On 05/16/2013 09:33 AM, Steve Lawrence wrote:
It has become clear that SETools has fallen behind userspace in terms of features and general maintenance. We would like to get it to the point where this is not the case, and to find a way to make sure it does not happen again. We think the solution to the maintenance issue is to make it more visible by merging the more useful parts of SETools into the userspace repo, while deprecating/removing the remaining pieces. However, we are well aware of the complexity of SETools, primarily libapol, and that upstreaming it without any changes would not solve the problems. So, we have done a little work behind the scenes to find a way to reduce the complexity of libapol. As a first stab at it, we started with an older version of libapol that is quite a bit less complex and began porting it forward for use with modern userspace, and seeing if it would make sense to eventually merge. But before we get too deep into this port, we wanted to start a discussion with the SELinux community to make sure we are headed in the right direction. So to start, does this seem like a good idea (both merging with userspace and porting older libapol)? Or should we take a completely different direction (e.g. the use of graphing databases as a replacement of apol has been mentioned in the past)?
What is it that makes the modern version of libapol more complex, or what are you giving up by going back to the older version?
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