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Understanding SELinux Basics
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 16

Understanding SELinux Basics

Publication Date: 24 Oct 2025
WHAT?

This article provides basic information about Security-Enhanced Linux.

WHY?

You want to understand SELinux and how to configure it on SUSE Linux Micro.

EFFORT

It takes approximately 40 minutes to read this article.

1 About SELinux

SELinux was developed as an additional Linux security solution that uses the security framework in the Linux kernel. The purpose was to allow for a more granular security policy that goes beyond the standard Discretionary Access Controls (DAC), the traditional file permissions of owner/group/world, and read/write/execute.

SELinux implements Mandatory Access Control (MAC). Each process and system resource has a security label called an SELinux context. Also called an SELinux label, it is an identifier that contains information about a system object, such as files and network sockets. These labels are used to make access control decisions.

The default action of SELinux is to deny any access. SELinux allows only actions that are specifically allowed in the SELinux policy. Another feature of SELinux that increases security is that SELinux allows strict confinement of processes up to the point where the processes cannot access files of other processes on the same system.

SELinux was designed to enhance existing security solutions, not to replace them. For example, discretionary access control (DAC) is still applied, even if the system is using SELinux. If DAC denies access first, SELinux is then not used as the access was already blocked by another mechanism. SELinux is present on the pre-built images by default.

2 Why use SELinux?

The benefits of using SELinux are:

Labeling

SELinux uses security labels, or contexts, to identify and classify processes, files, and other system objects. This labeling system enables precise enforcement of access control policies.

Detailed access control

Administrators can define very specific rules for how processes interact with files, directories, and other system resources. This enables granular control over system security.

Mitigate zero-day exploits

A zero-day exploit is a cyber attack that targets an unknown software vulnerability. Attackers gain access to a system before a patch or fix is available. SELinux can help mitigate the impact of zero-day exploits by restricting the action a compromised application can take.

Detailed auditing

SELinux provides detailed audit logs, which can be used to track and analyze security events to help identify and mitigate potential threats.

Enhanced system integrity

SELinux helps to maintain the integrity of the operating system and the data by enforcing consistent access controls.

3 SELinux modes

SELinux can run in enforcing or permissive mode:

enforcing

The security policy is enforced. Any access that is not explicitly allowed by the policy is denied.

permissive

SELinux is active, the security policy is loaded, the file system is labeled and access denial entries are logged. However, the policy is not enforced, and no access is denied.

The default in SUSE Linux Micro 6.2 is enforcing mode.

For information about switching between SELinux modes, refer to Section 3.1, “Changing the SELinux mode”.

3.1 Changing the SELinux mode

You can switch the SELinux mode temporarily or permanently.

3.1.1 Verifying the active SELinux mode

To verify the mode, run the following command:

# getenforce

The command should return enforcing or permissive.

3.1.2 Changing the SELinux mode temporarily

To set SELinux to the permissive or enforcing mode temporarily, use the command setenforce.

The setenforce command has the following syntax:

# setenforce MODE_ID

where MODE_ID is 0 for the permissive mode or 1 for the enforcing mode.

Remember that you cannot disable SELinux using the setenforce command.

3.1.3 Changing the SELinux mode permanently

To perform changes to the SELinux mode that persists after a reboot, edit the /etc/selinux/config configuration file. If SELinux is causing issues on your system, switch to the permissive mode and debug your system.

In the file /etc/selinux/config, change the value of SELINUX to permissive, or enforcing as follows:

SELINUX=permissive

The changes in the file are applied after the next reboot.

3.1.4 Switching from permissive to enforcing mode

When switching from permissive to enforcing mode, it is essential that the security context is reset on all files. They might have changed during the time in permissive mode.

Some additional steps are necessary to ensure that your system works properly in enforcing mode:

  1. Reset the security context on the running system:

    # restorecon -R /

    Or mark a reset that is done during boot:

    # touch /etc/selinux/.autorelabel
  2. Switch to enforcing mode by setting SELINUX=enforcing in the /etc/selinux/config.

  3. Reboot the system and log in again.

  4. Run the sestatus -v command. It should give you an output similar to the following one:

    # sestatus -v
    SELinux status:                 enabled
    SELinuxfs mount:                /sys/fs/selinux
    SELinux root directory:         /etc/selinux
    Loaded policy name:             targeted
    Current mode:                   enforcing
    Mode from config file:          enforcing
    Policy MLS status:              enabled
    Policy deny_unknown status:     allowed
    Memory protection checking:     actual (secure)
    Max kernel policy version:      33
    
    Process contexts:
    Current context:                unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023
    Init context:                   system_u:system_r:init_t:s0
    /sbin/agetty                    system_u:system_r:getty_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023
    /usr/sbin/sshd                  system_u:system_r:sshd_t:s0-s0:c0.c1023
    
    File contexts:
    Controlling terminal:           unconfined_u:object_r:user_devpts_t:s0
    /etc/passwd                     system_u:object_r:passwd_file_t:s0
    /etc/shadow                     system_u:object_r:shadow_t:s0
    /bin/bash                       system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0
    /bin/login                      system_u:object_r:login_exec_t:s0
    /bin/sh                         system_u:object_r:bin_t:s0 -> system_u:object_r:shell_exec_t:s0
    /sbin/agetty                    system_u:object_r:getty_exec_t:s0
    /sbin/init                      system_u:object_r:bin_t:s0 -> system_u:object_r:init_exec_t:s0
    /usr/sbin/sshd                  system_u:object_r:sshd_exec_t:s0
  5. If the system is not working properly, check the log files in /var/log/audit/audit.log.

