Softnet is a software networking for Tart which provides better network isolation and alleviates DHCP shortage on production systems.
It is essentially a userspace packet filter which restricts the VM networking and prevents a class of security issues, such as ARP spoofing. By default, the VM will only be able to:
- send traffic from its own MAC-address
- send traffic from the IP-address assigned to it by the DHCP
- send traffic to globally routable IPv4 addresses
- send traffic to gateway IP of the vmnet bridge (this would normally be "bridge100" interface)
- receive any incoming traffic
In addition, Softnet tunes macOS built-in DHCP server to decrease its lease time from the default 86,400 seconds (one day) to 600 seconds (10 minutes). This is especially important when you use Tart to clone and run a lot of ephemeral VMs over a period of one day.
Please check out this blog post for backstory.
Softnet solves two problems:
- VM network isolation
VZNATNetworkDeviceAttachment
(the default networking in Tart) enables vmnet's bridge isolation by default and prevents cross-VM traffic, however it's still possible for any VM to spoof the host's ARP-table and capture other VMs traffic by using tools that enable conducting the ARP spoofing attacks (e.g. arpspoof, arpoison and so on)
- DHCP exhaustion
- macOS built-in DHCP-server allocates a
/24
subnet with 86400 seconds lease time by default, which only allows for ~253 VMs a day (or 1 VM every ~6 minutes) to be spawned without causing a denial-of-service, which is pretty limiting for CI services like Cirrus CI
- macOS built-in DHCP-server allocates a
And assumes that:
- Tart gives it's VMs unique MAC-addresses
- macOS built-in DHCP-server won't re-use the IP-addresses from it's pool until their lease expire
...otherwise it's possible for two VMs to receive an identical IP-address from the macOS built-in DHCP-server (even in the presence of Softnet's packet filtering) and thus bypass the protections offered by Softnet.
For proper functioning, Softnet binary requires two things:
- a SUID-bit to be set on the binary or a passwordless sudo to be configured, which effectively gives the binary
root
privileges- these privileges are needed to create
vmnet.framework
interface and perform DHCP-related system tweaks - the privileges will be dropped automatically to that of the calling user (or those represented by the
--user
and--group
command-line arguments) once all of the initialization is completed
- these privileges are needed to create
- the binary to be available in
PATH
- so that the Tart will be able to find it
Softnet is started and managed automatically by Tart if --net-softnet
flag is provided when calling tart run
.