Revision 0365070f05f12f1648b4adf22cfb52ec7a8a371c authored by Tim Anderson on 17 June 2009, 23:22:53 UTC, committed by Ralf Baechle on 03 July 2009, 14:45:26 UTC
Most of the CMP support was added before, this mostly correct compile problems but adds a platform specific translation for the interrupt number based on cpu number. Signed-off-by: Tim Anderson <tanderson@mvista.com> Signed-off-by: Ralf Baechle <ralf@linux-mips.org>
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SELinux.txt
If you want to use SELinux, chances are you will want
to use the distro-provided policies, or install the
latest reference policy release from
http://oss.tresys.com/projects/refpolicy
However, if you want to install a dummy policy for
testing, you can do using 'mdp' provided under
scripts/selinux. Note that this requires the selinux
userspace to be installed - in particular you will
need checkpolicy to compile a kernel, and setfiles and
fixfiles to label the filesystem.
1. Compile the kernel with selinux enabled.
2. Type 'make' to compile mdp.
3. Make sure that you are not running with
SELinux enabled and a real policy. If
you are, reboot with selinux disabled
before continuing.
4. Run install_policy.sh:
cd scripts/selinux
sh install_policy.sh
Step 4 will create a new dummy policy valid for your
kernel, with a single selinux user, role, and type.
It will compile the policy, will set your SELINUXTYPE to
dummy in /etc/selinux/config, install the compiled policy
as 'dummy', and relabel your filesystem.
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