4 SELinux policy overview

The policy is the key component of SELinux. In SELinux, Mandatory Access Control (MAC) is implemented through security labels known as SELinux contexts. Each process and system resource is assigned a unique SELinux security context, also referred to as an SELinux label. An SELinux context is an identifier that focuses only on the security properties of the entity. This provides a consistent and unambiguous method for referencing objects within the SELinux policy.

An SELinux policy contains a huge number of security contexts and access rules between those security contexts. These are split into modules. This allows the administrator to customize policies for different parts of the system.

4.1 SELinux security context

The security context is a set of information assigned to a file or a process. It consists of SELinux user, role, type, level and category. This information is used to make access control decisions.

A SELinux context looks like this:

user_u:role_r:type_t:level:category
Tip
Tip: Focus on the SELinux type

For beginners working with SELinux, it is recommended to focus first on the SELinux type, which is type_t. This is because SELinux rules mainly use the SELinux type to define allowed access, a core concept known as Type Enforcement.

An understanding of SELinux types is critical, as they are frequently modified during SELinux administration.

SELinux context fields
SELinux user

An identity defined in the policy that is authorized for a specific set of roles and for a specific level range. Each Linux user is mapped to only one SELinux user. However, one SELinux user can have several roles.

SELinux does not use the list of user accounts maintained by Linux in /etc/passwd, but uses its own database and mapping. By convention, the identity name is suffixed with _u, for example, user_u.

When a new Linux account is created and the SELinux user is not assigned to the account, the default SELinux user is used. Usually, the default value is unconfined_u. For a procedure on how to change the default value, refer to Section 9.5.2, “The semanage login command”.

role

Defines a set of permissions that a user can be granted. A role defines which types a user assigned to this role can access. By convention, the role name is suffixed with _r, for example, system_r.

type

The type conveys information about how particular files and processes can interact. SELinux policy rules define which types are allowed to access each other. This concept is called Type Enforcement. In the context of processes, this is also sometimes called a domain. By convention, the type name is suffixed with _t, for example, var_t.

level

An optional attribute that specifies the range of levels of clearance in the multilevel security.

category

An optional attribute that allows you to add categories to processes, files and users. A user can then access files that have the same category.

To check the current security context of a file, you can list the file with ls -Z. The following example lists the security context of the file /etc/shadow:

#  ls -Z /etc/shadow
system_u:object_r:shadow_t:s0 /etc/shadow

To check the current security context of a process, you can display the current process state with ps -Z. The following example lists the security context of the systemd process:

#  ps -eZ | grep systemd
system_u:system_r:init_t:s0           1 ?        00:00:01 systemd
...
Tip
Tip: The -Z flag convention

Many command-line tools, such as ls, ps, mkdir, id, cp, and many more, implement their explicit SELinux handling by adding a -Z flag or option. To check for explicit SELinux handling, refer to the man page of the tool and look out for -Z.

4.2 SELinux Rules

SELinux rules define whether a subject's security context (source) is permitted or denied access to an object's security context (target), explicitly specifying the allowed or denied permissions and the class of the object being accessed.

SELinux rules generally follow this format:

rule_name source target:class permissions;
rule_name

An access vector rule (AVC rule) is a rule that defines access control for object classes. The permissions for an object class are represented by a bitmask called an access vector, hence the term access vector rule.

source

The SELinux context of the process (subject)

target

The SELinux context of the resource (object)

class

Type of object, such as a file, process or socket

permissions

Allowed actions such as read, write and execute

Tip
Tip: Listing SELinux rules

The setools-console package contains sesearch, which is a convenient tool to list all rules.

For example, to check if the loaded policy has a rule that allows passwd (process running with passwd_t type) write access to the /etc/shadow file (labeled as shadow_t), run:

#  sesearch -A -s passwd_t -t shadow_t -p write
allow passwd_t shadow_t:file { append create getattr ioctl link lock map open read relabelfrom relabelto rename setattr unlink watch watch_reads write };

This output shows that there is a rule, so the access is allowed.

4.3 Design principles of the targeted SELinux policy

In the SELinux ecosystem, various policy types, such as the widely used targeted policy, are designed with distinct security concepts and enforcement methodologies to address diverse requirements.

SUSE Linux Micro 6.2 is shipped with the targeted SELinux policy by default.

The design of this policy prioritizes the confinement of long-running and network-facing services, particularly on general-purpose server systems.

While the default targeted policy is designed to cover the most common use cases in default configuration, specialized workloads often need policy adjustments. For instance, scenarios involving custom network ports or unique file system layouts will require administrators to refine the existing policy.

Additionally, SELinux Booleans encapsulate specific policy modifications that, while potentially reducing the baseline security of a general-purpose system, are necessary for certain common workloads. This design allows administrators to selectively enable these adjustments only when required, maintaining a more secure default posture.

To facilitate such modifications, SELinux offers various tools. System administrators and software developers can customize the default policy to their specific requirements.

5 Understanding SELinux logs

When SELinux blocks an action, it generates a detailed log message. Understanding these logs is very important for troubleshooting and auditing the system's security with SELinux.

The primary service responsible for handling SELinux logs is the audit daemon, auditd. On a standard system, this service is enabled by default.

  • With auditd running (default): All SELinux log messages are written to /var/log/audit/audit.log.

  • Without auditd running: If the auditd service fails or is not running, SELinux log messages can be found instead in the systemd journal as a fallback.

