On Jun 18, 2008, at 7:20 PM, Eamon Walsh wrote:
Xavier Toth wrote:
I'm contemplating some AVC's that originate in metacity and am
wondering whether a window manager is a special case of an X client
that requires its' own policy. Are there things that a window manager
does that other X clients shouldn't? Also on an MLS system should the
window manager run at the users highwater mark or ranged?
The window manager basically needs the full run of the display.
When another application creates a window, the window manager
creates a second window with the titlebar and borders, and then
plops the application window down inside of it (reparents it). It
also moves windows around and resizes them, sets properties on them
(such as the _NET_WM_DESKTOP property that contains the desktop
number) and listens for events so it can tell when to change the
focus window. Finally, a compositing manager actually needs to read
the window contents. It's definitely a special-case app that's
going to need its own policy.
It almost certainly needs permissions on all windows that map to
both read and write in the MLS configuration. So it will need read-
and write-all-levels.
What other desktop related processes need MLS policies to be written
to get a minimally functional Fedora/Gnome enforcing X environment?
What window manager/environment do you use in your enforcing X
development and test?
Do you have a start on a window manager policy that we could try?
joe
--
This message was distributed to subscribers of the selinux mailing list.
If you no longer wish to subscribe, send mail to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with
the words "unsubscribe selinux" without quotes as the message.