On Tue, 2010-02-23 at 10:58 -0800, Justin P. mattock wrote: > On 02/23/2010 10:42 AM, Stephen Smalley wrote: > > On Tue, 2010-02-23 at 10:30 -0800, Justin P. mattock wrote: > >> On 02/23/2010 10:01 AM, Stephen Smalley wrote: > >>> On Tue, 2010-02-23 at 09:41 -0800, Justin P. mattock wrote: > >>>> On 02/23/2010 08:10 AM, Stephen Smalley wrote: > >>>>> On Tue, 2010-02-23 at 10:56 -0500, Alan Rouse wrote: > >>>>>> Would the proper solution be to add a transition to put that script in the right context when run from a shell? > >>>>> > >>>>> No. I think we just need to drop the transition to sysadm_t altogether > >>>>> (at least in the ifdef suse case) and have userspace explicitly arrange > >>>>> the transition for single-user mode (ala sulogin). > >>>> > >>>> out of curiosity during booting up I'm seeing > >>>> a mess load of *.sh files being called > >>>> before the policy is loaded. > >>>> > >>>> looking into this I'm seeing them in /lib/mkinitrd/scripts > >>>> before I go and mess around with initrd > >>>> what are the thoughts on this area? > >>> > >>> That's ok - I wouldn't worry about that. > >>> > >>> As I said, I think the solution here is just to disable the transition > >>> to sysadm_t, at least if DISTRO=suse. > >>> > >> > >> > >> alright.. in regards to sysadm_t > >> a quick google found something > >> similar to what might be happening: > >> > >> http://www.engardelinux.org/modules/index/list_archives.cgi?list=selinux&page=1000.html&month=2008-03 > > > > That was the original discussion that led to the logic you see in > > init.te today. In any event, I've taken this up as a separate issue on > > refpolicy list. > > > > > alright.. > I'll look to file some bugs at suse > for pam.d, the config file with the > permissions being that cause libselinux to default > to targeted. and any other that I can think of. Might want to add it to: https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=581505 -- Stephen Smalley National Security Agency -- 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.