The most common log messages that are created by SELinux are Access Vector Cache (AVC) denials, which record that a process was denied permission to access an object.

An AVC denial is a symptom, not the problem itself, so it is important to understand why the denial occurred. When initially setting up a workload or on upgrade scenarios, SELinux blocking actions can be easily fixed by using the tools mentioned in Section 7, “SELinux administration”. In contrast, AVCs occurring at later stages when the workload is running for while, might indicate a blocked intrusion attempt.

5.1 Reading the audit log

The audit.log file contains structured records. The ausearch utility is designed to query these logs effectively. The most common use is to search for recent AVC denials.

# ausearch -m AVC -ts recent
type=AVC msg=audit(1753703741.779:1779): avc:  denied  { getattr } for  pid=22212 comm="httpd-prefork" path="/srv/wwwcustom/vhosts/example.com/index.html" dev="vda3" ino=278 scontext=system_u:system_r:httpd_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:var_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=0

Here, -m AVC filters for SELinux denials, and -ts recent limits the search to events that happened in the last 10 minutes. You can also use values like today, a specific date or boot.

The log entry contains all the information needed to understand the denial. The key fields are:

denied { getattr }

The specific permission that was denied.

comm="httpd-prefork"

The command that triggered the denial.

path="/srv/wwwcustom/vhosts/example.com/index.html"

The path that was accessed (only for files).

scontext=...:httpd_t:...

The Source Context of the process that attempted the action.

tcontext=...:var_t:...

The Target Context of the object (file, directory, port) that was being accessed.

tclass=file

The Target Class, which specifies the type of object (e.g., file, dir, tcp_socket).

permissive=0

The Mode of the source domain. permissive=0 means the security policy is enforced, while permissive=1 means logging only.

The example log states the process named httpd-prefork (running with the httpd_t context) was denied permission to getattr a file that has the var_t context.

This example AVC occurred when a Web server was configured to use a different directory (/srv/wwwcustom) for the served files instead of the default path. This needs to be adjusted in SUSE Enterprise Storage as well, which can be seen in Section 7.2, “Managing custom file contexts”.

6 SELinux packages

SUSE Linux Micro 6.2 provides you with tools to manage SELinux on your system.

The policycoreutils package contains the basic tools needed for SELinux administration and is installed by default. It contains sestatus, restorecon, semodule, setsebool and many other tools.

Additionally, the policycoreutils-python-utils package provides helper tools that make SELinux administration easier. This includes tools such as audit2allow and semanage. If the package is missing, run the following command to install it:

> sudo transactional-update pkg install policycoreutils-python-utils

Advanced policy development requires additional -devel packages, which can be installed by:

> sudo transactional-update pkg install selinux-policy-devel policycoreutils-devel

7 SELinux administration

As software developers and system administrators, you may need to adapt various aspects of the SELinux policy for specialized workloads and deployment scenarios. This is because of the design principles of the targeted policy, as seen in Section 4.3, “Design principles of the targeted SELinux policy”.

Necessary adaptions might include:

  • Controlling policy behavior via Booleans

  • Defining and modifying file contexts

  • Adjusting network port contexts

  • Setting domains to permissive mode for troubleshooting

  • Managing policy modules

  • Enabling or disabling dontaudit rules to enhance policy development or auditing

7.1 SELinux Booleans

Instead of requiring the development and compilation of custom policy rules, booleans encapsulate predefined policy adjustments. Their primary purpose is to accommodate common operational workloads that, if permitted by default in the main policy, could potentially reduce the baseline security posture of a general-purpose system.

Instead of requiring the development and compilation of custom policy rules, booleans encapsulate predefined policy adjustments. This allows selectively enabling or disabling specific functionalities on an as-needed basis.

These changes can be applied at runtime and take effect immediately. Administrators can configure Booleans to be effective temporarily for the current session or persistently across reboots.

7.1.1 Working with Booleans

7.1.1.1 Listing Booleans

You can use the getsebool or semanage command to list currently defined Booleans. To list all currently defined Booleans, along with their state, run the following command:

# getsebool -a

abrt_anon_write --> off
abrt_handle_event --> off
abrt_upload_watch_anon_write --> on
...

To get more details about particular Booleans, you can use the semanage command as follows:

# semanage boolean -l

SELinux boolean               State   Default     Description

abrt_anon_write               (off  ,  off)       Allow abrt to anon write
abrt_handle_event             (off  ,  off)       Allow abrt to handle event
abrt_upload_watch_anon_write  (on   ,   on)       Allow abrt to upload watch anon write

Additionally, confined services have a man page, which contains the corresponding Booleans and a description. Man pages have the prefix of the service name and the _selinux suffix: SERVICE_selinux. For example, the SELinux man page for Web servers is named httpd_selinux.

To get the status of an individual Boolean, you can use the following command:

# getsebool BOOLEAN_NAME

Alternatively, you can just use the grep command on the semanage boolean output:

# semanage boolean -l | grep BOOLEAN_NAME

A single Boolean can enable or disable several policy rules. To see which policy rules are enabled or disabled by specific Booleans, use the sedispol tool to analyze the policy file:

# sedispol /etc/selinux/targeted/policy/policy.34

As the policy rules are usually huge, we recommend setting an output file by selecting the f and specifying a file name. After specifying the file name, press 6. Then you can inspect the file.

