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Darrel Goeddel376bd9c2006-02-24 15:44:05 -06001/*
2 * SELinux services exported to the rest of the kernel.
3 *
4 * Author: James Morris <jmorris@redhat.com>
5 *
6 * Copyright (C) 2005 Red Hat, Inc., James Morris <jmorris@redhat.com>
7 * Copyright (C) 2006 Trusted Computer Solutions, Inc. <dgoeddel@trustedcs.com>
Steve Grubbe7c34972006-04-03 09:08:13 -04008 * Copyright (C) 2006 IBM Corporation, Timothy R. Chavez <tinytim@us.ibm.com>
Darrel Goeddel376bd9c2006-02-24 15:44:05 -06009 *
10 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
11 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2,
12 * as published by the Free Software Foundation.
13 */
14#ifndef _LINUX_SELINUX_H
15#define _LINUX_SELINUX_H
16
17struct selinux_audit_rule;
18struct audit_context;
Steve Grubb1b50eed2006-04-03 14:06:13 -040019struct inode;
Steve Grubb9c7aa6a2006-03-31 15:22:49 -050020struct kern_ipc_perm;
Darrel Goeddel376bd9c2006-02-24 15:44:05 -060021
22#ifdef CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX
23
24/**
25 * selinux_audit_rule_init - alloc/init an selinux audit rule structure.
26 * @field: the field this rule refers to
27 * @op: the operater the rule uses
28 * @rulestr: the text "target" of the rule
29 * @rule: pointer to the new rule structure returned via this
30 *
31 * Returns 0 if successful, -errno if not. On success, the rule structure
32 * will be allocated internally. The caller must free this structure with
33 * selinux_audit_rule_free() after use.
34 */
35int selinux_audit_rule_init(u32 field, u32 op, char *rulestr,
36 struct selinux_audit_rule **rule);
37
38/**
39 * selinux_audit_rule_free - free an selinux audit rule structure.
40 * @rule: pointer to the audit rule to be freed
41 *
42 * This will free all memory associated with the given rule.
43 * If @rule is NULL, no operation is performed.
44 */
45void selinux_audit_rule_free(struct selinux_audit_rule *rule);
46
47/**
48 * selinux_audit_rule_match - determine if a context ID matches a rule.
49 * @ctxid: the context ID to check
50 * @field: the field this rule refers to
51 * @op: the operater the rule uses
52 * @rule: pointer to the audit rule to check against
53 * @actx: the audit context (can be NULL) associated with the check
54 *
55 * Returns 1 if the context id matches the rule, 0 if it does not, and
56 * -errno on failure.
57 */
58int selinux_audit_rule_match(u32 ctxid, u32 field, u32 op,
59 struct selinux_audit_rule *rule,
60 struct audit_context *actx);
61
62/**
63 * selinux_audit_set_callback - set the callback for policy reloads.
64 * @callback: the function to call when the policy is reloaded
65 *
66 * This sets the function callback function that will update the rules
67 * upon policy reloads. This callback should rebuild all existing rules
68 * using selinux_audit_rule_init().
69 */
70void selinux_audit_set_callback(int (*callback)(void));
71
72/**
73 * selinux_task_ctxid - determine a context ID for a process.
74 * @tsk: the task object
75 * @ctxid: ID value returned via this
76 *
77 * On return, ctxid will contain an ID for the context. This value
78 * should only be used opaquely.
79 */
80void selinux_task_ctxid(struct task_struct *tsk, u32 *ctxid);
81
Steve Grubb1b50eed2006-04-03 14:06:13 -040082/**
83 * selinux_ctxid_to_string - map a security context ID to a string
84 * @ctxid: security context ID to be converted.
85 * @ctx: address of context string to be returned
86 * @ctxlen: length of returned context string.
87 *
88 * Returns 0 if successful, -errno if not. On success, the context
89 * string will be allocated internally, and the caller must call
90 * kfree() on it after use.
91 */
92int selinux_ctxid_to_string(u32 ctxid, char **ctx, u32 *ctxlen);
93
94/**
95 * selinux_get_inode_sid - get the inode's security context ID
96 * @inode: inode structure to get the sid from.
