Theodore Tso <tytso@xxxxxxx> writes: > i think we really need to have stacked LSM's, because there is a large set > of people who will never use SELinux. Every few years, I take another > look at SELinux, my head explodes with the (IMHO unneeded complexity), > and I go away again... > > Yet I would really like a number of features such as this ptrace scope idea --- > which I think is a useful feature, and it may be that stacking is the only > way we can resolve this debate. The SELinux people will never believe that > their system is too complicated, and I don't like using things that are impossible > for me to understand or configure, and that doesn't seem likely to change anytime > in the near future. > > I mean, even IPSEC RFC's are easier for me to understand, and that's saying > a lot... If anyone is going to work on this let me make a concrete suggestion. Let's aim at not stacked lsm's but chained lsm's, and put the chaining logic in the lsm core. The core difficulty appears to be how do you multiplex the security pointers on various objects out there. My wishlist has this working so that I can logically have a local security policy in a container, restricted by the global policy but with additional restrictions. Eric -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html