Re: [AppArmor 39/45] AppArmor: Profile loading and manipulation,pathname matching

From: Crispin Cowan
Date: Sun Jun 10 2007 - 16:55:26 EST


david@xxxxxxx wrote:
> On Fri, 8 Jun 2007, Greg KH wrote:
>> I still want to see a definition of the AA "model" that we can then use
>> to try to implement using whatever solution works best. As that seems
>> to be missing the current argument of if AA can or can not be
>> implemented using SELinux or something totally different should be
>> stopped.
> the way I would describe the difference betwen AA and SELinux is:
>
> SELinux is like a default allow IPS system, you have to describe
> EVERYTHING to the system so that it knows what to allow and what to stop.
>
> AA is like a default deny firewall, you describe what you want to
> happen, and it blocks everything else without you even having to
> realize that it's there.
That's not quite right:

* SELinux Strict Policy is a default-deny system: it specifies
everything that is permitted system wide, and all else is denied.
* AA and the SELinux Targeted Policy are hybrid systems:
o default-deny within a policy or profile: confined processes
are only permitted to do what the policy says, and all else
is denied.
o default-allow system wide: unconfined processes are allowed
to do anything that classic DAC permissions allow.

Crispin

--
Crispin Cowan, Ph.D. http://crispincowan.com/~crispin/
Director of Software Engineering http://novell.com
AppArmor Chat: irc.oftc.net/#apparmor

-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/