xpid
gvisor
xpid | gvisor | |
---|---|---|
2 | 72 | |
217 | 15,701 | |
- | 1.4% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
about 2 years ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
xpid
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Hunting hidden PIDs, eBPF and much more using xpid
This tool is opensource, the code is available on Github
- GitHub - kris-nova/xpid: Linux Process Discovery. C Library, Go bindings, Runtime.
gvisor
- GVisor: Linux-Compatible Sandbox
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Unfashionably secure: why we use isolated VMs
If you think about it virtualization is just a narrowing of the application-kernel interface. In a standard setting the application has a wide kernel interface available to it with dozens (ex. seccomp) to 100's of syscalls. A vulnerablility in any one of which could result in complete system compromise.
With virtualization the attack surface is narrowed to pretty much just the virtualization interface.
The problem with current virtualization (or more specifically, the VMM's) is that it can be cumbersome, for example memory management is a serious annoyance. The kernel is built to hog memory for cache and etc. but you don't want the guest to be doing that - since you want to overcommit memory as guests will rarely use 100% of what is given to them (especially when the guest is just a jailed singular application), workarounds such as free page reporting and drop_caches hacks exist.
I would expect eventually to see high performance custom kernels for a application jails - for example: gVisor[1] acts as a syscall interceptor (and can use KVM too!) and a custom kernel. Or a modified linux kernel with patched pain points for the guest.
[1] <https://gvisor.dev/>
- Syd the perhaps most sophisticated sandbox for Linux
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Hacking Alibaba Cloud's Kubernetes Cluster
Hillai: Following our research, Alibaba took several steps to address the vulnerabilities we discovered. They limited image pull secret permissions to read-only access, preventing unauthorized uploads. Additionally, they implemented a secure container technology similar to Google's gVisor project. This technology hardens containers and makes them more difficult to escape from, adding another layer of security.
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We Improved the Performance of a Userspace TCP Stack in Go by 5X
If you want to use netstack without Bazel, just use the go branch:
https://github.com/google/gvisor/tree/go
go get gvisor.dev/gvisor/pkg/tcpip@go
The go branch is auto generated with all of the generated code checked in.
- My VM is lighter (and safer) than your container
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Maestro: A Linux-compatible kernel in Rust
Isn't gVisor kind of this as well?
"gVisor is an application kernel for containers. It limits the host kernel surface accessible to the application while still giving the application access to all the features it expects. Unlike most kernels, gVisor does not assume or require a fixed set of physical resources; instead, it leverages existing host kernel functionality and runs as a normal process. In other words, gVisor implements Linux by way of Linux."
https://github.com/google/gvisor
- Google/Gvisor: Application Kernel for Containers
- GVisor: OCI Runtime with Application Kernel
- How to Escape a Container
What are some alternatives?
syzkaller - syzkaller is an unsupervised coverage-guided kernel fuzzer
firecracker - Secure and fast microVMs for serverless computing.
reposaur - Open source compliance tool for development platforms.
podman - Podman: A tool for managing OCI containers and pods.
o365beat - Elastic Beat for fetching and shipping Office 365 audit events
wsl-vpnkit - Provides network connectivity to WSL 2 when blocked by VPN
btrfscue - Recover files from damaged BTRFS filesystems
kata-containers - Kata Containers is an open source project and community working to build a standard implementation of lightweight Virtual Machines (VMs) that feel and perform like containers, but provide the workload isolation and security advantages of VMs. https://katacontainers.io/
lxd-probe - Open Source runtime scanner for Linux containers (LXD / LXC), It performs security audit checks based on CIS Linux containers Benchmark specification
sysbox - An open-source, next-generation "runc" that empowers rootless containers to run workloads such as Systemd, Docker, Kubernetes, just like VMs.
Gravitational Teleport - The easiest, and most secure way to access and protect all of your infrastructure.
containerd - An open and reliable container runtime