Manpages

MAC.CONF(5) BSD File Formats Manual MAC.CONF(5)

NAME

mac.conf — format of the MAC library configuration file

DESCRIPTION

The mac.conf file configures the default label elements to be used by policy-agnostic applications that operate on MAC labels. A file contains a series of default label sets specified by object class, in addition to blank lines and comments preceded by a ’#’ symbol.

Each declaration consists of a single line with two fields separated by white space: the object class name, and a list of label elements as used by the mac_prepare(3) library calls prior to an application invocation of a function from mac_get(3). Label element names may optionally begin with a ’?’ symbol to indicate that a failure to retrieve the label element for an object should be silently ignored, and improves usability if the set of MAC policies may change over time.

EXAMPLES

The following example configures user applications to operate with four MAC policies: mac_biba(4), mac_mls(4), SEBSD, and mac_partition(4).

#
# Default label set to be used by simple MAC applications
#

default_file_labels ?biba,?mls,?sebsd
default_ifnet_labels ?biba,?mls,?sebsd
default_process_labels ?biba,?mls,partition,?sebsd

In this example, userland applications will attempt to retrieve Biba, MLS, and SEBSD labels for all object classes; for processes, they will additionally attempt to retrieve a Partition identifier. In all cases except the Partition identifier, failure to retrieve a label due to the respective policy not being present will be ignored.

FILES
/etc/mac.conf

MAC library configuration file.

SEE ALSO

mac(3), mac_get(3), mac_prepare(3), mac(4), mac(9)

HISTORY

Support for Mandatory Access Control was introduced in FreeBSD 5.0 as part of the TrustedBSD Project.

BUGS

The TrustedBSD MAC Framework and associated policies, interfaces, and applications are considered to be an experimental feature in FreeBSD. Sites considering production deployment should keep the experimental status of these services in mind during any deployment process. See also mac(9) for related considerations regarding the kernel framework.

BSD April 19, 2003 BSD