Hi, I’m in a process of making fast, (extrenely) secure, and modern laptop. Currently I have Arch Linux with encrypted root partition (unlocked with Nitrokey or long password), secure boot, linux-hardened, firewalld, etc.
I’m running linux-hardened with custom config. I enabled AMD SME, kernel lockdown, added some xanmod patch for more specific cpus, and disabled some unnedded drivers (only those that I’m 100% sure I don’t need - Intel, NVidia, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Virtio). Currently it takes ~50 minutes to recompile the kernel. Are there any tutorials what drivers to disable to speed up this process? After doing that I will try to compile it with -O3 and LTO. Do you know any patches for performance?
I’m planning to enable encrypted swap, install ClaimAV and install flatpak versions for every non open-source app I have.
I also want to have SELinux. Does anyone know where can I learn it? I had it on Fedora and it was not fun using it.
What are other ways I can make my laptop more secure?
There are also some kernel settings that you may find useful. Currently I am on the mobile and cannot remember the names. Text me if you need help
Network:
Enable rp and arp filter
Disable IP forwarding if you don’t use docker
Disable tcp timestamp
Disable icmp broadcast
Enable syncookies
Enable source route checking
Other:
Enable hard and soft link protection (it is may broke your system, use carefully)
Enable kptr restrict
Disable kexec
Disable sysrq
Enable randomize virtual memory address
Disable JIT for ebpf programms
Disable loading drivers via modprobe in live kernel.
Also check which hardware mitigations is disabled in your kernel. (Spectre, meltdawn) You may enable KASL
Also use selinux or apparmor. I prefer Selinux.
Enable auditd and configure it for auditing actions that your find useful.
50 minutes seems way too long - I run Gentoo on a 2nd gen i5 and my kernel compile is always under 20 minutes.
You are using make -j4
or make -j(number of CPU cores)
for parallel compile, right?
On laptop with Ryzen 5 5500U (12 threads) it takes 50 minutes and on desktop with Ryzen 7 3700X (16 threads) it takes 20 minutes. I use all threads to compile the kernel.
It compiles way waster with Gentoo, because it has minimal config. I used the default config from Arch repos and modified it. It’s full of unneeded drivers, but I’m scared of disabling them. I already disabled wrong drivers a few times and had to use different kernel to boot.
Look at secureblue for more things
- hardened malloc (preloading is somewhat complex for flatpaks)
- maybe more kargs
That custom kernel sounds very cool. Not sure if replacing it works on Fedora Atomic, would be very much needed
SELinux confined users is also very important, SELinux is kinda contradictory to flatpak though, as they do the same things often and Flatpaks often dont work because they are not built for it.
I will try hardened_malloc, I already use it on my phone. I have GrapheneOS.
Same. It works really well, I am doing some kind of project building a hardened Firefox. It has hardened build parameters, removed jemalloc (so it uses hardened_malloc, otherwise it fails to start with memory issues), and I also experiment with various optimization flags as I have a x86_64-v4 intel CPU.
This repo is also interesting.
Secureblue has Chromium preinstalled with a hardening and also privacy policy, but I used googerteller and damn that thing pings Google every second, its scary.
Now I’ve installed it and Librewolf works nornally. Is that normal or is malloc not working or is Librewolf compiled with hardened malloc?
I’ve heard about googerteller and I never thought someone will use it (except to try it)