Selinux policy management tool
semanage {import,export,login,user,port,interface,module,node,fcontext,boolean,permissive,dontaudit}
...
positional arguments:
import Output local customizations
export Output local customizations
login Manage login mappings between linux users and SELinux confined users
user Manage SELinux confined users (Roles and levels for an SELinux user)
port Manage network port type definitions
interface Manage network interface type definitions
module Manage SELinux policy modules
node Manage network node type definitions
fcontext Manage file context mapping definitions
boolean Manage booleans to selectively enable functionality
permissive Manage process type enforcement mode
dontaudit Disable/Enable dontaudit rules in policy
semanage is used to configure certain elements of SELinux policy without requiring modification to or recompilation from policy sources. This includes the mapping from Linux usernames to SELinux user identities (which controls the initial security context assigned to Linux users when they login and bounds their authorized role set) as well as security context mappings for various kinds of objects, such as network ports, interfaces, and nodes (hosts) as well as the file context mapping. See the EXAMPLES section below for some examples of common usage. Note that the semanage login command deals with the mapping from Linux usernames (logins) to SELinux user identities, while the semanage user command deals with the mapping from SELinux user identities to authorized role sets. In most cases, only the former mapping needs to be adjusted by the administrator; the latter is principally defined by the base policy and usually does not require modification.
-h, --help
List help information
selinux (8), semanage-boolean (8), semanage-dontaudit (8), semanage-export (8), semanage-fcontext (8), semanage-import (8), semanage-interface (8), semanage-login (8), semanage-module (8), semanage-node (8), semanage-permissive (8), semanage-port (8), semanage-user (8)
This man page was written by Daniel Walsh <[email protected]>
and Russell Coker <[email protected]>.
Examples by Thomas Bleher <[email protected]>. usage: semanage [-h]