Choosing A Webhost:
A web hosting service is a type of Internet hosting service that allows individuals and organizations to provide their own website accessible via the World Wide Web. Web hosts are companies that provide space on a server they own for use by their clients as well as providing Internet connectivity, typically in a data center. Web hosts can also provide data center space and connectivity to the Internet for servers they do not own to be located in their data center, called colocation. more...
|
Re: senlinux configuration, are you sure it's the right way?: msg#00234
|
Subject: |
Re: senlinux configuration, are you sure it's the right way? |
Daniel J Walsh wrote:
Farkas Levente wrote:
hi,
after i having played a few days with selinux, apache and other
daemons and programs the whole selinux configuration seems to me a bit
confusing. if i found any kind of problem with the "default" selinux
setup which is not big thing since most systems are different and
there are a lots of program which are not included in the core distro.
i have to report it and the next update will include it. my question
why selinux include the default policies? why selinux-policy-*
contains the right acces rights for all included deamons, programs?
wouldn't it be much better to all package include it's own policy and
in the rpm postinstall session reload/add/modify the new policies.
this is something similar to the libs. i only install only those lib
which needed for me and at the postinstall session run an ldconfig. i
wouldn't like to install all libs! why should i install policies for
eg. apache when i don't run apache? why should i update
selinux-policy-* just because there was a bug in the apache part of
the policy when i don't run apache? the current case is something one
big monolitic policy configuration which most of the time not suitable
for anyone (anyone who run anything else then the default need to
modify it or run any webscript or). of course my main problem not with
apache policies rather then the whole system and way of configuration
of selinux. wouldn't be any easier and modularized way to use selinux
and configure it for the needed thing. probably there is need for some
core policy but all others policy can be modularized. or do i missed
something?
just my 2c.
yours.
Yes this is something we are working on. Currenly there are lots of
interdendancies in policy that make separating them out difficult.
Currently the only way to add or remove a policy, is via source code.
So if I want to remove apache policy, I need to install the policy
sources and mv apache.te file out of the programs directory. Then
recompile and reload the policy.
Tresys corporation is working on loadable modules that may be able to
solve this problem. We are working towards the point where you
would have an apache policy file that would get loaded and unloaded
depending on whether you are running apache, and then the policy file
could be supplied with the binaries.
but until this happend wouldn't it be still better to always install
policy sources too, binaries install it's own policy source under
/etc/selinux/*/src/policy/ and postinstall run a make reload?
even it's not the best why imho it's still better then the current one.
and the ploicy source not realy a big overhead.
anyway my main problem not with the overhead of apache's policy if i
don't use policy rather then currently there is no proper way to
install/add any package/program/daemon which is not in the core distro
and required some policy changes. since it's obvious that you wouldn't
like to include and maintain policy for foobar when it's not in the
distro (and not even in extras). but if each package install it's own
policy the there can a common and working way to do so. what's if there
can be apache-policy...rpm then if i don't use selinux then i shouldn't
have to install apache-policy even if i install apache.
This is new technology and we are working to improve it.
yes, i know that. so i wouldn't like to blame you since you i used to
got the quickest response from you:-) only try to suggest some
improvement to the current system.
--
Levente "Si vis pacem para bellum!"
|
| |