Scroll to navigation

selabel_lookup_best_match(3) SELinux API documentation selabel_lookup_best_match(3)

NAME

selabel_lookup_best_match - obtain a best match SELinux security context - Only supported on file backend.

SYNOPSIS

#include <selinux/selinux.h>
#include <selinux/label.h>

int selabel_lookup_best_match(struct selabel_handle *hnd,
char **context,
const char *key,
const char **links,
int type);

int selabel_lookup_best_match_raw(struct selabel_handle *hnd,
char **context,
const char *key,
const char **links,
int type);

DESCRIPTION

selabel_lookup_best_match() performs a best match lookup operation on the handle hnd, returning the result in the memory pointed to by context, which must be freed by the caller using freecon(3). The key parameter is a file path to check for best match using zero or more link (aliases) parameters. The order of precedence for best match is:

1.
An exact match for the real path (key) or
2.
An exact match for any of the links (aliases), or
3.
The longest fixed prefix match.

The type parameter is an optional file mode argument that should be set to the mode bits of the file, as determined by lstat(2). mode may be zero, however full matching may not occur.

selabel_lookup_best_match_raw() behaves identically to selabel_lookup_best_match() but does not perform context translation.

RETURN VALUE

On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned and errno is set appropriately.

ERRORS

No context corresponding to the input key and type was found.
The key and/or type inputs are invalid, or the context being returned failed validation.
An attempt to allocate memory failed.

NOTES

Example usage - When a service creates a device node, it may also create one or more symlinks to the device node. These symlinks may be the only stable name for the device, e.g. if the partition is dynamically assigned. The file label backend supports this by looking up the "best match" for a device node based on its real path (key) and any links to it (aliases). The order of precedence for best match is described above.

SEE ALSO

selabel_open(3), selabel_stats(3), selinux_set_callback(3), selinux(8), lstat(2), selabel_file(5)

05 May 2015 Security Enhanced Linux