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SELinux Cookbook

You're reading from   SELinux Cookbook Over 70 hands-on recipes to develop fully functional policies to confine your applications and users using SELinux

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783989669
Length 240 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Sven Vermeulen Sven Vermeulen
Author Profile Icon Sven Vermeulen
Sven Vermeulen
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The SELinux Development Environment FREE CHAPTER 2. Dealing with File Labels 3. Confining Web Applications 4. Creating a Desktop Application Policy 5. Creating a Server Policy 6. Setting Up Separate Roles 7. Choosing the Confinement Level 8. Debugging SELinux 9. Aligning SELinux with DAC 10. Handling SELinux-aware Applications Index

Using different web server ports


By default, web servers listen on the known web server ports (such as ports 80 and 443). Often, administrators might want to have the web server listen on a nondefault port. The SELinux policy might reject this, as it is not standard behavior for a web server to listen on other unrelated ports.

In this recipe, we will tell SELinux that a nondefault port should still be seen as a web server port.

How to do it…

In order to assign a label to a different port, execute the following steps:

  1. To see all the ports that match http_port_t, use semanage port -l:

    ~# semanage port -l | grep -w http_port_t
    http_port_t  tcp  80, 81, 443, 488, 8008, 8009, 8443, 9000
    
  2. Query the SELinux policy to see which port type is assigned to a particular port. For instance, for port 8881, the following command is used:

    ~$ seinfo --portcon=8881
    
  3. If the port is identified as unreserved_port_t, then we can mark it as http_port_t:

    ~# semanage port -a -t http_port_t -p tcp 8881
    
  4. If, however, the...

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