SHA-256 : b0b1730ecbc7ff4505142c49f1295e6eda6bcaed7e2c68c5be91b5a11001f024
SHA-1 : 611e5b662c593a08ff58d14ae22452d198df6c60
Common Name : Apple Root CA
Organization : Apple Inc.
Organizational Unit : Apple Certification Authority
Valid From : 2006/04/25 14:40:36 -0700
Valid Until : 2035/02/09 13:40:36 -0800
In this case, 15b8ce88e10f04c88a5542234fbdfc1487e9c2f64058a05027c7c34fc4201153
is the SHA-256 of Google’s Apple developer certificate (team ID EQHXZ8M8AV). To whitelist it:
$ sudo santactl rule --whitelist --certificate --sha256 15b8ce88e10f04c88a5542234fbdfc1487e9c2f64058a05027c7c34fc4201153
Added rule for SHA-256: 15b8ce88e10f04c88a5542234fbdfc1487e9c2f64058a05027c7c34fc4201153.
Google Chrome should now launch, and subsequent updates to the application will continue to work as long as the code signing certificate doesn’t change or expire.
To disable “Lockdown” mode:
$ sudo defaults delete /var/db/santa/config.plist ClientMode
See /var/log/santa.log
to monitor ALLOW and DENY execution decisions.
Note Python, Bash and other interpreters are whitelisted (since they are signed by Apple's developer certificate), so Santa will not be able to block such scripts from executing. Thus, a potential non-binary program which disables Santa is a weakness (not vulnerability, since it is so by design) to take note of.
If you wish, disable Diagnostics & Usage Data.
If you want to play music or watch videos, use VLC media player which is free and open source.
If you want to use torrents, use Transmission which is free and open source (note: like all software, even open source projects, malware may still find its way in). You may also wish to use a block list to avoid peering with known bad hosts - see Which is the best blocklist for Transmission and johntyree/3331662.
Manage default file handlers with duti, which can be installed with brew install duti
. One reason to manage extensions is to prevent auto-mounting of remote filesystems in Finder (see Protecting Yourself From Sparklegate). Here are several recommended handlers to manage:
$ duti -s com.apple.Safari afp
$ duti -s com.apple.Safari ftp
$ duti -s com.apple.Safari nfs
$ duti -s com.apple.Safari smb
Monitor system logs with the Console application or syslog -w
or log stream
commands.
In systems prior to macOS Sierra (10.12), enable the tty_tickets flag in /etc/sudoers
to restrict the sudo session to the Terminal window/tab that started it. To do so, use sudo visudo
and add the line Defaults tty_tickets
.
Set your screen to lock as soon as the screensaver starts:
$ defaults write com.apple.screensaver askForPassword -int 1
$ defaults write com.apple.screensaver askForPasswordDelay -int 0
Expose hidden files and Library folder in Finder:
$ defaults write com.apple.finder AppleShowAllFiles -bool true
$ chflags nohidden ~/Library
Show all filename extensions (so that "Evil.jpg.app" cannot masquerade easily).
$ defaults write NSGlobalDomain AppleShowAllExtensions -bool true
Don't default to saving documents to iCloud:
$ defaults write NSGlobalDomain NSDocumentSaveNewDocumentsToCloud -bool false
Enable Secure Keyboard Entry in Terminal (unless you use YubiKey or applications such as TextExpander).
Disable crash reporter (the dialog which appears after an application crashes and prompts to report the problem to Apple):
$ defaults write com.apple.CrashReporter DialogType none
Disable Bonjour multicast advertisements:
$ sudo defaults write /Library/Preferences/com.apple.mDNSResponder.plist NoMulticastAdvertisements -bool YES
Disable Handoff and Bluetooth features, if they aren't necessary.
Consider sandboxing your applications. See fG! Sandbox Guide (pdf) and s7ephen/OSX-Sandbox--Seatbelt--Profiles.
Did you know Apple has not shipped a computer with TPM since 2006?
Santa - A binary whitelisting/blacklisting system for macOS.
kristovatlas/osx-config-check - checks your OSX machine against various hardened configuration settings.
Lockdown - audits and remediates security configuration settings.
Dylib Hijack Scanner - scan for applications that are either susceptible to dylib hijacking or have been hijacked.
Little Flocker - "Little Snitch for files"; prevents applications from accessing files.
facebook/osquery - can be used to retrieve low level system information. Users can write SQL queries to retrieve system information.
google/grr - incident response framework focused on remote live forensics.
yelp/osxcollector - forensic evidence collection & analysis toolkit for OS X.
jipegit/OSXAuditor - analyzes artifacts on a running system, such as quarantined files, Safari, Chrome and Firefox history, downloads, HTML5 databases and localstore, social media and email accounts, and Wi-Fi access point names.
libyal/libfvde - library to access FileVault Drive Encryption (FVDE) (or FileVault2) encrypted volumes.
CISOfy/lynis - cross-platform security auditing tool and assists with compliance testing and system hardening.
In no particular order
MacOS Hardening Guide - Appendix of *OS Internals: Volume III - Security & Insecurity Internals (pdf)
Mac Developer Library: Secure Coding Guide
OS X Core Technologies Overview White Paper (pdf)
Reverse Engineering Mac OS X blog
Patrick Wardle's Objective-See blog
Managing Macs at Google Scale (LISA '13)
OS X Hardening: Securing a Large Global Mac Fleet (LISA '13)
DoD Security Technical Implementation Guides for Mac OS
Userland Persistence on Mac OS X
Developing Mac OSX kernel rootkits
IOKit kernel code execution exploit
Hidden backdoor API to root privileges in Apple OS X
Harden the World: Mac OSX 10.11 El Capitan
OS X 10.10 Yosemite: The Ars Technica Review
CIS Apple OSX 10.10 Benchmark (pdf)
Security Configuration For Mac OS X Version 10.6 Snow Leopard (pdf)
EFF Surveillance Self-Defense Guide
iCloud security and privacy overview
Demystifying the DMG File Format
There's a lot of vulnerable OS X applications out there (Sparkle Framework RCE)
iSeeYou: Disabling the MacBook Webcam Indicator LED
Mac OS X Forensics - Technical Report (pdf)
Mac Forensics: Mac OS X and the HFS+ File System (pdf)
Extracting FileVault 2 Keys with Volatility
Auditing and Exploiting Apple IPC
Mac OS X and iOS Internals: To the Apple's Core by Jonathan Levin
Demystifying the i-Device NVMe NAND (New storage used by Apple)