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pages/txt/simplicity-security.txt (view raw)

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---
date: '2020-05-07'
subtitle: This is why I meme mnmlsm so much
title: Simplicity (mostly) guarantees security
url: 'simplicity-security'
---

Although it is a very comfy one, it's not just an aesthetic. Simplicity
and minimalism, in technology, is great for security too. I say "mostly"
in the title because human error cannot be discounted, and nothing is
perfect. However, the simpler your tech stack is, it is inherentely more
secure than complex monstrosities.

Let's look at systemd, for example. It's got over 1.2 million lines of
code. "Hurr durr but LoC doesn't mean anything!" Sure ok, but can you
*imagine* auditing this? How many times has it even been audited? I
couldn't find any audit reports. No, the developers are not security
engineers and a trustworthy audit must be done by a third-party. What's
scarier, is this thing runs on a huge percentage of the world's critical
infrastructure and contains privileged core subsystems.

"B-but Linux is much bigger!" Indeed, it is, but it has a thousand times
(if not more) the number of eyes looking at the code, and there have
been multiple third-party audits. There are hundreds of independent orgs
and multiple security teams looking at it. That's not the case with
systemd---it's probably just RedHat.

Compare this to a bunch of shell scripts. Agreed, writing safe shell can
be hard and there are a ton of weird edge-cases depending on your shell
implementation, but the distinction here is *you* wrote it. Which means,
you can identify what went wrong---things are predictable. systemd,
however, is a large blackbox, and its state at runtime is largely
unprovable and unpredictable. I am certain even the developers don't
know.

And this is why I whine about complexity so much. A complex,
unpredictable system is nothing more than a large attack surface. Drew
DeVault, head of [sourcehut](https://sourcehut.org) wrote something
similar (yes that's the link, yes it has a typo).:

https://sourcehut.org/blog/2020-04-20-prioritizing-simplitity/

He manually provisions all sourcehut infrastructure, because tools like
Salt, Kubernetes etc. are just like systemd in our example---large
monstrosities which can get you RCE'd. Don't believe me? See
[this](https://threatpost.com/salt-bugs-full-rce-root-cloud-servers/155383/).

*This was day 3 of the \#100DaysToOffload challenge. It came out like a
systemd-hate post, but really, I couldn't think of a better example.*