On Tue, 2020-07-07 at 16:55 -0400, Paul Moore wrote: > If you've followed the SELinux developers mailing list for a while, > you've surely heard of The SELinux Notebook. For those of you that > haven't, The SELinux Notebook is an effort by Richard Haines to > document all the different aspects of SELinux from the kernel up > through policy. It's an impressive piece of work, spanning ~345 > pages > in the current edition. > > Richard has always made The SELinux Notebook freely available, but > with the latest edition Richard has converted the entire document to > markdown and it is now available on GitHub at the link below: > > * https://github.com/SELinuxProject/selinux-notebook > > Richard has decided that he enjoys life enough without a GitHub > account, so I've posted it on his behalf and with his approval. > Needless to say, this is a significant gift to the SELinux community, > and we all own Richard our thanks. > > I've made a few tweaks to the original import from Richard, but these > have mostly been limited to boilerplate, organization, and some > build/formatting fixes so that we could generate a reasonable PDF for > this initial "release". The latest edition (release?) can be found > at > the link below: Paul - Thanks for getting this into shape and adding to GitHub. The PDF now looks good > > * > https://github.com/SELinuxProject/selinux-notebook/releases/tag/20200707 > > It is my hope that we can treat this as a living document, keeping it > current so that it stays relevant and useful. Those who wish to help > and contribute to the effort can do so via patches to the SELinux > mailing list or via GitHub PRs. The CONTRIBUTING.md file in the > repository has more information. > > Thank you Richard! >