platform_system_sepolicy/kernel.te
Nick Kralevich e550e79c76 kernel: allow rebooting, and writing to /dev/__kmsg__
Addresses the following denials:

  avc:  denied  { write } for  pid=1 comm="init" path=2F6465762F5F5F6B6D73675F5F202864656C6574656429 dev="tmpfs" ino=7214 scontext=u:r:kernel:s0 tcontext=u:object_r:tmpfs:s0 tclass=chr_file permissive=0
  avc:  denied  { write } for  pid=1 comm="init" name="sysrq-trigger" dev="proc" ino=4026534153 scontext=u:r:kernel:s0 tcontext=u:object_r:proc_sysrq:s0 tclass=file permissive=0
  avc:  denied  { sys_boot } for  pid=1 comm="init" capability=22  scontext=u:r:kernel:s0 tcontext=u:r:kernel:s0 tclass=capability permissive=0

Change-Id: I46be370d520c4492d97c6ed7ccdc55cc20b22c49
2015-05-05 17:40:07 -07:00

78 lines
3 KiB
Text

# Life begins with the kernel.
type kernel, domain, mlstrustedsubject;
allow kernel self:capability sys_nice;
# Allow init relabel itself.
allow kernel rootfs:file relabelfrom;
allow kernel init_exec:file relabelto;
# TODO: investigate why we need this.
allow kernel init:process share;
# cgroup filesystem initialization prior to setting the cgroup root directory label.
allow kernel unlabeled:dir search;
# Mount usbfs.
allow kernel usbfs:filesystem mount;
allow kernel usbfs:dir search;
# Initial setenforce by init prior to switching to init domain.
# We use dontaudit instead of allow to prevent a kernel spawned userspace
# process from turning off SELinux once enabled.
dontaudit kernel self:security setenforce;
# Write to /proc/1/oom_adj prior to switching to init domain.
allow kernel self:capability sys_resource;
# Init reboot before switching selinux domains under certain error
# conditions. Allow it.
# As part of rebooting, init writes "u" to /proc/sysrq-trigger to
# remount filesystems read-only. /data is not mounted at this point,
# so we could ignore this. For now, we allow it.
allow kernel self:capability sys_boot;
allow kernel proc_sysrq:file w_file_perms;
# Allow writing to /dev/__kmsg__ which was created prior to
# loading policy
allow kernel tmpfs:chr_file write;
# Set checkreqprot by init.rc prior to switching to init domain.
allow kernel selinuxfs:file write;
allow kernel self:security setcheckreqprot;
# MTP sync (b/15835289)
# kernel thread "loop0", used by the loop block device, for ASECs (b/17158723)
allow kernel untrusted_app:fd use;
allow kernel sdcard_type:file { read write };
# Allow the kernel to read OBB files from app directories. (b/17428116)
# Kernel thread "loop0" reads a vold supplied file descriptor.
# Fixes CTS tests:
# * android.os.storage.cts.StorageManagerTest#testMountAndUnmountObbNormal
# * android.os.storage.cts.StorageManagerTest#testMountAndUnmountTwoObbs
allow kernel vold:fd use;
allow kernel app_data_file:file read;
allow kernel asec_image_file:file read;
domain_auto_trans(kernel, init_exec, init)
###
### neverallow rules
###
# The initial task starts in the kernel domain (assigned via
# initial_sid_contexts), but nothing ever transitions to it.
neverallow domain kernel:process { transition dyntransition };
# The kernel domain is never entered via an exec, nor should it
# ever execute a program outside the rootfs without changing to another domain.
# If you encounter an execute_no_trans denial on the kernel domain, then
# possible causes include:
# - The program is a kernel usermodehelper. In this case, define a domain
# for the program and domain_auto_trans() to it.
# - You failed to setcon u:r:init:s0 in your init.rc and thus your init
# program was left in the kernel domain and is now trying to execute
# some other program. Fix your init.rc file.
# - You are running an exploit which switched to the init task credentials
# and is then trying to exec a shell or other program. You lose!
neverallow kernel { file_type fs_type -rootfs }:file { entrypoint execute_no_trans };