Re: Trouble sending mail from PHP scripts

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On 12/30/2010 08:27 AM, Scott Gifford wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> I'm having some trouble with an SELinux policy to allow sending mail from a
> PHP script run from our Web server with a local installation of qmail on a
> CentOS 5 system.  We send mail using php's mail() function, which calls
> /usr/bin/sendmail, which in turn calls /var/qmail/bin/qmail-inject, then
> /var/qmail/bin/qmail-queue, which actually puts the message in the queue.
> 
> SELinux comes with some default qmail policies, but out-of-the-box we had
> AVC denials when qmail-queue would try to write the message into the queue,
> since the Web script context was not permitted to do this.
> 
> I decided to take this opportunity to learn about writing SELinux policies.
>  I know qmail very well, so thought I would write a policy for qmail.  The
> policy would transition to a new type mail_qmail_queue_t when qmail-queue
> was run, and then allow this type to write into the queue.
> 
> I think I have the basics working, but I'm running into some snags, and I
> don't have enough experience to know what sorts of solutions are likely to
> work out.
> 
> First, I am seeing some denials that seem to be related to file descriptors
> passed by Apache to qmail-queue.  When qmail-queue is run, stderr is
> connected to the Web server log, and stdout is connected to the HTTP socket.
>  This is a pretty normal setup, which will cause any output to show up in
> the user's browser and errors to show up in the Web server log.  However I
> get these AVC denials:
> 
>    - Thu Dec 30 01:27:47 2010 type=AVC msg=audit(1293690467.534:90936): avc:
>     denied  { read } for  pid=9643 comm="qmail-queue" path="pipe:[4937510]"
>    dev=pipefs ino=4937510 scontext=system_u:system_r:mail_qmail_queue_t:s0
>    tcontext=system_u:system_r:httpd_t:s0 tclass=fifo_file
>    - Thu Dec 30 01:27:47 2010 type=AVC msg=audit(1293690467.534:90936): avc:
>     denied  { append } for  pid=9643 comm="qmail-queue"
>    path="/var/log/httpd/error_log" dev=md2 ino=24183170
>    scontext=system_u:system_r:mail_qmail_queue_t:s0
>    tcontext=user_u:object_r:httpd_log_t:s0 tclass=file
>    - Thu Dec 30 01:27:47 2010 type=AVC msg=audit(1293690467.534:90936): avc:
>     denied  { read write } for  pid=9643 comm="qmail-queue"
>    path="socket:[13964]" dev=sockfs ino=13964
>    scontext=system_u:system_r:mail_qmail_queue_t:s0
>    tcontext=system_u:system_r:httpd_t:s0 tclass=tcp_socket
> 
> I could write policy to allow mail_qmail_queue access to these httpd_t
> resources, but in general it should not have that access; only when it is
> run from Apache.  I could create a special type for "qmail-queue run from
> Apache", but that quickly gets out-of-hand if I create custom policies for
> each program that sends mail.  What is the normal way to deal with these
> sorts of situations?

You can silently deny access vectors. So if you know that denying this
access does not cause any loss in functionality then consider silently
denying some of this.

Anything else, i guess,  will just have to be allowed.

> Second, I am having some trouble getting file contexts set up.  I have
> several qmail installations with different policies, so I wrote a rule in my
> fc file like this:
> 
> /var/qmail(-.*)?/bin/qmail-queue --
> gen_context(system_u:object_r:mail_qmail_queue_exec_t,s0)
> 
> 
> When I use that rule, qmail-queue gets labeled bin_t, I think because of
> another rule saying anything in a directory named "bin" is "bin_t".  How can
> I tell it my rule is more specific or higher priority than the default rule?
>  For that matter, how can I figure out what rule is overriding mine?

This is a similar el5 issue i encountered just yesterday and upto now i
havent found the cause and solution to the issue, other then setting the
file context manually with the chcon command.


> Third, is there a useful guide for troubleshooting SELinux policy execution?
>  When things don't work as I expect them to, it's hard to find the reason if
> it's not obvious from the audit.log.

Examples?

It usually boils down to analyzing AVC denials.

> 
> Finally, can anybody recommend a good book or other resource for learning
> SELinux?  I have *SELinux by Example*, but it seems that conventions for
> policy files have changed a great deal since it was written.

Me and another guy had started to write a document about just that but
it just did not take off unfortunately, and now i am no longer sure if i
will have time for it in the future for it due to other responsibilities.

So i cannot recommend anything other then selinyxbyexample and the
actual reference policy source policy.

I will try however to answer any specific questions you may have.

> Thanks!
> 
> -----Scott.
> 
> 
> 
> 
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> selinux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/selinux

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