Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chris PeBenito ab8f919e6f Part of gnome patch from Dan Walsh. 2010-08-12 09:21:36 -04:00
Dominick Grift 03b86663f0 apps: domain { allowed to transition, allowed access, to not audit }.
Signed-off-by: Dominick Grift <domg472@gmail.com>
2010-08-05 08:20:59 -04:00
Chris PeBenito 296273a719 trunk: merge UBAC. 2008-11-05 16:10:46 +00:00
Chris PeBenito 2cca6b79b4 trunk: remove redundant shared lib calls. 2008-10-17 17:31:04 +00:00
Chris PeBenito 2a98379a24 trunk: additional whitespace fixes. 2008-10-17 15:52:39 +00:00
Chris PeBenito 0bfccda4e8 trunk: massive whitespace cleanup from dominick grift. 2008-07-23 21:38:39 +00:00
Chris PeBenito b34db7a8ec trunk: another pile of misc fixes. 2008-05-22 15:24:52 +00:00
Chris PeBenito d46cfe45cd trunk: add application module 2007-07-19 18:57:48 +00:00
Chris PeBenito 6b19be3360 patch from dan, Thu, 2007-01-25 at 08:12 -0500 2007-02-16 23:01:42 +00:00
Chris PeBenito c0868a7a3b merge policy patterns to trunk 2006-12-12 20:08:08 +00:00
Chris PeBenito 00219064d7 This patch adds a GConf policy to refpolicy.
This policy is much tighter than the GConf policy from the old example
policy.  It only allows gconfd to access configuration data stored by
GConf.  Users can modify configuration data using gconftool-2 or
gconf-editor, both of which use gconfd.  GConf manages multiple
configuration sources, so gconfd should be used to make any changes
anyway.  Normal users who aren't trying to directly edit the
configuration data of GConf won't notice anything different.

There is also a difference between this policy and the old example
policy in handling directories in /tmp.  The old example policy
labeled /tmp/gconfd-USER with ROLE_gconfd_tmp_t, but, since there was no
use of the file_type_auto_trans macro, if that directory was deleted
gconfd would create one labeled as tmp_t.  This policy uses the
files_tmp-filetrans macro to cause a directory in /tmp created by gconfd
to be labeled as $1_tmp_t.  It is not labeled with $1_gconf_tmp_t,
because if /tmp/orbit-USER is deleted, gconfd will create it (through
use of ORBit) and it would get the $1_gconf_tmp_t label.  By having
gconfd create $1_tmp_t directories in /tmp and $1_gconf_tmp_t files and
directories in directories labeled with $1_tmp_t, it can control its
data without requiring any future bonobo or Gnome policies to have
access to $1_gconf_tmp_t.

This patch is related to work that I am doing in making gconfd an
userspace object manager.  If any user program can modify the
configuration data that GConf stores, than making gconfd an userspace
object manager would be useless.

Signed-off-by:  James Carter <jwcart2@tycho.nsa.gov>
2006-10-02 15:22:48 +00:00