7.1.1.2 Toggling Booleans

The commands setsebool and semanage can be used to toggle the value of Booleans. You can change the Boolean status persistently or just temporarily until the session ends. To change a Boolean value temporarily, run the following command:

# setsebool BOOLEAN_NAME BOOLEAN_VALUE

where BOOLEAN_VALUE is either on or off.

To change a Boolean value persistently, run one of the following two commands:

# setsebool -P BOOLEAN_NAME BOOLEAN_VALUE

Alternatively, using the semanage command:

# semanage boolean -m --BOOLEAN_VALUE  BOOLEAN_NAME

where BOOLEAN_VALUE is either on or off.

7.2 Managing custom file contexts

When changing the default location of configuration files or other files of a confined service, you likely need to define or modify the security contexts. These contexts, also called labels, are attached to certain files by SELinux.

For instance, if a Web server is configured to serve Web pages from a custom directory other than its default location, the corresponding SELinux file contexts need to be updated as well to permit this operation.

To update the security context of the files in a custom location permanently, you can use the semanage fcontext command. This command writes the new file context to the policy. Additionally, the restorecon command needs to be run afterward to reflect the policy change in the file system.

The challenge when updating the SELinux context for a workload is determining which SELinux context is needed during the customization. You can list all mappings of security contexts to files in the file system using:

# semanage fcontext -l

This will show a long list of regular expressions, to which file type they match and which security context the files will be assigned. This can be searched to find the appropriate labels.

Example 1: Viewing default file contexts
# semanage fcontext -l | less
SELinux fcontext                                   type               Context

/                                                  directory          system_u:object_r:root_t:s0
/.*                                                all files          system_u:object_r:default_t:s0
/[^/]+                                             regular file       system_u:object_r:etc_runtime_t:s0
/\.autofsck                                        regular file       system_u:object_r:etc_runtime_t:s0
/\.autorelabel                                     regular file       system_u:object_r:etc_runtime_t:s0
/\.journal                                         all files          X:>>None>>
/\.suspended                                       regular file       system_u:object_r:etc_runtime_t:s0
/a?quota\.(user|group)                             regular file       system_u:object_r:quota_db_t:s0
/afs                                               directory          system_u:object_r:mnt_t:s0
/bin                                               directory          system_u:object_r:bin_t:s0
/bin/.*                                            all files          system_u:object_r:bin_t:s0

Another way is to consult the SELinux man page of the service that has the custom path and check which type needs to be set. The man page convention is SERVICE_selinux. For example, the SELinux man page for Web servers is named httpd_selinux.

When the correct type for the custom path has been identified, you can set it by using semanage fcontext and using the TYPE and a regular expression REGEX to match the custom file path:

 # semanage fcontext -a -t TYPE REGEX

For example, to set all files below /srv/wwwcustom to have the type httpd_sys_content_t:

 # semanage fcontext -a -t httpd_sys_content_t "/srv/wwwcustom(/.*)?"

You can verify if your modification is set up correctly by using the matchpathcon command:

# matchpathcon /srv/wwwcustom
/srv/wwwcustom	system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t:s0

Then reflect the security context in the file system for that directory by resetting the security context:

# restorecon -Rv /srv/wwwcustom
Tip
Tip: Set equivalencies between the label of the default and custom location

When you are using a different location in the file system than the default one, you can check which security context would have been assigned to the default location and assign the same to the new location. For example, the default served location of a Web server is /srv/www. You want to move it to /srv/wwwcustom. Check out the label of the default location:

# matchpathcon /srv/www
/srv/www	system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t:s0

Check out the label of the new custom location:

# matchpathcon /srv/wwwcustom
/srv/wwwcustom	system_u:object_r:var_t:s0

Set an equivalency between /srv/www and /srv/wwwcustom by running:

# semanage fcontext -a -e /srv/www /srv/wwwcustom

The new custom location now has the same label as the default one:

# matchpathcon /srv/wwwcustom
/srv/wwwcustom	system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t:s0

Then, reset the security contexts in the file system:

# restorecon -Rv /srv/wwwcustom

Your workload should work now as expected.

In case you would like to remove the customization again, run:

 # semanage fcontext -d "/srv/wwwcustom(/.*)?"

7.3 Managing SELinux port contexts

By default, an SELinux-confined service can only bind to network ports that are defined in the policy with the correct port type. If you configure a service to listen on a non-standard port, SELinux will prevent it from starting.

For example, if you configure the SSH daemon to listen on port 2222, SELinux blocks it because only ports with the ssh_port_t type are accessible to the SSH service. To allow this, you must add the new port number to the SELinux policy.

To add a custom port definition permanently, you can use the semanage port command. This command writes the new port definition directly into the active SELinux policy. Unlike file contexts, you do not need to run a separate command like the restorecon command; the changes take effect immediately. However, you may need to restart the affected service.

To identify the correct port type for your service, list all existing port definitions:

# semanage port -l

This shows a list of port types, protocols and the port numbers or ranges assigned to them. You can search this list or consult the service's SELinux man page. For example, use the man sshd_selinux command to find the appropriate port type.

Example 2: Viewing default port contexts
# semanage port -l | less
SELinux Port                          Proto    Port Number

...
ssh_port_t                     tcp      22
...

Once you have identified the correct port type, you can add your custom port using semanage port with the port type TYPE, protocol PROTO, and port number PORT:

# semanage port -a -t TYPE -p PROTO PORT

For example, to allow the SSH daemon to bind to the custom TCP port 2222, use:

# semanage port -a -t ssh_port_t -p tcp 2222

You can then verify your modification was added to the policy by listing the ports again and filtering for the type:

# semanage port -l | grep ssh_port_t
ssh_port_t                     tcp      2222, 22

After adding the port definition and modifying the port on the actual SSH daemon side, restart the SSH service and the daemon should be accessible on the custom port 2222.

