xref: /linux/security/tomoyo/Kconfig (revision d53b8e36925256097a08d7cb749198d85cbf9b2b)
1# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
2config SECURITY_TOMOYO
3	bool "TOMOYO Linux Support"
4	depends on SECURITY
5	depends on NET
6	select SECURITYFS
7	select SECURITY_PATH
8	select SECURITY_NETWORK
9	default n
10	help
11	  This selects TOMOYO Linux, pathname-based access control.
12	  Required userspace tools and further information may be
13	  found at <https://tomoyo.sourceforge.net/>.
14	  If you are unsure how to answer this question, answer N.
15
16config SECURITY_TOMOYO_MAX_ACCEPT_ENTRY
17	int "Default maximal count for learning mode"
18	default 2048
19	range 0 2147483647
20	depends on SECURITY_TOMOYO
21	help
22	  This is the default value for maximal ACL entries
23	  that are automatically appended into policy at "learning mode".
24	  Some programs access thousands of objects, so running
25	  such programs in "learning mode" dulls the system response
26	  and consumes much memory.
27	  This is the safeguard for such programs.
28
29config SECURITY_TOMOYO_MAX_AUDIT_LOG
30	int "Default maximal count for audit log"
31	default 1024
32	range 0 2147483647
33	depends on SECURITY_TOMOYO
34	help
35	  This is the default value for maximal entries for
36	  audit logs that the kernel can hold on memory.
37	  You can read the log via /sys/kernel/security/tomoyo/audit.
38	  If you don't need audit logs, you may set this value to 0.
39
40config SECURITY_TOMOYO_OMIT_USERSPACE_LOADER
41	bool "Activate without calling userspace policy loader."
42	default n
43	depends on SECURITY_TOMOYO
44	help
45	  Say Y here if you want to activate access control as soon as built-in
46	  policy was loaded. This option will be useful for systems where
47	  operations which can lead to the hijacking of the boot sequence are
48	  needed before loading the policy. For example, you can activate
49	  immediately after loading the fixed part of policy which will allow
50	  only operations needed for mounting a partition which contains the
51	  variant part of policy and verifying (e.g. running GPG check) and
52	  loading the variant part of policy. Since you can start using
53	  enforcing mode from the beginning, you can reduce the possibility of
54	  hijacking the boot sequence.
55
56config SECURITY_TOMOYO_POLICY_LOADER
57	string "Location of userspace policy loader"
58	default "/sbin/tomoyo-init"
59	depends on SECURITY_TOMOYO
60	depends on !SECURITY_TOMOYO_OMIT_USERSPACE_LOADER
61	help
62	  This is the default pathname of policy loader which is called before
63	  activation. You can override this setting via TOMOYO_loader= kernel
64	  command line option.
65
66config SECURITY_TOMOYO_ACTIVATION_TRIGGER
67	string "Trigger for calling userspace policy loader"
68	default "/sbin/init"
69	depends on SECURITY_TOMOYO
70	depends on !SECURITY_TOMOYO_OMIT_USERSPACE_LOADER
71	help
72	  This is the default pathname of activation trigger.
73	  You can override this setting via TOMOYO_trigger= kernel command line
74	  option. For example, if you pass init=/bin/systemd option, you may
75	  want to also pass TOMOYO_trigger=/bin/systemd option.
76
77config SECURITY_TOMOYO_INSECURE_BUILTIN_SETTING
78	bool "Use insecure built-in settings for fuzzing tests."
79	default n
80	depends on SECURITY_TOMOYO
81	select SECURITY_TOMOYO_OMIT_USERSPACE_LOADER
82	help
83	  Enabling this option forces minimal built-in policy and disables
84	  domain/program checks for run-time policy modifications. Please enable
85	  this option only if this kernel is built for doing fuzzing tests.
86