On Thu, May 09, 2019 at 02:47:30PM -0700, Jeffrey Vander Stoep wrote: > From: Stephen Smalley > Date: Thu, May 9, 2019 at 2:17 PM > To: Jeffrey Vander Stoep, , Joel Galenson, > Petr Lautrbach > > > On 5/9/19 3:56 PM, Jeffrey Vander Stoep wrote: > > > I expected files here would have the process's context, but they > > > don't. The files are actually all symlinks so it's entirely possible > > > that the they shouldn't have the process's context. If that's the > > > case, how can I provide different labels for them? Neither "proc" nor > > > "unlabeled" are appropriate. > > > > > > On a device with a 3.18 kernel they have the "proc" context: > > > sailfish:/ # ls -LZ1 /proc/1/ns > > > u:object_r:proc:s0 mnt > > > u:object_r:proc:s0 net > > > > > > On a device with the 4.9 kernel the have the "unlabeled" context: > > > blueline:/ # ls -LZ1 /proc/1/ns > > > u:object_r:unlabeled:s0 cgroup > > > u:object_r:unlabeled:s0 mnt > > > u:object_r:unlabeled:s0 net > > > > First, ls -L dereferences symlinks so you are going to get the context > > of the object referenced by the symlink, not the context of the symlink > > itself. > > I'm seeing a denial on the object not the symlink, so -L is what I want. > > > > > Second, the task context is only assigned to proc inodes created via > > proc_pid_make_inode(), which has never been the case of /proc/pid/ns > > inodes - those have their own implementations and operations. > > > > Third, /proc/pid/ns migrated from proc to its own pseudo filesystem, > > nsfs, which requires a corresponding fs_use or genfscon rule in policy > > or they will be unlabeled. refpolicy has a genfscon rule. Confusingly > > there appears to be both in Fedora policy, a fs_use_task and a genfscon > > rule, and it appears that fs_use_task is being applied here. I don't > > know why or what exactly that means. It won't be the task context for > > the task associated with that /proc/pid directory but instead would be > > whichever task context instantiates the inode. > > > > So, how do I label these files in genfs_contexts? > > "mount | grep nsfs" returns nothing. # seinfo --genfs | grep nsfs genfscon nsfs / sys.id:sys.role:fs.nsfs.fs:s0 Yes, i think this is a step backwards. In the past we got a nice list of objects that have no context associated when policy is loaded. That list was removed. So sometimes its hard to determine whether something needs a genfscon if its not listen with `mount. -- Key fingerprint = 5F4D 3CDB D3F8 3652 FBD8 02D5 3B6C 5F1D 2C7B 6B02 https://sks-keyservers.net/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x3B6C5F1D2C7B6B02 Dominick Grift