We went back and reread the bindreservport code in glibc.
Turns out the range or ports that this will reserve are 512-1024 rather
then 600-1024.
The code actually first tries to reserve a port from 600-1024 and if
they are ALL reserved will try 512-599.
So we need to change corenetwork to reflect this.
I found out a bug when we initialize the database with dbadm_r:dbadm_t
which belongs to sepgsql_admin_type attribute.
In the case when sepgsql_admin_type create a new database objects,
it does not have valid type_transition rules. So, it was failed.
Sorry, I didn't find out it for a long time.
And db_procedure:{execute} on the sepgsql_proc_exec_t might be necessary
for the administrative domain independently from sepgsql_unconfined_dbadm,
because we need to execute some of system defined procedures to look up
system tables.
The X policy for users is currently split between
userdom_xwindows_client_template() and xserver_role(). Deprecate
the former and put the rules into the latter.
For preserving restricted X roles (xguest), divide the rules
into xserver_restricted_role() and xserver_role().
The unconfined role is running java in the unconfined_java_t. The current
policy only has a domtrans interface, so the unconfined_java_t domain is not
added to unconfined_r. Add a run interface and change the unconfined module
to use this new interface.
> Whats the difference between add/remove and create/destroy?
>
> The devices are in a kind of hierarchy. You can now create one or more
> "master devices" (mouse cursor and keyboard focus). The physical input
> devices are "slave devices" that attach to master devices.
>
> Add/remove controls the ability to add/remove slave devices from a
> master device. Create/destroy controls the ability to create new master
> devices.
Unconfined_cronjob_t is not a valid cron job domain because the cron
module is lacking a transition from the crond to the unconfined_cronjob_t
domain. This adds the transition and also a constraints exemption since
part of the transition is also a seuser and role change typically.