SELinux
Expected functionality
Essentially provide mechanisms to manage local customizations:
-
Set enforcing/permissive
-
restorecon portions of filesystem tree
-
Set/Get Booleans
-
Set/Get file contexts
-
Manage logins
-
Manage ports
Requirements
Modules provided by this repository
selinux_modules_facts
Gather state of SELinux modules
Role Variables
purge local modifications
By default, the modifications specified in selinux_booleans
,
selinux_fcontexts
, selinux_ports
and selinux_logins
are applied on
top of pre-existing modifications. To purge local modifications prior to
setting new ones, set following variables to true
:
-
selinux_booleans_purge
- SELinux booleans -
selinux_fcontexts_purge
- SELinux file contexts -
selinux_ports_purge
- SELinux ports -
selinux_logins_purge
- SELinux user mapping
You can purge all modifications by using selinux_all_purge: true
:
selinux_all_purge: true
selinux_policy, selinux_state
Manage the SELinux policy type and mode.
selinux_policy: targeted
selinux_state: enforcing
Allowed values for selinux_state
are disabled
, enforcing
and
permissive
.
If selinux_state
is not set, the SELinux state is not changed. If
selinux_policy
is not set and SELinux is to be enabled, it defaults to
targeted
. If SELinux is already enabled, the policy is not changed.
This uses the selinux module to manage the SELinux mode and policy.
selinux_booleans
Manage the state of SELinux booleans. This is a list
of dict
, where
each dict
is in the same format as used by the
seboolean
module.
selinux_booleans:
- {name: 'samba_enable_home_dirs', state: true}
- {name: 'ssh_sysadm_login', state: true, persistent: true}
selinux_fcontexts
Manage the state of SELinux file context mapping definitions. This is a
list
of dict
, where each dict
is in the same format as used by the
sefcontext
module.
selinux_fcontexts:
- {target: '/tmp/test_dir(/.*)?', setype: 'user_home_dir_t', ftype: 'd', state: 'present'}
Users may also pass the following optional parameters:
-
seuser
: to set the SELinux user -
selevel
: to set the MLS/MCS Security Range (MLS/MCS Systems only). SELinux Range for SELinux login mapping defaults to the SELinux user record range.
Individual modifications can be dropped by setting state
to absent
.
selinux_ports
Manage the state of SELinux port policy. This is a list
of dict
,
where each dict
is in the same format as used by the
seport
module.
selinux_ports:
- {ports: '22100', proto: 'tcp', setype: 'ssh_port_t', state: 'present', local: true}
selinux_restore_dirs
This is a list
of strings, where each string is a filesystem tree
where you want to run restorecon
:
selinux_restore_dirs:
- /tmp/test_dir
selinux_logins
Manage the linux user to SELinux user mapping. This is a list
of
dict
, where each dict
is in the same format as used by the
selogin
module.
selinux_logins:
- {login: 'plautrba', seuser: 'staff_u', state: 'absent'}
- {login: '__default__', seuser: 'staff_u', serange: 's0-s0:c0.c1023', state: 'present'}
selinux_modules
It is possible to manage SELinux modules using selinux_modules
variable which would contain a list
of dict
, e.g.:
selinux_modules:
- {path: 'localmodule.pp', state: 'enabled'}
- {path: 'localmodule.cil', priority: '350', state: 'enabled'}
- {name: 'unconfineduser', state: 'disabled'}
- {name: 'localmodule', priority: '350', state: 'absent'}
-
path
: a local module file (either .cil or .pp) to be installed on a node, used for installing new modules -
name
: module name, used for enabling disabled modules, disabling enabled modules, removing modules -
priority
: SELinux module priority, default is "400". "100" is used for modules installed from selinux-policy packages, "200" for other modules installed from 3rd party rpms, "300" is used by SETroubleshoot -
state
: one of the following values-
enabled
: install or enable module -
disabled
: disable module -
absent
: remove module
-
Note: Building modules from source on nodes is not supported. However, in many cases a binary pp or cil module could be used on different systems if all systems support types, classes and permissions used in the module. In case of pp module it also needs to be built with the lowest supported policydb module version on target systems, i.e. on the oldest system.
Note: Module priorities are ignored in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6
Note: Managing modules is idempotent only on Fedora, and EL 8.6 and later. You can manage modules on older releases, but it will not be idempotent.
Ansible Facts
selinux_reboot_required
This custom fact is set to true
if system reboot is necessary when
SELinux is set from disabled
to enabled
or vice versa. Otherwise the
fact is set to false
. In the case that system reboot is needed, it
will be indicated by returning failure from the role which needs to be
handled using a block:
…rescue:
construct. The reboot needs to be
performed in the playbook, the role itself never reboots the managed
host. After the reboot the role needs to be reapplied to finish the
changes.
selinux_installed_modules
This custom fact represents SELinux module store structure
"selinux_installed_modules": {
<module name>: {
<module priority>: ("enabled"|"disabled"),
...
},
...
}
e.g.
"ansible_facts": {
"selinux_installed_modules": {
"abrt": {
"100": "enabled",
"400": "disabled"
},
"accountsd": {
"100": "enabled"
},
"acct": {
"100": "enabled"
}
}
}
NOTE: Module priority is set to "0" when priorities are not supported, e.g. on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6
Examples
The general usage is demonstrated in selinux-playbook.yml playbook.