Move net.dns* from net_radio_prop to the newly created label
net_dns_prop. This allows finer grain control over this specific
property.
Prior to this change, this property was readable to all SELinux domains,
and writable by the following SELinux domains:
* system_server
* system_app (apps which run as UID=system)
* netmgrd
* radio
This change:
1) Removes read access to this property to everyone EXCEPT untrusted_app
and system_server.
2) Limit write access to system_server.
In particular, this change removes read access to priv_apps. Any
priv_app which ships with the system should not be reading this
property.
Bug: 34115651
Test: Device boots, wifi turns on, no problems browsing the internet
Change-Id: I8a32e98c4f573d634485c4feac91baa35d021d38
- Added set_prop to shell so that you can set it from shell.
- Added set_prop to sytem_app so that it can be updated in settings.
Bug: 34256441
Test: can update prop from Settings and shell. nfc and lights work with
ag/1833821 with persist.hal.binderization set to on and off. There are
no additional selinux denials.
Change-Id: I883ca489093c1d56b2efa725c58e6e3f3b81c3aa
This removes access to Bluetooth system properties from arbitrary
SELinux domains. Access remains granted to init, bluetooth, and
system_app domains. neverallow rules / CTS enforce that access is not
granted to Zygote and processes spawned from Zygote expcept for
system_app and bluetooth.
The reason is that some of these properties may leak persistent
identifiers not resettable by the user.
Test: Bluetooth pairing and data transfer works
Bug: 33700679
Change-Id: Icdcb3927a423c4011a62942340a498cc1b302472
ro.runtime.firstboot system property is only used internally by
system_server to distinguish between first start after boot from
consecutive starts (for example, this happens when full-disk
encryption is enabled). The value of the property is a
millisecond-precise timestamp which can help track individual
device. Thus apps should not have access to this property.
Test: Device boots fine, reading ro.runtime.firstboot from an app results in an error and SELinux denial.
Bug: 33700679
Change-Id: I4c3c26a35c5dd840bced3a3e53d071f45317f63c
This restricts access to ro.serialno and ro.boot.serialno, the two
system properties which contain the device's serial number, to a
select few SELinux domains which need the access. In particular, this
removes access to these properties from Android apps. Apps can access
the serial number via the public android.os.Build API. System
properties are not public API for apps.
The reason for the restriction is that serial number is a globally
unique identifier which cannot be reset by the user. Thus, it can be
used as a super-cookie by apps. Apps need to wean themselves off of
identifiers not resettable by the user.
Test: Set up fresh GMS device, install some apps via Play, update some apps, use Chrome
Test: Access the device via ADB (ADBD exposes serial number)
Test: Enable MTP over USB, use mtp-detect to confirm that serial number is reported in MTP DeviceInfo
Bug: 31402365
Bug: 33700679
Change-Id: I4713133b8d78dbc63d8272503e80cd2ffd63a2a7
system/core commit 331cf2fb7c16b5b25064f8d2f00284105a9b413f created a
number of new properties of the form:
[ro.boottime.init]: [5294587604]
[ro.boottime.InputEventFind]: [10278767840]
[ro.boottime.adbd]: [8359267180]
...
These properties were assigned the default_prop SELinux label because a
better label did not exist. Properties labeled with the default_prop
label are readable to any SELinux domain, which is overly broad.
bullhead:/ $ getprop -Z ro.boottime.adbd
u:object_r:default_prop:s0
Instead, create a new label for the ro.boottime.* properties so we can
apply more fine grain read access control to these properties.
bullhead:/ $ getprop -Z ro.boottime.adbd
u:object_r:boottime_prop:s0
New SELinux property labels have minimal permissions by default. As a
result, after this change, ro.boottime.* properties will only be
readable to system_server, bootstat, init (because it manages the property
space), and "adb root" (because no SELinux permissions are enforced there).
Additional read access can be granted as-needed.
This is part of a larger effort to implement fine-grain access control
on the properties managed by init.
Test: Device boots and no SELinux denials on boot.
Change-Id: Ibf981cb81898f4356fdc5c1b6f15dd93c0d6d84d
Allow the system_server to change. Allow the zygote to read it as well.
Test: Have system_server set a property
Change-Id: Ie90eec8b733fa7193861026a3a6e0fb0ba5d5318
Divide policy into public and private components. This is the first
step in splitting the policy creation for platform and non-platform
policies. The policy in the public directory will be exported for use
in non-platform policy creation. Backwards compatibility with it will
be achieved by converting the exported policy into attribute-based
policy when included as part of the non-platform policy and a mapping
file will be maintained to be included with the platform policy that
maps exported attributes of previous versions to the current platform
version.
Eventually we would like to create a clear interface between the
platform and non-platform device components so that the exported policy,
and the need for attributes is minimal. For now, almost all types and
avrules are left in public.
Test: Tested by building policy and running on device.
Change-Id: Idef796c9ec169259787c3f9d8f423edf4ce27f8c