table of contents
ptchown_selinux(8) | SELinux Policy ptchown | ptchown_selinux(8) |
NAME¶
ptchown_selinux - Security Enhanced Linux Policy for the ptchown processes
DESCRIPTION¶
Security-Enhanced Linux secures the ptchown processes via flexible mandatory access control.
The ptchown processes execute with the ptchown_t SELinux type. You can check if you have these processes running by executing the ps command with the -Z qualifier.
For example:
ps -eZ | grep ptchown_t
ENTRYPOINTS¶
The ptchown_t SELinux type can be entered via the ptchown_exec_t file type.
The default entrypoint paths for the ptchown_t domain are the following:
/usr/lib/pt_chown, /usr/libexec/pt_chown
PROCESS TYPES¶
SELinux defines process types (domains) for each process running on the system
You can see the context of a process using the -Z option to ps
Policy governs the access confined processes have to files. SELinux ptchown policy is very flexible allowing users to setup their ptchown processes in as secure a method as possible.
The following process types are defined for ptchown:
ptchown_t
Note: semanage permissive -a ptchown_t can be used to make the process type ptchown_t permissive. SELinux does not deny access to permissive process types, but the AVC (SELinux denials) messages are still generated.
BOOLEANS¶
SELinux policy is customizable based on least access required. ptchown policy is extremely flexible and has several booleans that allow you to manipulate the policy and run ptchown with the tightest access possible.
If you want to allow all domains to execute in fips_mode, you must turn on the fips_mode boolean. Enabled by default.
setsebool -P fips_mode 1
FILE CONTEXTS¶
SELinux requires files to have an extended attribute to define the file type.
You can see the context of a file using the -Z option to ls
Policy governs the access confined processes have to these files. SELinux ptchown policy is very flexible allowing users to setup their ptchown processes in as secure a method as possible.
STANDARD FILE CONTEXT
SELinux defines the file context types for the ptchown, if you wanted to store files with these types in a different paths, you need to execute the semanage command to specify alternate labeling and then use restorecon to put the labels on disk.
semanage fcontext -a -t ptchown_exec_t
'/srv/ptchown/content(/.*)?'
restorecon -R -v /srv/myptchown_content
Note: SELinux often uses regular expressions to specify labels that match multiple files.
The following file types are defined for ptchown:
ptchown_exec_t
- Set files with the ptchown_exec_t type, if you want to transition an executable to the ptchown_t domain.
- Paths:
- /usr/lib/pt_chown, /usr/libexec/pt_chown
Note: File context can be temporarily modified with the chcon command. If you want to permanently change the file context you need to use the semanage fcontext command. This will modify the SELinux labeling database. You will need to use restorecon to apply the labels.
COMMANDS¶
semanage fcontext can also be used to manipulate default file context mappings.
semanage permissive can also be used to manipulate whether or not a process type is permissive.
semanage module can also be used to enable/disable/install/remove policy modules.
semanage boolean can also be used to manipulate the booleans
system-config-selinux is a GUI tool available to customize SELinux policy settings.
AUTHOR¶
This manual page was auto-generated using sepolicy manpage .
SEE ALSO¶
selinux(8), ptchown(8), semanage(8), restorecon(8), chcon(1), sepolicy(8), setsebool(8)
24-12-16 | ptchown |