* Re: libsemanage Next Generation in Fedora 14?
[not found] <4BACFED2.70508@redhat.com>
@ 2010-03-26 19:59 ` Joshua Brindle
2010-03-29 12:25 ` Daniel J Walsh
0 siblings, 1 reply; 2+ messages in thread
From: Joshua Brindle @ 2010-03-26 19:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Daniel J Walsh; +Cc: Caleb Case, SELinux
Daniel J Walsh wrote:
> Caleb and Josh,
>
> What do you think of putting the new version of libsemanage into F14? Do
> you think it is ready?
>
I don't think it is advisable. The current patchset makes use of a 'new'
kind of policy that is really the 3 parts of a refpolicy module combined
into a single file. The end system then pulls out all the interface
files and uses the entire Refpolicy build infrastructure to build a policy.
While that has uses (changing interfaces changes callers of the
interface, for example) it also means every end system would have to
have m4, sed, awk, checkpolicy and all the magic unicorns that are part
of building refpolicy.
Once we have a minimal CIL (without the transformation language, for
example) and a proper Refpolicy compiler much of this will be hidden
away behind the library it will be much more suitable.
I believe waiting until F15 is definitely the best idea, we never really
intended for a wider audience to use the current way because it is
non-ideal and has a number of hacks to make it work. It is mainly
available for people who want to work on it, see what it going to be
coming up or otherwise curious.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: libsemanage Next Generation in Fedora 14?
2010-03-26 19:59 ` libsemanage Next Generation in Fedora 14? Joshua Brindle
@ 2010-03-29 12:25 ` Daniel J Walsh
0 siblings, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Daniel J Walsh @ 2010-03-29 12:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Joshua Brindle; +Cc: Caleb Case, SELinux
On 03/26/2010 03:59 PM, Joshua Brindle wrote:
> Daniel J Walsh wrote:
>> Caleb and Josh,
>>
>> What do you think of putting the new version of libsemanage into F14? Do
>> you think it is ready?
>>
>
> I don't think it is advisable. The current patchset makes use of a
> 'new' kind of policy that is really the 3 parts of a refpolicy module
> combined into a single file. The end system then pulls out all the
> interface files and uses the entire Refpolicy build infrastructure to
> build a policy.
>
> While that has uses (changing interfaces changes callers of the
> interface, for example) it also means every end system would have to
> have m4, sed, awk, checkpolicy and all the magic unicorns that are
> part of building refpolicy.
>
> Once we have a minimal CIL (without the transformation language, for
> example) and a proper Refpolicy compiler much of this will be hidden
> away behind the library it will be much more suitable.
>
> I believe waiting until F15 is definitely the best idea, we never
> really intended for a wider audience to use the current way because it
> is non-ideal and has a number of hacks to make it work. It is mainly
> available for people who want to work on it, see what it going to be
> coming up or otherwise curious.
Ok I will ping again in September.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
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2010-03-26 19:59 ` libsemanage Next Generation in Fedora 14? Joshua Brindle
2010-03-29 12:25 ` Daniel J Walsh
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