If you need to remove the customization, use the -dflag:

# semanage port -d -t ssh_port_t -p tcp 2222

7.4 Setting permissive domains

When troubleshooting an issue with a specific service, it can be useful to disable SELinux enforcement for that specific service. Making a domain permissive means that SELinux logs policy violations for that domain but does not block any actions. This is a more targeted and secure alternative to switching the entire system to permissive mode with setenforce 0 command.

The semanage permissive command allows you to manage a list of domains that operate permissively even while the system is enforcing the policy globally. This change is persistent across reboots.

7.4.1 Finding the appropriate domain

Before you can make a service permissive, you must find the correct domain name associated with its process. You can do this by listing running processes with their security contexts using the ps -eZ command and filtering for the process name.

For example, to find the domain for the HAProxy service:

# ps -eZ | grep haproxy
system_u:system_r:haproxy_t:s0    45248 ?        00:00:00 haproxy

The first column of the output shows the context, and the type component (ending in _t) is the domain. In this example, the domain for HAProxy is haproxy_t.

7.4.2 Setting a domain to permissive mode

Once you know the domain, you can add it to the permissive list using the semanage permissive -a command. This command makes the specific domain permissive without affecting the global enforcing mode.

# semanage permissive -a haproxy_t

Verify that the domain has been added to the list of custom permissive domains:

# semanage permissive -l

Builtin Permissive Types
...

Customized Permissive Types

haproxy_t

With the haproxy_t domain now permissive, the HAProxy service can perform any action, even those that violate the SELinux policy. Instead of being blocked, these violations are recorded as AVC denials in the audit log /var/log/audit/audit.log with a permissive=1 flag. This allows you to gather data on what rules might be missing from your policy without interrupting the service's operation.

After you have finished troubleshooting, you must return the domain to enforcing mode to ensure the system is secure. To do this, delete the domain from the permissive list using the -d flag:

# semanage permissive -d haproxy_t

The haproxy_t domain is now fully protected by the SELinux policy again.

7.5 Working with SELinux modules

The semanage module command is used to manage policy modules. Some non-SELinux packages ship their independent policy modules, which enhance the rules in the main SELinux policy. These are usually installed only when the application package is installed.

Additionally, system administrators and software developers can enhance the SELinux policy with their custom set of rules, by introducing a custom policy module.

To view all modules currently installed in the policy, along with their priority and language, use the -l option. Modules included in the main policy usually have priority 100, whereas a priority of 200 suggests the module is included in a different package. Custom modules added by the user have a priority of 400 if not specified differently, for example:

# semanage module -l

Module Name               Priority  Language

abrt                      100       pp
accountsd                 100       pp
acct                      100       pp
afs                       100       pp
...

To disable a module for troubleshooting, use the -d option:

# semanage module -d MODULE_NAME

For example, to disable the container module, run:

# semanage module -d container

To verify that the module has been disabled, check the output of semodule -l. It should add a Disabled column:

# semanage module -l | grep container
container                 200       pp    Disabled

To reenable a module, run:

# semanage module -e MODULE_NAME

To permanently remove a module and all of its rules from the policy store, use the -r flag. This option is usually only needed when working with custom SELinux modules created by the user. It is not recommended or supported to remove modules that were shipped with the operating system.

# semanage module -r my-local-module

7.5.1 Creating a custom module (advanced)

If the diagnosis indicates a rule is genuinely missing from the policy and there is no policy module available for the specific workload, you can generate a custom module. Many open source projects provide their own SELinux module, which can be used to enhance the existing policy, so check for the specific workload. This workflow includes a critical review step.

  1. Use the ausearch command to fetch all the AVCs in the time frame. Then, optionally, isolate the specific denials related to your issue with grep. Pipe the results to audit2allow. For example, to generate a module only for denials that have occurred recently, use:

    # ausearch -m avc -ts recent | audit2allow -M my-fix

    This command creates two files: my-fix.te (human-readable source) and my-fix.pp (installable module).

  2. Critically review the contents of the human-readable .te file to ensure the proposed rules are appropriate and expected.

    > cat my-fix.te
    Warning
    Warning: Security analysis of generated rules

    The audit2allow tool translates denials into allow rules mechanically. It does not understand context or intent. Only proceed with installing a module if you fully understand the rule and are certain it does not violate your security principles.

  3. Optional. Modify and rebuild the module: If the generated rules need to be adjusted, edit the .te file. Save your changes and you can then manually recompile the module.

    1. Use a text editor to modify my-fix.te.

    2. Recreate my-fix.pp:

      # make -f /usr/share/selinux/devel/Makefile my-fix.pp
  4. After a review, the generated rules are deemed safe and necessary for a legitimate application function. Install the compiled module package.

    # semodule -i my-fix.pp

8 SELinux troubleshooting

An SELinux issue occurs when the security policy blocks a legitimate action that an application needs to perform its function. This topic provides a systematic workflow for resolving these issues. The process involves confirming that SELinux is the cause, gathering evidence from logs, diagnosing the underlying problem and implementing the correct solution.

8.1 Confirm the issue is SELinux related

The initial diagnostic step is to determine if SELinux is the cause of the unexpected behavior. This is done by temporarily placing the system into permissive mode, where denials are logged but not enforced.

