But nobody likes checking configs manually. So let the computers do their job!
-__kconfig-hardened-check__ helps me to check the Linux kernel options
-against my security hardening preferences, which are based on the
+__kconfig-hardened-check__ is a tool for checking the security hardening options of the Linux kernel.
+The recommendations are based on
- [KSPP recommended settings][1]
- [CLIP OS kernel configuration][2]
## Usage
```
-usage: kconfig-hardened-check [-h] [--version] [-p {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}]
- [-c CONFIG]
- [-l CMDLINE]
- [-m {verbose,json,show_ok,show_fail}]
+usage: kconfig-hardened-check [-h] [--version] [-m {verbose,json,show_ok,show_fail}]
+ [-c CONFIG] [-l CMDLINE] [-p {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}]
+ [-g {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}]
A tool for checking the security hardening options of the Linux kernel
-optional arguments:
+options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--version show program's version number and exit
- -p {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}, --print {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}
- print security hardening preferences for the selected architecture
- -c CONFIG, --config CONFIG
- check the kernel kconfig file against these preferences
- -l CMDLINE, --cmdline CMDLINE
- check the kernel cmdline file against these preferences
-m {verbose,json,show_ok,show_fail}, --mode {verbose,json,show_ok,show_fail}
choose the report mode
+ -c CONFIG, --config CONFIG
+ check the security hardening options in the kernel Kconfig file
+ (also supports *.gz files)
+ -l CMDLINE, --cmdline CMDLINE
+ check the security hardening options in the kernel cmdline file
+ (contents of /proc/cmdline)
+ -p {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}, --print {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}
+ print the security hardening recommendations for the selected
+ microarchitecture
+ -g {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}, --generate {X86_64,X86_32,ARM64,ARM}
+ generate a Kconfig fragment with the security hardening options
+ for the selected microarchitecture
```
## Output modes
[+] Config check is finished: 'OK' - 122 / 'FAIL' - 101
```
-## kconfig-hardened-check versioning
-
-I usually update the kernel security hardening recommendations every few kernel releases.
-
-So the version of `kconfig-hardened-check` is associated with the corresponding version of the kernel.
+## Generating a Kconfig fragment with the security hardening options
-The version format is: __[major_number].[kernel_version].[kernel_patchlevel]__
+With the `-g` argument, the tool generates a Kconfig fragment with the security hardening options for the selected microarchitecture.
+This Kconfig fragment can be merged with the existing Linux kernel config:
+```
+$ ./bin/kconfig-hardened-check -g X86_64 > /tmp/fragment
+$ cd ~/linux-src/
+$ ./scripts/kconfig/merge_config.sh .config /tmp/fragment
+Using .config as base
+Merging /tmp/fragment
+Value of CONFIG_BUG_ON_DATA_CORRUPTION is redefined by fragment /tmp/fragment:
+Previous value: # CONFIG_BUG_ON_DATA_CORRUPTION is not set
+New value: CONFIG_BUG_ON_DATA_CORRUPTION=y
+ ...
+```
## Questions and answers