Despite the never ending proclamations of the end of memory corruption vulnerabilities, modern software still falls to exploits that target these bugs. Current operating systems incorporate a battery of exploit mitigations making life significantly more complex for attackers. Additionally, developers are becoming increasingly aware of the security implications of previously idiomatic code. Leading software publishers are teaching defensive coding techniques and have adopted an offensive mindset for product testing. Unfortunately, a single vulnerability can still provide the attacker the leverage needed to gain entry. Security researchers have disclosed multiple ways to render the mitigations ineffective (under the right circumstances) -- imagine what techniques are not public. One bug can still "ruin your day". In this presentation, I describe the architecture and implementation of the Apple XNU Sandbox framework (previously codenamed "Seatbelt"). This framework is used to contain App Store applications on iOS and some server applications on OS X. I will give you a complete tour of the Sandbox internals, most of which are in closed source modules (kernel extensions and dynamic libraries). This information is useful for auditors or exploit developers attempting to escape the sandbox and for developers or defenders attempting to secure their applications. I will also release an automated profile decompiler to extract a human readable policy definition from a compiled profile inside the kernel (iOS kernelcache or OS X). By the end of the presentation, you will have a working understanding of the entire access control system from policy definition to sandbox initialization to the kernel's policy enforcement.
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