  1. Switch to permissive mode:

    # setenforce 0
  2. Retry the action that was previously failing.

  3. Analyze the result:

    • If the application succeeds, the problem is confirmed to be related to the SELinux policy. Proceed to the next step.

    • If the application still fails, the root cause is likely unrelated to SELinux and may involve other factors such as standard file permissions, firewall rules, or application configuration.

Important
Important

It is important to return the system back to enforcing mode once the test is completed:

# setenforce 1

8.2 Gather evidence to find the denial

Once SELinux is confirmed as the cause, the next step is to find the specific denial message in the audit logs. The primary log file is located in /var/log/audit/audit.log. Use the ausearch utility to query these logs for recent Access Vector Cache (AVC) denials.

# ausearch -m avc -ts recent
 type=AVC msg=audit(1753703741.779:1779): avc:  denied  { getattr } for  pid=22212 comm="httpd-prefork" path="/srv/wwwcustom/vhosts/example.com/index.html" dev="vda3" ino=278 scontext=system_u:system_r:httpd_t:s0 tcontext=system_u:object_r:var_t:s0 tclass=file permissive=0

This log entry contains the essential details: the source process context (scontext), the target object's context (tcontext) and the permission denied. More information on interpreting the log file can be found in Section 5, “Understanding SELinux logs”.

8.3 Understanding the cause of the denial

After reviewing the log, the denial is likely caused by one of the following common issues:

Incorrect file label

This denial typically occurs in one of two scenarios: a file has an incorrect label for its current location or the file is in a non-standard location and needs to be assigned a correct label in the policy.

Service using a non-standard port

A denial occurs if a service attempts to bind to a network port that is not assigned the correct port type in the SELinux policy.

Missing policy rule

The system's SELinux policy may lack a specific rule required for an application's operation. This happens when the application is not shipped by default with the distribution. In this case, the resulting AVC denial is valid and indicates the policy needs to be extended.

8.4 Applying the correct fix

Based on the diagnosis, apply the appropriate solution.

For incorrect file labels

The solution depends on the cause of the mislabeling:

  • Case 1: Incorrectly labeled file in the file system. If files in a standard location have the wrong labels, for example, after using mv or cp without the -Z flag, use the restorecon command to reset them to the policy default. For example, to restore the context of /srv/www/vhosts/example.com, use:

    # restorecon -Rv /srv/www/vhosts/example.com
  • Case 2: Tell SELinux about a custom path. If you intentionally chose a non-standard location for your files, for example, serving Web content from /srv/wwwcustom, you must add a new rule to the SELinux policy with thesemanage fcontextcommand. Then, use the restorecon command to apply the new rule.

    # semanage fcontext -a -t httpd_sys_content_t "/srv/wwwcustom(/.*)?"
    # restorecon -Rv /srv/wwwcustom

    For more information on adding custom file paths, see Section 7.2, “Managing custom file contexts”.

For non-standard ports

Use the semanage port command to add the custom port to the policy with the correct type. For example:

# semanage port -a -t ssh_port_t -p tcp 2222

For more information on adding custom file paths, see Section 7.3, “Managing SELinux port contexts”.

For missing policy rules

If the issue is that policy rules are missing, ensure to check if the corresponding module is loaded and enabled:

# semanage module -l | less

If that is the case, or there is no corresponding module as the workload is highly customized, you can consider writing and including a custom policy module with your own rules as described in Section 7.5.1, “Creating a custom module (advanced)”.

To unblock the workload while working on the custom module, you can set the domains blocking the access into permissive mode, as described in Section 7.4, “Setting permissive domains”.

8.5 Advanced Scenarios and Recovery

8.5.1 Handling missing log entries

If an application fails but no denial is logged, a dontaudit rule may be silently suppressing it. You can temporarily disable these rules to make all denials visible.

  1. Disable all dontaudit rules:

    # semodule -DB
  2. Retry the failing action to generate the denial log.

  3. Reenable the rules to restore normal logging behavior:

    # semanage -B

8.5.2 Recovering from an SELinux-related boot failure

If an SELinux policy or labeling issue prevents the system from booting, the primary goal is to regain access to a shell to diagnose and fix the problem. This is achieved by booting the system in permissive mode.

  1. Restart the machine and interrupt the boot sequence to access the GRUB menu.

  2. Select the desired kernel and press e to edit its boot parameters.

  3. Locate the line beginning with the keyword linux.

  4. Append the parameter enforcing=0 to the end of this line. This instructs the kernel to boot in permissive mode for this session only.

  5. Press CtrlX or F10 to proceed with booting.

  6. Once the system has booted successfully, log in and use the standard troubleshooting tools described in this chapter to find the denial and apply the correct fix.

Note
Note: Fixing widespread labeling issues at boot

In the specific case where the boot failure is caused by incorrect file labels across the entire system, the most effective solution is to schedule a full relabel. After booting into permissive mode using the steps above, execute the following commands before rebooting:

# touch /etc/selinux/.autorelabel
# reboot

The system now reboots and begins a comprehensive relabeling of the file system.

9 Tools for managing SELinux

The topic provides a list of tools that you can use to configure SELinux.

SUSE Linux Micro provides you with tools to manage SELinux on your system. If the below described tools are not installed on your system, install the tools by running:

 # transactional-update pkg install policycoreutils-python-utils

After successful installation, reboot the system.

