Impact
Unprivileged software in VMware VMs, including software running in unprivileged containers, can retrieve an Ignition config stored in a hypervisor guestinfo variable or OVF environment. If the Ignition config contains secrets, this can result in the compromise of sensitive information.
Patches
Ignition 2.14.0 and later adds a new systemd service, ignition-delete-config.service
, that deletes the Ignition config from supported hypervisors (currently VMware and VirtualBox) during the first boot. This ensures that unprivileged software cannot retrieve the Ignition config from the hypervisor.
If you have external tooling that requires the Ignition config to remain accessible in VM metadata after provisioning, and your Ignition config does not include sensitive information, you can prevent Ignition 2.14.0 and later from deleting the config by masking ignition-delete-config.service
. For example:
{
"ignition": {
"version": "3.0.0"
},
"systemd": {
"units": [
{
"name": "ignition-delete-config.service",
"mask": true
}
]
}
}
Workarounds
Avoid storing secrets in Ignition configs. In addition to VMware, many cloud platforms allow unprivileged software in a VM to retrieve the Ignition config from a networked cloud metadata service. While platform-specific mitigation is possible, such as firewall rules that prevent access to the metadata service, it's best to store secrets in a dedicated platform such as Hashicorp Vault.
Advice to Linux distributions
Linux distributions that ship Ignition should ensure the new ignition-delete-config.service
is installed and enabled by default.
In addition, we recommend shipping a service similar to ignition-delete-config.service
that runs when existing machines are upgraded, similar to the one in coreos/fedora-coreos-config#1738. Consider giving your users advance notice of this change, and providing instructions for masking ignition-delete-config.service
on existing nodes if users have tooling that requires the Ignition config to remain accessible in VM metadata.
References
For more information, see #1300 and #1350.
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory, open an issue in Ignition or email the CoreOS development mailing list.
Impact
Unprivileged software in VMware VMs, including software running in unprivileged containers, can retrieve an Ignition config stored in a hypervisor guestinfo variable or OVF environment. If the Ignition config contains secrets, this can result in the compromise of sensitive information.
Patches
Ignition 2.14.0 and later adds a new systemd service,
ignition-delete-config.service
, that deletes the Ignition config from supported hypervisors (currently VMware and VirtualBox) during the first boot. This ensures that unprivileged software cannot retrieve the Ignition config from the hypervisor.If you have external tooling that requires the Ignition config to remain accessible in VM metadata after provisioning, and your Ignition config does not include sensitive information, you can prevent Ignition 2.14.0 and later from deleting the config by masking
ignition-delete-config.service
. For example:Workarounds
Avoid storing secrets in Ignition configs. In addition to VMware, many cloud platforms allow unprivileged software in a VM to retrieve the Ignition config from a networked cloud metadata service. While platform-specific mitigation is possible, such as firewall rules that prevent access to the metadata service, it's best to store secrets in a dedicated platform such as Hashicorp Vault.
Advice to Linux distributions
Linux distributions that ship Ignition should ensure the new
ignition-delete-config.service
is installed and enabled by default.In addition, we recommend shipping a service similar to
ignition-delete-config.service
that runs when existing machines are upgraded, similar to the one in coreos/fedora-coreos-config#1738. Consider giving your users advance notice of this change, and providing instructions for maskingignition-delete-config.service
on existing nodes if users have tooling that requires the Ignition config to remain accessible in VM metadata.References
For more information, see #1300 and #1350.
For more information
If you have any questions or comments about this advisory, open an issue in Ignition or email the CoreOS development mailing list.