selinux(8)


NAME

   SELinux - NSA Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux)

DESCRIPTION

   NSA  Security-Enhanced  Linux  (SELinux)  is  an  implementation  of  a
   flexible mandatory access control architecture in the  Linux  operating
   system.   The  SELinux  architecture  provides  general support for the
   enforcement  of  many  kinds  of  mandatory  access  control  policies,
   including those based on the concepts of Type Enforcement, Role- Based
   Access Control, and Multi-Level Security.  Background  information  and
   technical    documentation    about    SELinux    can   be   found   at
   http://www.nsa.gov/research/selinux.

   The /etc/selinux/config configuration file controls whether SELinux  is
   enabled  or  disabled,  and  if  enabled,  whether  SELinux operates in
   permissive mode or enforcing mode.  The SELINUX variable may be set  to
   any  one  of  disabled, permissive, or enforcing to select one of these
   options.  The disabled option completely disables  the  SELinux  kernel
   and  application  code,  leaving the system running without any SELinux
   protection.  The permissive option enables the SELinux code, but causes
   it  to  operate in a mode where accesses that would be denied by policy
   are permitted but audited.  The enforcing option  enables  the  SELinux
   code  and causes it to enforce access denials as well as auditing them.
   Permissive mode may yield a different set  of  denials  than  enforcing
   mode,  both  because  enforcing  mode  will  prevent  an operation from
   proceeding past the first denial and because some application code will
   fall back to a less privileged mode of operation if denied access.

   The /etc/selinux/config configuration file also controls what policy is
   active on the system.  SELinux  allows  for  multiple  policies  to  be
   installed on the system, but only one policy may be active at any given
   time.  At present, multiple kinds of SELinux  policy  exist:  targeted,
   mls  for  example.   The  targeted policy is designed as a policy where
   most user processes operate without  restrictions,  and  only  specific
   services are placed into distinct security domains that are confined by
   the policy.  For example, the user would run in a completely unconfined
   domain  while the named daemon or apache daemon would run in a specific
   domain tailored to  its  operation.   The  MLS  (Multi-Level  Security)
   policy is designed as a policy where all processes are partitioned into
   fine-grained  security  domains  and  confined  by  policy.   MLS  also
   supports  the  Bell  And  LaPadula  model, where processes are not only
   confined by the type but also the level of the data.

   You can define which policy you will run  by  setting  the  SELINUXTYPE
   environment  variable  within /etc/selinux/config.  You must reboot and
   possibly relabel if you change the policy type to have it  take  effect
   on  the  system.   The corresponding policy configuration for each such
   policy   must   be   installed   in   the   /etc/selinux/{SELINUXTYPE}/
   directories.

   A  given  SELinux  policy  can  be customized further based on a set of
   compile-time tunable options and a  set  of  runtime  policy  booleans.
   system-config-selinux   allows  customization  of  these  booleans  and
   tunables.

   Many domains that are protected by SELinux  also  include  SELinux  man
   pages explaining how to customize their policy.

FILE LABELING

   All  files,  directories,  devices  ...  have  a security context/label
   associated with  them.   These  context  are  stored  in  the  extended
   attributes  of the file system.  Problems with SELinux often arise from
   the file system being mislabeled. This can be  caused  by  booting  the
   machine  with  a  non  SELinux  kernel.   If  you  see an error message
   containing file_t, that is usually a good indicator  that  you  have  a
   serious problem with file system labeling.

   The  best  way  to  relabel  the file system is to create the flag file
   /.autorelabel  and  reboot.   system-config-selinux,  also   has   this
   capability.   The  restorecon/fixfiles  commands are also available for
   relabeling files.

AUTHOR

   This manual page was written by Dan Walsh <dwalsh@redhat.com>.

FILES

   /etc/selinux/config

SEE ALSO

   booleans(8), setsebool(8), sepolicy(8), system-config-selinux(8),
   togglesebool(8), restorecon(8), fixfiles(8), setfiles(8), semanage(8),
   sepolicy(8)

   Every confined service on the system has a man page in the following
   format:

   <servicename>_selinux(8)

   For example, httpd has the httpd_selinux(8) man page.

   man -k selinux

   Will list all SELinux man pages.





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