29 lines
879 B
Plaintext
29 lines
879 B
Plaintext
Injects allow rules into binary SELinux kernel policies
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Injecting a rule:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -s shell -t system -c file -p read -P sepolicy
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Injecting multiple permissions:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -s shell -t system -c file -p read,write,open -P sepolicy
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Add a type_attribute to a domain:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -s su -a mlstrustedsubject -P sepolicy
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Injecting a permissive domain:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -Z shell -P sepolicy
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Change a permissive domain to non-permissive:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -z shell -P sepolicy
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Test a SELinux type exists:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -e -s shell -P sepolicy
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Test a SELinux class exists:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -e -c service_manager -P sepolicy
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Add a transition:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -s su_daemon -f device -c file -t su_device -P sepolicy
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Add a filename transition:
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$ ./sepolicy-inject -s su_daemon -f device -c file -g "socket" -t su_device -P sepolicy
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