SELinux defines a number of classes for objects, making it easier to group certain permissions by specific classes. Here are some examples:
File related classes include filesystem for file systems, file for files, and dir for directories. Each class has it's own associated set of permissions. The filesystem class can mount, unmount, get attributes, set quotas, relabel, and so forth. The file class gains the common file permissions such as read, write, get and set attributes, lock, relabel, link, rename, append, etc.
Network related classes include tcp_socket for TCP sockets, netif for network interfaces, and node for network nodes. The netif class, for example, can send and receive on TCP, UDP and raw sockets (tcp_recv, tcp_send, udp_send, udp_recv, rawip_recv, and rawip_send.)
The object classes have matching declarations in the kernel, meaning that it is not trivial to add or change object class details. The same thing is true for permissions. Development work is ongoing to make it possible to register and unregister classes and permissions dynamically.
Permissions are the actions that a subject can take on an object, if the policy allows it. These permissions are the access requests that SELinux actively allows or denies.
There are several common sets of permissions defined in the targeted policy, in $SELINUX_SRC/flask/access_vectors. These allow the actual classes to inherit the sets, instead of rewriting the same permissions across multiple classes:
# Define a common prefix for file access vectors.
#
common file
{
ioctl
read
write
create
getattr
setattr
lock
relabelfrom
relabelto
append
unlink
link
rename
execute
swapon
quotaon
mounton
}
# Define a common prefix for socket access vectors.
#
common socket
{
# inherited from file
ioctl
read
write
create
getattr
setattr
lock
relabelfrom
relabelto
append
# socket-specific
bind
connect
listen
accept
getopt
setopt
shutdown
recvfrom
sendto
recv_msg
send_msg
name_bind
}
# Define a common prefix for ipc access vectors.
#
common ipc
{
create
destroy
getattr
setattr
read
write
associate
unix_read
unix_write
} |
Following the common sets are all the access vector definitions. The definition is structured this way: class <class_name> [ inherits <common_name> ] { <permission_name> ... }. A good example is the dir class, which inherits the permissions from the file class, and has additional permissions on top:
class dir
inherits file
{
add_name
remove_name
reparent
search
rmdir
} |
Another example is the class for tcp_socket, which inherits the socket set plus having its own set of additional permissions:
class tcp_socket
inherits socket
{
connectto
newconn
acceptfrom
node_bind
} |