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Part I Initial Configuration of Trusted Extensions 1. Security Planning for Trusted Extensions 2. Configuration Roadmap for Trusted Extensions 3. Adding Solaris Trusted Extensions Software to the Solaris OS (Tasks) 4. Configuring Trusted Extensions (Tasks) 5. Configuring LDAP for Trusted Extensions (Tasks) 6. Configuring a Headless System With Trusted Extensions (Tasks) Part II Administration of Trusted Extensions 7. Trusted Extensions Administration Concepts 8. Trusted Extensions Administration Tools 9. Getting Started as a Trusted Extensions Administrator (Tasks) 10. Security Requirements on a Trusted Extensions System (Overview) 11. Administering Security Requirements in Trusted Extensions (Tasks) 12. Users, Rights, and Roles in Trusted Extensions (Overview) 13. Managing Users, Rights, and Roles in Trusted Extensions (Tasks) 14. Remote Administration in Trusted Extensions (Tasks) 15. Trusted Extensions and LDAP (Overview) 16. Managing Zones in Trusted Extensions (Tasks) 17. Managing and Mounting Files in Trusted Extensions (Tasks) Sharing and Mounting Files in Trusted Extensions Sharing Files From a Labeled Zone Access to NFS Mounted Directories in Trusted Extensions Trusted Extensions Software and NFS Protocol Versions Backing Up, Sharing, and Mounting Labeled Files (Task Map) 18. Trusted Networking (Overview) 19. Managing Networks in Trusted Extensions (Tasks) 20. Multilevel Mail in Trusted Extensions (Overview) 21. Managing Labeled Printing (Tasks) 22. Devices in Trusted Extensions (Overview) 23. Managing Devices for Trusted Extensions (Tasks) 24. Trusted Extensions Auditing (Overview) 25. Software Management in Trusted Extensions (Tasks) Creating and Managing a Security Policy Site Security Policy and Trusted Extensions Computer Security Recommendations Physical Security Recommendations Personnel Security Recommendations Additional Security References B. Using CDE Actions to Install Zones in Trusted Extensions Associating Network Interfaces With Zones by Using CDE Actions (Task Map) Preparing to Create Zones by Using CDE Actions (Task Map) Creating Labeled Zones by Using CDE Actions (Task Map) C. Configuration Checklist for Trusted Extensions Checklist for Configuring Trusted Extensions D. Quick Reference to Trusted Extensions Administration Administrative Interfaces in Trusted Extensions Solaris Interfaces Extended by Trusted Extensions Tighter Security Defaults in Trusted Extensions Limited Options in Trusted Extensions E. List of Trusted Extensions Man Pages Trusted Extensions Man Pages in Alphabetical Order |
NFS Mounts in Trusted ExtensionsNFS mounts in Trusted Extensions are similar to Solaris mounts. The differences occur in the use of zone root pathnames when mounting a labeled zone in Trusted Extensions, and in the enforcement of MAC policy. NFS shares in Trusted Extensions are similar to Solaris shares in a global zone. However, the sharing of files from a labeled zone on a multilevel system is unique to Trusted Extensions:
Labels affect which files can be mounted. Files are shared and mounted at a particular label. For a Trusted Extensions client to write to a file that is NFS-mounted, the file must be mounted with read/write permissions and be at the same label as the client. If you are mounting a file between two Trusted Extensions hosts, the server and the client must have compatible remote host templates of type cipso. If you are mounting a file between a Trusted Extensions host and an unlabeled host, files that are at the single label that is specified for the unlabeled host in the tnrhdb file can be mounted. Files that are mounted with LOFS can be viewed, but cannot be modified. For details on NFS mounts, see Access to NFS Mounted Directories in Trusted Extensions. Labels also affect which directories and files can be viewed. By default, lower-level objects are available in a user's environment. Therefore, in the default configuration, a regular user can view files that are in a zone at a lower level than the user's current level. For example, users can see their lower-level home directories from a higher label. For details, see Home Directory Creation in Trusted Extensions. If site security forbids the viewing of lower-level objects, you can make lower-level directories invisible to the user. For details, see How to Disable the Mounting of Lower-Level Files. The mount policy in Trusted Extensions has no MAC overrides. Mounted files that are visible at a lower label can never be modified by a higher-label process. This MAC policy is also in effect in the global zone. A global zone ADMIN_HIGH process cannot modify an NFS-mounted file at a lower label, such as a PUBLIC file or an ADMIN_LOW file. MAC policies enforce the default configuration and are invisible to regular users. Regular users cannot see objects unless they have MAC access to them. |
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