Apps now all share the appdomain_tmpfs type.
Bug: 122854450
Test: boot Blueline with memfd enabled.
Change-Id: I5eac0adc7ecd10d19aa1bdf5f72efc7ed2a3a548
This is being done in preparation for the migration from ashmem to
memfd. In order for tmpfs objects to be usable across the Treble
boundary, they need to be declared in public policy whereas, they're
currently all declared in private policy as part of the
tmpfs_domain() macro. Remove the type declaration from the
macro, and remove tmpfs_domain() from the init_daemon_domain() macro
to avoid having to declare the *_tmpfs types for all init launched
domains. tmpfs is mostly used by apps and the media frameworks.
Bug: 122854450
Test: Boot Taimen and blueline. Watch videos, make phone calls, browse
internet, send text, install angry birds...play angry birds, keep
playing angry birds...
Change-Id: I20a47d2bb22e61b16187015c7bc7ca10accf6358
Merged-In: I20a47d2bb22e61b16187015c7bc7ca10accf6358
(cherry picked from commit e16fb9109c)
Rules in clients of NFC HAL due to the HAL running (or previously
running) in passthrough mode are now targeting hal_nfc. Domains which
are clients of NFC HAL are associated with hal_nfc only the the HAL
runs in passthrough mode. NFC HAL server domains are always associated
with hal_nfc and thus get these rules unconditionally.
This commit also moves the policy of nfc domain to private. The only
thing remaining in the public policy is the existence of this domain.
This is needed because there are references to this domain in public
and vendor policy.
Test: Open a URL in Chrome, NFC-tap Android to another Android and
observe that the same URL is opened in a web browser on the
destination device. Do the same reversing the roles of the two
Androids.
Test: Install an NFC reader app, tap a passive NFC tag with the
Android and observe that the app is displaying information about
the tag.
Test: No SELinux denials to do with NFC before and during and after
the above tests on sailfish, bullhead, and angler.
Bug: 34170079
Change-Id: I29fe43f63d64b286c28eb19a3a9fe4f630612226
This switches most remaining HALs to the _client/_server approach.
To unblock efforts blocked on majority of HALs having to use this
model, this change does not remove unnecessary rules from clients of
these HALs. That work will be performed in follow-up commits. This
commit only adds allow rules and thus does not break existing
functionality.
The HALs not yet on the _client/_server model after this commit are:
* Allocator HAL, because it's non-trivial to declare all apps except
isolated apps as clients of this HAL, which they are.
* Boot HAL, because it's still on the non-attributized model and I'm
waiting for update_engine folks to answer a couple of questions
which will let me refactor the policy of this HAL.
Test: mmm system/sepolicy
Test: Device boots, no new denials
Test: Device boots in recovery mode, no new denials
Bug: 34170079
Change-Id: I03e6bcec2fa02f14bdf17d11f7367b62c68a14b9
Introduce the add_service() macro which wraps up add/find
permissions for the source domain with a neverallow preventing
others from adding it. Only a particular domain should
add a particular service.
Use the add_service() macro to automatically add a neverallow
that prevents other domains from adding the service.
mediadrmserver was adding services labeled mediaserver_service.
Drop the add permission as it should just need the find
permission.
Additionally, the macro adds the { add find } permission which
causes some existing neverallow's to assert. Adjust those
neverallow's so "self" can always find.
Test: compile and run on hikey and emulator. No new denials were
found, and all services, where applicable, seem to be running OK.
Change-Id: Ibbd2a5304edd5f8b877bc86852b0694732be993c
Signed-off-by: William Roberts <william.c.roberts@intel.com>
reflect the change from "mediaanalytics" to "mediametrics"
Also incorporates a broader access to the service -- e.g. anyone.
This reflects that a number of metrics submissions come from application
space and not only from our controlled, trusted media related processes.
The metrics service (in another commit) checks on the source of any
incoming metrics data and limits what is allowed from unprivileged
clients.
Bug: 34615027
Test: clean build, service running and accessible
Change-Id: I657c343ea1faed536c3ee1940f1e7a178e813a42
app_domain was split up in commit: 2e00e6373f to
enable compilation by hiding type_transition rules from public policy. These
rules need to be hidden from public policy because they describe how objects are
labeled, of which non-platform should be unaware. Instead of cutting apart the
app_domain macro, which non-platform policy may rely on for implementing new app
types, move all app_domain calls to private policy.
(cherry-pick of commit: 76035ea019)
Bug: 33428593
Test: bullhead and sailfish both boot. sediff shows no policy change.
Change-Id: I4beead8ccc9b6e13c6348da98bb575756f539665
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