Bill Nottingham wrote:
> James Morris (jmorris(a)namei.org) said:
>>> * All the parties are here now needed to figure this out
>>> * Someone better than me is going to reply with specifics about what is
>>> not working in the buildsys
>>> * We all agree it's pretty important to get this figured out in a good
>>> way
>> Can you please explain specifically what the problem is?
>
> You cannot create files in a chroot of a context not known by the
> host policy. This means that if your host is running RHEL 5, you are
> unable to compose any trees/images/livecds with SELinux enabled for
> later releases.
>
> Bill
>
> --
> fedora-selinux-list mailing list
> fedora-selinux-list(a)redhat.com
>
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-selinux-list
Just catching up on this email chain.
The far more insidious problem is the act of loading policy in the
chroot effects the kernel of the host. So processes that are running in
the host become invalidated when the client loads a policy. This
happens even in the case where you are building a chroot environment on
the SAME os. Since the spec file is running semanage commands to modify
and add unconfined_t users, the unconfined processes of the parent and
potential labels become unknown to the kernel for a period of time,
which ends up labeling the files and processes as unlabeled_t. When
this happens files labeled unlabeled_t can not be accesses by confined
process and if a process becomes unlabeled_t it will not be allowed any
access on the box, which can cause the process to crash or go into in
infinite loop. If I build a livedvd, I end
setenforce 0
livedvd ...
load_policy
setenforce 1
And sometimes I still need to
fixfiles restore
Could it be solved by kernel preventing loading the policy when the
process which tries that is in the chroot? It seems to me that it
doesn't make any sense to allow that. Then with enabling creating files
with a context unknown to the policy the machine could run in enforcing
mode although the process which does the compose would of course have to
be unconfined.
--
Tomas Mraz
No matter how far down the wrong road you've gone, turn back.
Turkish proverb