torsocks on MacOS: {binary} is protected by System Integrity Protection

UPDATE: I found a more elegant way here.

After very long time I recently moved from Ubuntu to MacOS. That’s a big switch, which involves time in changing personal habits and restoring the old features…

Among one of them I constantly use Tor. Not that I have anything to hide, it’s mostly for fun and sometimes for work, where I need to escape restrictive firewalls to access outside network. I mostly need ssh to connect to the office, and to tunnel the connection though Tor I prefix the command with torsocks.

So after installing Tor using Homebrew I run the command and:

ERROR: /usr/bin/ssh is located in a directory protected by Apple's System Integrity Protection.

From what I could get, Apple’s SIP is the local SELinux/AppArmor. The message is produced by torsocks itself, and according to the related bug report:

Apple’s system integrity prevention also prevents users from injecting shared libraries into some binaries. This could be a cause of this issue. (And if this is the case, there may be nothing we can do to fix this.)

Luckily I found a lame workaround. According to the message, the command is placed in a directory protected by SIP. So what happens when running the command outside that directory?

At first I tried making a link:

ln -s /usr/bin/ssh /usr/local/bin

but this didn’t work. There was no error but ssh was unable to connect. So the more lame test

cp /usr/bin/ssh /usr/local/bin

and… Success!

So, as long as Tor devs cannot find a solution I’m still able to ssh through Tor.

3 pensieri su “torsocks on MacOS: {binary} is protected by System Integrity Protection

Lascia un commento

Il tuo indirizzo email non sarà pubblicato. I campi obbligatori sono contrassegnati *

Solve : *
23 − 14 =


Questo sito usa Akismet per ridurre lo spam. Scopri come i tuoi dati vengono elaborati.