97 * @sid: pointer to security context ID to be filled in.
98 *
99 * Returns nothing
100 */
101void selinux_get_inode_sid(const struct inode *inode, u32 *sid);
102
Steve Grubb9c7aa6a2006-03-31 15:22:49 -0500103/**
104 * selinux_get_ipc_sid - get the ipc security context ID
105 * @ipcp: ipc structure to get the sid from.
106 * @sid: pointer to security context ID to be filled in.
107 *
108 * Returns nothing
109 */
110void selinux_get_ipc_sid(const struct kern_ipc_perm *ipcp, u32 *sid);
111
Steve Grubbe7c34972006-04-03 09:08:13 -0400112/**
113 * selinux_get_task_sid - return the SID of task
114 * @tsk: the task whose SID will be returned
115 * @sid: pointer to security context ID to be filled in.
116 *
117 * Returns nothing
118 */
119void selinux_get_task_sid(struct task_struct *tsk, u32 *sid);
120
James Morrisc749b292006-06-09 00:28:25 -0700121/**
122 * selinux_string_to_sid - map a security context string to a security ID
123 * @str: the security context string to be mapped
124 * @sid: ID value returned via this.
125 *
126 * Returns 0 if successful, with the SID stored in sid. A value
127 * of zero for sid indicates no SID could be determined (but no error
128 * occurred).
129 */
130int selinux_string_to_sid(char *str, u32 *sid);
131
132/**
133 * selinux_relabel_packet_permission - check permission to relabel a packet
134 * @sid: ID value to be applied to network packet (via SECMARK, most likely)
135 *
136 * Returns 0 if the current task is allowed to label packets with the
137 * supplied security ID. Note that it is implicit that the packet is always
138 * being relabeled from the default unlabled value, and that the access
139 * control decision is made in the AVC.
140 */
141int selinux_relabel_packet_permission(u32 sid);
Steve Grubbe7c34972006-04-03 09:08:13 -0400142
Darrel Goeddel376bd9c2006-02-24 15:44:05 -0600143#else
144
145static inline int selinux_audit_rule_init(u32 field, u32 op,
146 char *rulestr,
147 struct selinux_audit_rule **rule)
148{
149 return -ENOTSUPP;
150}
151
152static inline void selinux_audit_rule_free(struct selinux_audit_rule *rule)
153{
154 return;
155}
156
157static inline int selinux_audit_rule_match(u32 ctxid, u32 field, u32 op,
158 struct selinux_audit_rule *rule,
159 struct audit_context *actx)
160{
161 return 0;
162}
163
164static inline void selinux_audit_set_callback(int (*callback)(void))
165{
166 return;
167}
168
169static inline void selinux_task_ctxid(struct task_struct *tsk, u32 *ctxid)
170{
171 *ctxid = 0;
172}
173
Steve Grubb1b50eed2006-04-03 14:06:13 -0400174static inline int selinux_ctxid_to_string(u32 ctxid, char **ctx, u32 *ctxlen)
175{
176 *ctx = NULL;
177 *ctxlen = 0;
178 return 0;
179}
180
181static inline void selinux_get_inode_sid(const struct inode *inode, u32 *sid)
182{
183 *sid = 0;
184}
185
Steve Grubb9c7aa6a2006-03-31 15:22:49 -0500186static inline void selinux_get_ipc_sid(const struct kern_ipc_perm *ipcp, u32 *sid)
187{
188 *sid = 0;
189}
190
Steve Grubbe7c34972006-04-03 09:08:13 -0400191static inline void selinux_get_task_sid(struct task_struct *tsk, u32 *sid)
192{
193 *sid = 0;
194}
195
James Morrisc749b292006-06-09 00:28:25 -0700196static inline int selinux_string_to_sid(const char *str, u32 *sid)
197{
198 *sid = 0;
199 return 0;
200}
201
202static inline int selinux_relabel_packet_permission(u32 sid)
203{
204 return 0;
205}
206
Darrel Goeddel376bd9c2006-02-24 15:44:05 -0600207#endif /* CONFIG_SECURITY_SELINUX */
208
209#endif /* _LINUX_SELINUX_H */