On Tue, 2007-08-07 at 13:56 -0400, Mark wrote: > Thanks for the help. I just want to become more familiar with SE > Linux and understand the context of the te, fe, if..etc files and how > I can modify them so that my programs are more secure. There just > seems to be alot of information that may or may not be related in > order to help me. For instance, there is the seedit tools, SLIDE and > RedHat tools available. Also, which is a better distribution to learn > SE Linux, CentOS or Fedora Core? Fedora Core tracks the latest SELinux developments more closely. The reference policy documentation should help you, online at http://oss.tresys.com/projects/refpolicy/wiki/Documentation and if you have selinux-policy installed, locally available docs under /usr/share/doc/selinux-policy-x.y.z/. SLIDE is an eclipse plugin that leverages reference policy and provides the typical IDE-style auto-completion, interface lookup, wizards for constructing domains, etc. Useful if you are ok working in an IDE. SEEdit is more about hiding the underlying abstractions and presenting a very simple UI. Requires switching to its own policy entirely, away from the stock policy. > I am an application developer who really just needs to learn how to > write policies for the programs I am developing. Things like > policies, domains and domain transition are important areas I really > want to learn. There are a number of resources, e.g. see http://selinux.sourceforge.net/resources.php3 , but many of them predate the reference policy. Reference policy documentation and SLIDE are your best bets right now, along with the book. -- Stephen Smalley National Security Agency -- fedora-selinux-list mailing list fedora-selinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-selinux-list