On Mon, 2010-06-14 at 12:14 -0400, Stephen Smalley wrote: > On Mon, 2010-06-14 at 11:24 -0400, Eric Paris wrote: > > On Mon, 2010-06-14 at 10:57 -0400, Stephen Smalley wrote: > > > On Fri, 2010-06-11 at 12:37 -0400, Eric Paris wrote: > > > > There is interest in being able to see what the actual policy is that was > > > > loaded into the kernel. The patch creates a new selinuxfs file > > > > /selinux/policy which can be read by userspace. The actual policy that is > > > > loaded into the kernel will be written back out to userspace. > > > > > > How do you expect this to be used? As with /selinux/load, we can't use > > > coreutils utilities to manipulate it unfortunately. Nor can we do > > > things like checkpolicy -b /selinux/policy since it doesn't support > > > mmap. > > > > I used my own program to pull it out to a file and poke it after it was > > out. I can certainly take a look at generating the policy on open() > > which would allow us to support ppos easily (and maybe mmap, but I've > > never written an mmap handler) > > Hmm...the resulting policy.from.kern doesn't match the binary policy > file that was loaded, nor is it a well-formed policy. It won't be a binary perfect match since we switched range transition rules to a hashtab and we lose ordering in the kernel. (although the second load and resulting read should be the same binary policy) What is not well-formed about your result? I got back the same policy (according to sediff) but I was using selinux-policy-minimum.... -Eric -- 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.