This is a utility that validates a Nix store for any packages that are reachable from live paths and likely to be affected by vulnerabilities listed in the NVD.
It implements a CLI utility to inspect the current status and a monitoring integration for Sensu.
Example output
2 derivations with active advisories
------------------------------------------------------------------------
binutils-2.31.1
/nix/store/zc1lbkaf9l9hlsp1jdiq3si56nsglymh-binutils-2.31.1.drv
CVE CVSSv3
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2018-1000876 7.8
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2018-20657 7.5
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2018-20712 6.5
------------------------------------------------------------------------
libssh2-1.9.0
/nix/store/mfpfclry68r4sv4mcc9hb88z0lb9jk1c-libssh2-1.9.0.drv
CVE CVSSv3
https://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2019-17498 8.1
vulnix
pulls all published CVEs from NIST and caches them locally. It
matches name and version of all derivations referenced from the command line
against known CVE entries. A whitelist is used to filter out unwanted results.
Matching Nix package names to NVD products is currently done via a coarse heuristic. First, a direct match is tried. If no product can be found, variations with lower case and underscore instead of hyphen are tried. It is clear that this mapping is too simplistic and needs to be improved in future versions.
- Depends on common Nix tools like
nix-store
. These are expected to be in $PATH. - Depends on being able to interact with the Nix store database
(/nix/var/nix/db). This means that it must either run as the same user that
owns the Nix store database or
nix-daemon
must be active. - Parses
*.drv
files directly. Tested with Nix >=1.10 and 2.x. - It refuses to work without some locale environment settings. Try
export LANG=C.UTF-8
if you see encoding errors.
- What vulnerabilities are listed for my current system
vulnix --system
- Check
nix-build
output together with its transitive closure
vulnix result/
- Check all passed derivations, but don't determine requisites
vulnix -R /nix/store/*.drv
- JSON output for machine post-processing
vulnix --json /nix/store/my-derivation.drv
See vulnix --help
for a list of all options.
vulnix
output may contain false positives, unfixable packages or stuff which
is known to be addressed. The whitelist feature allows to exclude packages
matching certain criteria.
Load whitelists from either local files or HTTP servers
vulnix -w /path/to/whitelist.toml \
-w https://example.org/published-whitelist.toml
Whitelists are TOML files which contain the package to be filtered as section headers, followed by further per-package options.
Exclude a package at a specific version
["openjpeg-2.3.0"]
Exclude a package regardless of version (additional CVE filters may apply, see below)
["openjpeg"]
Exclude all packages (see below for CVE filters, again)
["*"]
- cve
- List of CVE identifiers to match. The whitelist rule is valid as long as the detected CVEs are a subset of the CVEs listed here. If additional CVEs are detected, this whitelist rule is not effective anymore.
- until
- Date in the form "YYYY-MM-DD" which confines this rule's lifetime. On the specified date and later, this whitelist rule is not effective anymore.
- issue_url
- URL or list of URLs that point to any issue tracker. Informational only.
- comment
- String or list of strings containing free text. Informational only.
Create a ticket on your favourite issue tracker. Estimate the time to get the vulnerable package fixed. Create whitelist entry:
["ffmpeg-3.4.2"]
cve = ["CVE-2018-6912", "CVE-2018-7557"]
until = "2018-05-01"
issue_url = "https://issues.example.com/29952"
comment = "need to backport patch"
This particular version of ffmpeg will be left out from reports until either another CVE gets published or the specified date is reached.
vulnix
will inspect derivations for patches which supposedly fix specific
CVEs. When a patch filename contains one or more CVE identifiers, these will not
reported anymore. Example Nix code:
{
patches = [ ./CVE-2018-6951.patch ];
}
Patches which fix multiple CVEs should name them all with a non-numeric
separator, e.g. CVE-2017-14159 CVE-2017-17740.patch
.
Auto-detection even works when patches are pulled via fetchpatch
and friends
as long as there is a CVE identifier in the name. Example:
{
patches = [
(fetchpatch {
name = "CVE-2018-9055.patch";
url = http://paste.opensuse.org/view/raw/330751ce;
sha256 = "0m798m6c4v9yyhql7x684j5kppcm6884n1rrb9ljz8p9aqq2jqnm";
})
];
}