On Tue, Jul 19, 2022 at 9:21 PM Richard W.M. Jones rjones@redhat.com wrote:
On Fri, Jul 15, 2022 at 05:42:35PM -0400, Ben Cotton wrote:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/SELinux_Parallel_Autorelabel
This document represents a proposed Change. As part of the Changes process, proposals are publicly announced in order to receive community feedback. This proposal will only be implemented if approved by the Fedora Engineering Steering Committee.
== Summary == After a system's SELinux mode is switched from disabled to enabled, or after an administrator runs `fixfiles onboot`, SELinux autorelabel will be run in parallel by default.
== Owner ==
- Name: [[User:plautrba| Petr Lautrbach]]
- Email: plautrba@redhat.com
== Detailed Description == SELinux tools `restorecon` and `fixfiles` recently gained the ability to relabel files in parallel using the `-T nthreads` option. This option is currently not used in the automatic relabel after reboot. When users want/need the parallel relabeling they have to specify the option explicitly (e.g. `fixfiles -T 0 onboot`). With this change `-T 0` (0 == use all available CPU cores) will be the default for `fixfiles onboot` and users will have to use `fixfiles -T 1 onboot` to force it to use only one thread.
The rationale is that when autorelabel runs, there are no other resource-intensive processes running on the system, so it's fine (and actually better) to use all available parallelism to speed up the task and get to a fully booted system faster.
== Benefit to Fedora == Faster reboot after switching back to an SELinux enabled system or when triggering autorelabel explicitly.
[...]
== Upgrade/compatibility impact ==
== How To Test == # boot with SELinux disabled - add `selinux=0` to the kernel command line # reboot # store the time it took # run `fixfiles -T 1 onboot` # reboot # the latter reboot should take longer time
[...]
I wonder if we can use this in virt tools & virt-v2v:
https://github.com/libguestfs/libguestfs/blob/master/daemon/selinux-relabel....
We actually use setfiles instead of fixfiles. setfiles appears to have no -T option unfortunately. Is there a reason why setfiles doesn't have / need this option?
Both setfiles and restorecon also have the -T option, as long as you are running a recent enough Fedora (36+, AFAIK).