Shaz wrote:
And to stay up to date with the commands and infrastructure than you
would like to go for Fedora SELinux guide. It might as well give you
partial details on the design of SELinux, although SELinux by Example
has a very clear description of the design in its first section.
Policy models are discussed in section 2.
On Wed, Jan 28, 2009 at 12:44 AM, Sutton, Harry (MSE)
<harry.sutton@xxxxxx <mailto:harry.sutton@xxxxxx>> wrote:
Hi Josh,
I found that to be one of the (few) O'Reilly books that didn't really
cut it for me on its stated subject matter; my preference is
Prentice-Hall's "SELinux by Example, Using Security Enhanced
Linux", by
Frank Mayer, Karl MacMillan and David Caplan (ISBN 0-13-196369-4).
It's
a much clearer (and more comprehensive) treatment of the theory in
depth
you're asking for.
Best regards,
/Harry Sutton, RHCA / RHCSS
Hewlett-Packard Company
Joshua Kramer wrote:
> Howdy Folks,
>
> I have a copy of the O'Rielly SELinux book from 2005.
>
> Many things have changed as far as the implementation and practice.
> However, is this still a good book to read if I just want to
learn the
> theory in-depth? Or have basic elements of SELinux changed
since then?
>
> Thanks!
> -Josh
>
>
--
Shaz
In any case(from my point of view) seeing any info
about SELinux is nice to see.
hopefully more people adopt the policy.
eventually(hopefully) this will be a something that
every system adopts;
regards;
Justin P. Mattock,
--
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