refpolicy 2:2.20180114-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

refpolicy (2:2.20180114-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * New upstream 2.20180114 with patch from git version 2.20180220.
    Took that patch because a lot of it was policy I developed.
  * Delete the deprecated macro mmap_file_perms, anyone who uses this should
    change to mmap_exec_file_perms instead.  Closes: #885771
  * Now build-depend on recent toolchain.  Closes: #875546
  * Removed typebounds patch that upstream didn't like, seems to work ok
    without it now, but we can use nnp_transition if necessary.

 -- Russell Coker <email address hidden>  Mon, 26 Feb 2018 23:25:27 +1100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian SELinux maintainers
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian SELinux maintainers
Architectures:
all
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Bionic release universe admin

Builds

Bionic: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
refpolicy_2.20180114-1.dsc 2.4 KiB 5f9a64695bc2c32bc006e3a47bed45cafe31f34290af830b8dd728cac26d2dd6
refpolicy_2.20180114.orig.tar.bz2 726.3 KiB e826f7d7f899a548e538964487e9fc1bc67ca94756ebdce0bfb6532b4eb0d06b
refpolicy_2.20180114-1.debian.tar.xz 66.0 KiB 9adc460f3fda67d886d83689af2ca028524fc415c4a06bab6b8fe6b12bb4e6a4

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

selinux-policy-default: No summary available for selinux-policy-default in ubuntu cosmic.

No description available for selinux-policy-default in ubuntu cosmic.

selinux-policy-dev: Headers from the SELinux reference policy for building modules

 The SELinux Reference Policy (refpolicy) is a complete SELinux
 policy, as an alternative to the existing strict and targeted
 policies available from http://selinux.sf.net. The goal is to have
 this policy as the system policy, be and used as the basis for
 creating other policies. Refpolicy is based on the current strict and
 targeted policies, but aims to accomplish many additional
 goals:
  + Strong Modularity
  + Clearly stated security Goals
  + Documentation
  + Development Tool Support
  + Forward Looking
  + Configurability
  + Flexible Base Policy
  + Application Policy Variations
  + Multi-Level Security
 .
 This package provides header files for building your own SELinux
 policy packages compatible with official policy packages.

selinux-policy-doc: Documentation for the SELinux reference policy

 The SELinux Reference Policy (refpolicy) is a complete SELinux
 policy, as an alternative to the existing strict and targeted
 policies available from http://selinux.sf.net. The goal is to have
 this policy as the system policy, be and used as the basis for
 creating other policies. Refpolicy is based on the current strict and
 targeted policies, but aims to accomplish many additional
 goals:
  + Strong Modularity
  + Clearly stated security Goals
  + Documentation
  + Development Tool Support
  + Forward Looking
  + Configurability
  + Flexible Base Policy
  + Application Policy Variations
  + Multi-Level Security
 .
 This package contains the documentation for the reference policy.

selinux-policy-mls: MLS (Multi Level Security) variant of the SELinux policy

 This is the reference policy for SE Linux built with MLS support. It allows
 giving data labels such as "Top Secret" and preventing such data from leaking
 to processes or files with lower classification.
 .
 It was developed for Common Criteria LSPP certification for RHEL. It will
 probably never be well supported in Debian and is only recommended for
 students who want to learn about the security features used by the military.

selinux-policy-src: Source of the SELinux reference policy for customization

 The SELinux Reference Policy (refpolicy) is a complete SELinux
 policy, as an alternative to the existing strict and targeted
 policies available from http://selinux.sf.net. The goal is to have
 this policy as the system policy, be and used as the basis for
 creating other policies. Refpolicy is based on the current strict and
 targeted policies, but aims to accomplish many additional
 goals:
  + Strong Modularity
  + Clearly stated security Goals
  + Documentation
  + Development Tool Support
  + Forward Looking
  + Configurability
  + Flexible Base Policy
  + Application Policy Variations
  + Multi-Level Security
 .
 This is the source of the policy, provided so that local variations of
 SELinux policy may be created.