When a device gets removed, for example with "cryptsetup close",
kdevtmpfs (a kernel thread) removes its entry from devtmpfs filesystem:
avc: denied { unlink } for pid=48 comm="kdevtmpfs"
name="dm-4" dev="devtmpfs" ino=144111
scontext=system_u:system_r:kernel_t
tcontext=system_u:object_r:fixed_disk_device_t tclass=blk_file
Allow this access on systems using systemd.
On Arch Linux, /usr/lib/gvfs directory contains both executable files
(gvfsd, gvfs-udisks2-volume-monitor...) and libraries (libgvfscommon.so
and libgvfsdaemon.so). As all executable files are prefixed with
"gfvs", so use this to distinguish them with the libraries.
This fixes the following AVC denials, reported from geoclue service
using a library wrongly labelled bin_t:
avc: denied { read } for pid=14872 comm="geoclue"
name="libgvfscommon.so" dev="dm-0" ino=3152594
scontext=system_u:system_r:geoclue_t
tcontext=system_u:object_r:bin_t tclass=file permissive=1
avc: denied { open } for pid=14872 comm="geoclue"
path="/usr/lib/gvfs/libgvfscommon.so" dev="dm-0" ino=3152594
scontext=system_u:system_r:geoclue_t
tcontext=system_u:object_r:bin_t tclass=file permissive=1
avc: denied { execute } for pid=14872 comm="geoclue"
path="/usr/lib/gvfs/libgvfscommon.so" dev="dm-0" ino=3152594
scontext=system_u:system_r:geoclue_t
tcontext=system_u:object_r:bin_t tclass=file permissive=1
It is used by system-config-printer, as shown by these AVC denials:
avc: denied { execute } for pid=1061 comm="system-config-p"
name="applet.py" dev="dm-0" ino=9568316
scontext=sysadm_u:sysadm_r:sysadm_t tcontext=system_u:object_r:usr_t
tclass=file permissive=1
avc: denied { execute_no_trans } for pid=1061
comm="system-config-p"
path="/usr/share/system-config-printer/applet.py" dev="dm-0"
ino=9568316 scontext=sysadm_u:sysadm_r:sysadm_t
tcontext=system_u:object_r:usr_t tclass=file permissive=1
When ifdef systemd is enabled, some interfaces from systemd are called
unconditionally. This makes migrating from non-systemd to systemd
complicated since init is part of base and systemd is not so loading
fails. Moving them into optional_policy fixes this.
It's required for agetty on kernels with a recent grsecurity patchset.
(The denial itself has been showing up for quite some time, but it
hasn't had any obvious ill effects until recently.)
selinux_lxc_contexts_path() function in upstream libselinux points to
this config file. It is ATM used by libvirt.
The file from Fedora also contains sandbox_lxc_process and
sandbox_kvm_process parameters, but I cannot find where they are used,
keep them out of the file for the time being.
Mirror file/dir approach.
db objects which do not contain other objects at multiple levels are analogous
to files:
db_sequence
db_view
db_procedure
db_language
db_tuple
db_blob
db objects which are capable of holding objects at multiple levels are
analogous to dirs:
db_database
db_schema
db_table
db_column
At early boot, I get the following messages in dmesg:
audit: type=1400 audit(1452851002.184:3): avc: denied { audit_read } for pid=1 comm="systemd" capability=37 scontext=system_u:system_r:init_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:system_r:init_t:s0 tclass=capability2 permissive=1
systemd[1]: Listening on Journal Audit Socket.
systemd creates a new network namespace for services which are using
PrivateNetwork=yes.
In the implementation, systemd uses a socketpair as a storage buffer for
the namespace reference file descriptor (c.f.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/blob/v228/src/core/namespace.c#L660).
One end of this socketpair is locked (hence the need of "lock" access to
self:unix_dgram_socket for init_t) while systemd opens
/proc/self/ns/net, which lives in nsfs.
While at it, add filesystem_type attribute to nsfs_t.