Content Specification (Draft-only)
SELinux Introduction
SELinux Basics
Someone suggested having a section, that detailed if you are not going to do anything else with SELinux, then at least do these 3-4 things...
Access Control
Describe the concepts of the following, using <http://www.redhat.com/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/5.2/html/Deployment_Guide/selg-overview.html> as a guide:
- Discretionary Access Control (DAC)
- Mandatory Access Control (MAC)
- Multi-Level Security (MLS)
- Mutli-Category Security (MCS)
- Type Enforcement (TE)
- Role Based Access Control (RBAC)
SELinux rules are not checked if DAC rules deny access.
RBAC: Roles are associated with domain types, and domain types are associated with users. When not taking domain transition into account, roles do not restrict access between subjects and objects, but limit which users can exist and transition to which domains. SELinux users and roles are important when writing policies, but do not restrict access per se, and as such, are not discussed in detail in this guide.
Targeted Policy Overview
- Introduction to targeted policy: <http://www.redhat.com/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/5.2/html/Deployment_Guide/sec-sel-policy-targeted-oview.html>.
- Confined and unconfined processes. Explain unconfined.
- Users and roles: user_u, user_r, system_r, and so on.
When using targeted policy, domains run as the system_r
role. Type enforcement then separates each domain.
SELinux Contexts and Attributes
SELinux Contexts and Attributes