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Roadmap

What's coming next, in priority order. Dates are aspirational, not commitments.

Phase 0 — Bootstrap (DONE as of 2026-05-16)

  • Repo structure (modules/, core/, docs/, tools/, tests/)
  • Absorbed DIRTYFAIL as the first module (modules/copy_fail_family/)
  • Top-level README, CVES.md, ROADMAP.md, docs/ARCHITECTURE.md, docs/ETHICS.md
  • LICENSE (MIT)
  • Private GitHub repo

Phase 1 — Make the bundling real (next session)

  • Top-level iamroot dispatcher CLI (iamroot.c) — module registry, fingerprint, route to module's detect/exploit
  • Module interface header (core/module.h) — standard iamroot_module struct each module exports
  • Refactor modules/copy_fail_family/ internals to expose the standard module interface
  • Extract shared code into core/: apparmor_bypass.c, exploit_su.c, common.c, fcrypt.c (currently duplicated under the absorbed DIRTYFAIL tree)
  • Top-level Makefile that builds all modules into one binary
  • Smoke test: iamroot --scan --json on Ubuntu 26.04 produces sensible output

Phase 2 — Add Dirty Pipe (CVE-2022-0847)

Public PoC, well-understood, useful for completeness — IAMROOT without Dirty Pipe is incomplete as a "historical bundle." Affects kernels ≤5.16.11/≤5.15.25/≤5.10.102 so coverage is older deployments (worth bundling — many production boxes still run these).

  • modules/dirty_pipe_cve_2022_0847/ — exploit + detect + range metadata
  • Test matrix: Ubuntu 20.04 (vulnerable kernels), Debian 11 (vulnerable kernels), modern kernels (immune — should detect as patched)
  • Detection rules: auditd splice/pipe write patterns

Phase 3 — Add EntryBleed (CVE-2023-0458) as stage-1 leak brick

EntryBleed is not a standalone LPE. It's a kbase leak primitive that other modules can chain. Bundle it because:

  • Stage-1 of any future "build-your-own LPE" workflow

  • Detection rules for KPTI side-channel attempts are useful for defenders

  • Already works empirically on lts-6.12.88 (verified 2026-05-16)

  • modules/entrybleed_cve_2023_0458/ — leak primitive + detect-mitigations

  • Exposed as a library helper: other modules can call entrybleed_leak_kbase() when they need a kbase

Phase 4 — CI matrix

  • Distro+kernel VM matrix in GitHub Actions (Ubuntu 20.04 / 22.04 / 24.04 / 26.04, Debian 11 / 12 / 13, Alma 8 / 9 / 10, Fedora 39 / 40 / 41)
  • Each module's exploit runs against matched-vulnerable VMs and MUST land root; runs against patched VMs and MUST fail at detect step
  • Nightly run; failures open issues automatically

Phase 5 — Detection signature export

  • iamroot --detect-rules --format=sigma — Sigma rules per CVE
  • --format=yara — YARA rules for static detection of exploit binaries
  • --format=auditd — auditd .rules snippets
  • --format=falco — Falco rule snippets
  • Sample SOC playbook in docs/DETECTION_PLAYBOOK.md

Phase 6 — Mitigation mode

  • iamroot --mitigate walks the host's vulnerabilities, applies temporary sysctl / module-blacklist / LSM workarounds
  • Per-CVE rollback procedure if the mitigation breaks something
  • Idempotent: running twice is safe

Phase 7+ — More modules

Backfill of historical and recent LPEs as time allows:

  • CVE-2021-3493 — overlayfs nested-userns LPE
  • CVE-2021-4034 — Pwnkit (pkexec env handling)
  • CVE-2022-2588 — net/sched route4 dead UAF
  • CVE-2023-2008 — vmwgfx OOB write
  • CVE-2024-1086 — netfilter nf_tables UAF
  • Fragnesia (if it lands as a CVE)
  • Anything we ourselves disclose — bundled AFTER upstream patch ships (responsible-disclosure-first)

Non-goals

  • No 0-day shipment. Everything in IAMROOT is post-patch.
  • No automated mass-targeting. No host-list mode. No automatic pivoting.
  • No persistence beyond --exploit-backdoor's /etc/passwd overwrite, which is overt and easily detected by any auditd rule we ship ourselves. Persistence-as-evasion is out of scope.
  • No container-runtime escapes unless they cleanly chain to host-root.
  • No Windows / macOS / non-Linux targets. Focus is the moat.