9.1 Using the Z option

Where SELinux is installed and configured, you can use the -Z to regular commands like ls, id or ps. Using this option, you can display the security context of files or processes. For example, with the ls command:

> ls -Z /etc/shadow
        system_u:object_r:shadow_t:s0 /etc/shadow

9.2 The chcon command

The command name chcon stands for change context. The command can change the full security context of a file to the value provided on the CLI, or it can change parts of the context. Alternatively, you can provide a file that serves as a reference. The change is not reflected in the policy, so a relabel of the file will reset the context back to its definition in the policy.

To change the full security context of a file, the command syntax looks as follows:

# chcon SECURITY_CONTEXT FILENAME

where:

  • SECURITY_CONTEXT is in the format: SELinux_USER:ROLE:TYPE:LEVEL:CATEGORY. For example, the context could be: system_u:object_r:httpd_config_t:s0.

  • FILENAME is a path to the file whose context should be changed.

To set a security context according to a provided file that serves as a reference, run chcon as follows:

# chcon --reference=REFERENCE_FILE FILENAME

where:

  • REFERENCE_FILE is a path to a file that should be used as a reference.

  • FILENAME is a path to the file whose context should be changed.

Alternatively, you can change only one part of the security context. The general syntax of the chcon command is as follows:

# chcon CONTEXT_OPTION CONTEXT_PART FILENAME

The options and arguments have the following meaning:

  • depending on the context part, CONTEXT_OPTION can be any of the following:

    -u resp --user

    denotes that an SELinux user context will be changed on the provided file:

    # chcon -u system_u logind.conf
    -r resp --role

    only the role part will be changed in the context of the provided file:

    # chcon -r object_r logind.conf
    -t resp --type

    only the type part will be changed in the context of the provided file:

    # chcon -t etc_t logind.conf
    -l resp --range

    only the range part of the security context will be changed:

    # chcon -l s0 logind.conf
  • CONTEXT_PART is the particular value of the security context to be set.

  • FILENAME is a path to the file whose context will be changed.

Note
Note: Using chcon on symbolic links

By default, when you change the security context on a symbolic link, the context of the link target is changed and the symbolic link context is not changed. To force chcon to change the context of the symbolic link and not the link target, use the --no-dereference option as shown below:

# chcon --no-dereference -u system_u -t etc_t network.conf

You can change the context of all files in a directory by using the recursive option:

# chcon --recursive  system_u:object_r:httpd_config_t:s0 conf.d

9.3 getenforce and setenforce commands

The getenforce command returns the current SELinux mode: Enforcing, Permissive or Disabled.

# getenforce

Permissive

The setenforce command temporarily changes the SELinux mode to enforcing or permissive. You cannot use this command to disable SELinux. Remember that the change persists only until the next reboot. To change the state permanently, follow the description in Section 3.1, “Changing the SELinux mode”.

# setenforce MODE_ID

where MODE_ID is 0 for the permissive mode or 1 for the enforcing mode.

9.4 The fixfiles script

The script enables you to perform the following tasks with the security context:

  • check if the context is correct

  • change any incorrect file context labels

  • relabel your system if you added a new policy

The script syntax is as follows:

# fixfiles [OPTIONS] ARGUMENT

where:

  • OPTIONS can be the following:

    -l LOGFILE

    saves the output to the provided file

    -o OUTPUT_FILE

    saves to the provided output file the names of all files whose file context differs from the default

    -F

    forces a reset of context

  • ARGUMENT can be one of the following:

    check

    shows previous and current file context for an incorrect label without performing any changes

    relabel

    relabels incorrect file contexts according to the currently loaded policy

    restore

    restores incorrect file contexts to the default values

    verify

    lists all files with incorrect file context labels without performing any changes

9.5 The semanage command

The semanage command can be used to configure parts of the policy without the need to recompile the policy from sources. The command enables you to perform the following tasks:

  • manage Booleans by using the boolean argument. For details about Booleans, refer to Section 7.1.1, “Working with Booleans”.

  • adjust the context of files by using the fcontext argument.

  • manage user mappings using the login argument

  • manage SELinux users using the user argument

  • manage SELinux policy modules using the module argument

The general command syntax looks as follows:

# semanage ARGUMENT OPTIONS [OBJECT_NAME]

where:

  • ARGUMENT is one of the following: login, user, fcontext, boolean, module.

  • OPTIONS depends on the provided ARGUMENT. Common options are described in Common options.

  • OBJECT_NAME, depending on the provided ARGUMENT, can be a login name, module name, file name or SELinux user.

Common options
-a, --add

adds a provided object

-h, --help

prints the command help

--extract

displays commands that were used to change the system (Booleans, file context, and so on)

-l, --list

lists all objects

-m, --modify

modifies the provided object

-n, --noheading

modifies the output of the listing operation by omitting headings

-s, --seuser

specifies the SELinux user

Other options are specific to particular semanage commands and are described in corresponding sections.

9.5.1 The semanage fcontext command

Using the semanage fcontext command, you can perform the following tasks:

  • query file context definitions

  • add contexts on files

  • add your own rules

Changes performed to the file context using the semanage fcontext command do not require modifications or recompilation of the policy.

