I am *this* close to disabling selinux!
David Kramer
david at thekramers.net
Sun Apr 29 10:10:58 EDT 2007
Matthew Gillen wrote:
>> Did it change the default policy, or just the running policy?
>
> Neither. It set a property on the file itself (stored by the filesystem).
> The texrel_shlib_t is basically a group that needs to do something that most
> programs shouldn't need to do. Video codecs are notorious for this
> technique though (which is probably one of the reasons they have so many
> security problems).
Yeah, I finally understood that after I sent that email through more
Googling, and studying sealert's output more closely.
>> So yes, there's this pretty good tool if you stumble upon it, but how
>> can you have a tool that's so invasive without accessible documentation?
>
> That issue is sort of endemic to linux in general ;-)
Agreed, of course, but most of the software that effects the whole
system like that are better documented, with the clear exception of X
configuration, which will always be black magic.
> Part of the answer is that it's still being developed. You might look this
> site for more info on the setroubleshoot tool:
> https://hosted.fedoraproject.org/projects/setroubleshoot
While that page is now only moderately useful, it's a good start, and
it's a place to capture more information. After I read more of what's
there now, I'll see if I can contribute anything.
Thanks.
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