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selinux_restorecon(3) SELinux API documentation selinux_restorecon(3)

NAME

selinux_restorecon - restore file(s) default SELinux security contexts

SYNOPSIS

#include <selinux/restorecon.h>

int selinux_restorecon(const char *pathname,

unsigned int restorecon_flags);

DESCRIPTION

selinux_restorecon() restores file default security contexts on filesystems that support extended attributes (see xattr(7)), based on:

pathname containing a directory or file to be relabeled.
If this is a directory and the restorecon_flags SELINUX_RESTORECON_RECURSE has been set (for decending through directories), then selinux_restorecon() will write an SHA1 digest of the combined specfiles (see the NOTES section for details) to an extended attribute of security.restorecon_last once the relabeling has been completed successfully. This digest will be checked should selinux_restorecon() be rerun with the restorecon_flags SELINUX_RESTORECON_RECURSE flag set. If any of the specfiles had been updated, the digest will also be updated. However if the digest is the same, no relabeling checks will take place (unless the SELINUX_RESTORECON_IGNORE_DIGEST flag is set).

restorecon_flags contains the labeling option/rules as follows:

SELINUX_RESTORECON_IGNORE_DIGEST force the checking of labels even if the stored SHA1 digest matches the specfiles SHA1 digest. The specfiles digest will be written to the security.restorecon_last extended attribute once relabeling has been completed successfully provided the SELINUX_RESTORECON_NOCHANGE flag has not been set.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_NOCHANGE don't change any file labels (passive check) or update the digest in the security.restorecon_last extended attribute.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_SET_SPECFILE_CTX If set, reset the files label to match the default specfile context. If not set only reset the files "type" component of the context to match the default specfile context.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_RECURSE change file and directory labels recursively (descend directories) and if successful write an SHA1 digest of the combined specfiles to an extended attribute as described in the NOTES section.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_VERBOSE log file label changes.

Note that if SELINUX_RESTORECON_VERBOSE and SELINUX_RESTORECON_PROGRESS flags are set, then SELINUX_RESTORECON_PROGRESS will take precedence.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_PROGRESS show progress by printing * to stdout every 1000 files unless relabeling the entire OS, that will then show the approximate percentage complete.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_REALPATH convert passed-in pathname to the canonical pathname using realpath(3).

SELINUX_RESTORECON_XDEV prevent descending into directories that have a different device number than the pathname entry from which the descent began.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_ADD_ASSOC attempt to add an association between an inode and a specification. If there is already an association for the inode and it conflicts with the specification, then use the last matching specification.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_ABORT_ON_ERROR abort on errors during the file tree walk.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_SYSLOG_CHANGES log any label changes to syslog(3).

SELINUX_RESTORECON_LOG_MATCHES log what specfile context matched each file.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_IGNORE_NOENTRY ignore files that do not exist.

SELINUX_RESTORECON_IGNORE_MOUNTS do not read /proc/mounts to obtain a list of non-seclabel mounts to be excluded from relabeling checks.
Setting SELINUX_RESTORECON_IGNORE_MOUNTS is useful where there is a non-seclabel fs mounted with a seclabel fs mounted on a directory below this.

The behavior regarding the checking and updating of the SHA1 digest described above is the default behavior. It is possible to change this by first calling selabel_open(3) and not enabling the SELABEL_OPT_DIGEST option, then calling selinux_restorecon_set_sehandle(3) to set the handle to be used by selinux_restorecon(3).

If the pathname is a directory path, then it is possible to set directories to be excluded from the path by calling selinux_restorecon_set_exclude_list(3) with a NULL terminated list before calling selinux_restorecon(3).

By default selinux_restorecon(3) reads /proc/mounts to obtain a list of non-seclabel mounts to be excluded from relabeling checks unless the SELINUX_RESTORECON_IGNORE_MOUNTS flag has been set.

RETURN VALUE

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

NOTES

1.
To improve performance when relabeling file systems recursively (e.g. the restorecon_flags SELINUX_RESTORECON_RECURSE flag is set) selinux_restorecon() will write an SHA1 digest of the specfiles that are processed by selabel_open(3) to an extended attribute named security.restorecon_last to the directory specified in the pathname.
2.
To check the extended attribute entry use getfattr(1), for example:

getfattr -e hex -n security.restorecon_last /
3.
The SHA1 digest is calculated by selabel_open(3) concatenating the specfiles it reads during initialisation with the resulting digest and list of specfiles being retrieved by selabel_digest(3).
4.
The specfiles consist of the mandatory file_contexts file plus any subs, subs_dist, local and homedir entries (text or binary versions) as determined by any selabel_open(3) options e.g. SELABEL_OPT_BASEONLY.

Should any of the specfiles have changed, then when selinux_restorecon() is run again with the SELINUX_RESTORECON_RECURSE flag set, a new SHA1 digest will be calculated and all files will be automatically relabeled depending on the settings of the SELINUX_RESTORECON_SET_SPECFILE_CTX flag (provided SELINUX_RESTORECON_NOCHANGE is not set).

5.
/sys and in-memory filesystems do not support the security.restorecon_last extended attribute and are automatically excluded from any relabeling checks.
6.
By default stderr is used to log output messages and errors. This may be changed by calling selinux_set_callback(3) with the SELINUX_CB_LOG type option.

SEE ALSO

selinux_restorecon_set_sehandle(3),
selinux_restorecon_default_handle(3),
selinux_restorecon_set_exclude_list(3),
selinux_restorecon_set_alt_rootpath(3),
selinux_restorecon_xattr(3),
selinux_set_callback(3)
20 Oct 2015 Security Enhanced Linux