On top of the common options described in Common options, the semanage fcontext command takes the following options:

-e, --equal

The option enables you to use the context of the provided path context to label files in a different directory (the provided target path). For example, you want to assign the same context as /home has to an alternative home directory /export/home. If you use this option, you need to provide the source path and the target path:

# semanage fcontext -a -e /home /export/home
-f, --ftype

To specify a file type. Use one of the following values:

  • a - all files, which is also the default value

  • b - a block device

  • c - a character device

  • d - a directory

  • f - regular files

  • l - a symbolic link

  • p - a named pipe

  • s - a socket

9.5.2 The semanage login command

The semanage login enables you the perform the following tasks:

  • Mapping of Linux users on a particular SELinux user. For example, to map the Linux user tux on sysadm_u, run the command:

    # semanage login -a -s sysadm_u tux
  • Mapping of a group of Linux users on a particular SELinux user. For example, to map users of the writers group on user_u, run the command:

    # semanage login -a -s user_u %writers

    The group is then listed in the output of semanage login -l, prefixed with the % character.

    Keep in mind that the user group should be primary because mapping SELinux users on supplementary groups may result in incompatible mappings.

    # semanage login -m -s staff_u %writers
  • Mapping of Linux users on a particular SELinux MLS/MCS security range.

  • Modifying of the already created mapping. For this purpose, just replace the -a option with -m in the previous commands.

  • Setting the default SELinux user for new Linux users. The usual default SELinux user is unconfined_u. To change the value to staff_u, run the command:

    # semanage login -m -s staff_u __default__

9.5.3 The semanage boolean command

The semanage boolean command is used to control Booleans in the SELinux policy.

The command synopsis looks as follows:

semanage boolean [-h] [-n]  [ --extract |
       --deleteall | --list [-C] | --modify ( --on | --off | -1 | -0 ) boolean ]

On top of the common options, you can use the following ones specific to the semanage boolean command:

--list -C

To display a list of local modifications to Booleans.

-m --on | -1

To switch the provided Boolean on.

-m --off | -0

To switch the provided Boolean off.

-D, --deleteall

To delete all local modifications to Booleans.

The most common usage of the command is to switch on or off a particular Boolean. For example, to switch on the authlogin_yubikey Boolean, run:

# semanage boolean -m --on authlogin_yubikey

9.5.4 The semanage user command

The semanage user command controls the mapping between the SELinux user and the roles and MLS/MCS levels.

On top of the common options described in Common options, the semanage user command takes the following options:

-R [ROLES], --roles [ROLES]

A list of SELinux roles. You can enclose multiple roles within double quotes and separate them by spaces, or you can use the -R several times.

Using this command, you can perform the following tasks:

  • Listing the mapping of SELinux users on roles by running:

    # semanage user -l
  • Changing the roles assigned to the user_u SELinux user:

    # semanage user -m -R "system_r unconfined_r user_r"
  • Assigning to admin_u the role staff_r and a category s0:

    # semanage user -a -R "staff_r -r s0 admin_u
  • Creating a new SELinux user, for example, admin_u with the staff_r role. You also need to define the labeling prefix for this user by using the -P:

    # semanage user -a -R "staff_r" -P admin admin_u

9.5.5 The semanage module command

The semanage module command can install, remove, disable or enable SELinux policy modules.

On top of the common options described in Common options, the semanage fcontext command takes the following options:

-d, --disable

To disable the provided SELinux policy module:

# semanage module --disable MODULE_NAME
-e, --enable

To enable the provided SELinux policy module:

# semanage module --enable MODULE_NAME

9.6 The sestatus command

The sestatus gets the status of a system where SELinux is running.

The generic syntax of the command looks as follows:

sestatus [OPTION]

When run without any options and arguments, the command outputs the following information:

# sestatus

SELinux status:                 enabled
SELinuxfs mount:                /sys/fs/selinux
SELinux root directory:         /etc/selinux
Loaded policy name:             targeted
Current mode:                   enforcing
Mode from config file:          enforcing
Policy MLS status:              enabled
Policy deny_unknown status:     allowed
Memory protection checking:     requested (insecure)
Max kernel policy version:      33

The command can take the following options:

-b

Displays the status of Booleans on the system.

-v

Displays the security context of files and processes listed in the /etc/sestatus.conf file.

10 Disabling and reenabling SELinux

Important
Important: Disabling SELinux is not recommended

It is not recommended to disable SELinux. If SELinux is possibly causing issues to your system, switch to the permissive mode to debug your system.

SELinux is enabled by default in SUSE Linux Micro 6.2. To disable or reenable SELinux requires a modification of the kernel command-line. This can be done temporarily for one boot or permanently by modifying the boot loader configuration.

10.1 Modify the kernel command-line via the GRUB boot loader configuration

To disable SELinux, edit the GRUB configuration file to include selinux=0:

# update-bootloader --add-option "selinux=0"
# update-bootloader --config

Verify that /etc/default/grub contains selinux=0:

GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="...... selinux=0"

The change will be effective after reboot.

To verify that SELinux is disabled, run:

# sestatus
SELinux status:                 disabled

To enable SELinux again, edit the GRUB configuration file to remove the selinux=0 option and relabel during reboot.

# update-bootloader --del-option "selinux=0"
# update-bootloader --config
# touch /etc/selinux/.autorelabel

SELinux is reenabled after reboot.

Note
Note: Relabeling your system after reenabling SELinux

If you disable SELinux on your system and then enable it later, make sure that you relabel your system. When SELinux is disabled and you perform changes to your file system, the changes are not reflected in the context; for example, new files do not have any context.

You must relabel your system by using the restorecon command and the autorelabel boot parameter. You can also create a file that will trigger relabeling on the next boot. To create the file, run the following command:

# touch /etc/selinux/.autorelabel

After reboot, the file /etc/selinux/.autorelabel is replaced with another flag file, /etc/selinux/.relabelled, to prevent relabeling on subsequent reboots.