On Thu, 2017-07-06 at 10:36 -0400, Paul Moore wrote: > On Thu, Jul 6, 2017 at 9:30 AM, Paul Moore <p...@paul-moore.com> > wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 6, 2017 at 1:32 AM, John Stultz <john.stu...@linaro.org > > > wrote: > > > Hey folks, > > > I updated my HiKey kernel tree to linus/master today and it > > > stopped > > > booting (hitting errors at init and reseting immediately into > > > bootloader mode): > > > > > > [ 5.289827] init: Skipped setting INIT_AVB_VERSION (not in > > > recovery mode) > > > [ 5.296709] init: Loading SELinux policy > > > [ 5.334521] SELinux: Permission validate_trans in class > > > security > > > not defined in policy. > > > [ 5.342828] SELinux: Permission map in class file not defined > > > in policy. > > > [ 5.349690] SELinux: Permission map in class dir not defined > > > in policy. > > > [ 5.356464] SELinux: Permission map in class lnk_file not > > > defined in policy. > > > [ 5.363666] SELinux: Permission map in class chr_file not > > > defined in policy. > > > [ 5.370870] SELinux: Permission map in class blk_file not > > > defined in policy. > > > [ 5.378070] SELinux: Permission map in class sock_file not > > > defined > > > in policy. > > > [ 5.385351] SELinux: Permission map in class fifo_file not > > > defined > > > in policy. > > > [ 5.392647] SELinux: Permission map in class socket not > > > defined in policy. > > > [ 5.399670] SELinux: Permission map in class tcp_socket not > > > defined in policy. > > > [ 5.407042] SELinux: Permission map in class udp_socket not > > > defined in policy. > > > [ 5.414415] SELinux: Permission map in class rawip_socket not > > > defined in policy. > > > [ 5.421969] SELinux: Permission map in class netlink_socket > > > not > > > defined in policy. > > > ... > > > [ 5.850590] SELinux: the above unknown classes and permissions > > > will be denied > > > [ 5.892283] audit: type=1403 audit(104.182:2): policy loaded > > > auid=4294967295 ses=4294967295 > > > [ 5.892510] selinux: SELinux: Loaded policy from /sepolicy > > > [ 5.892510] > > > [ 5.907690] audit: type=1404 audit(104.183:3): enforcing=1 > > > old_enforcing=0 auid=4294967295 ses=4294967295 > > > [ 5.911853] selinux: selinux_android_file_context: Error > > > getting > > > file context handle (Permission denied) > > > [ 5.911853] > > > [ 5.911968] init: execv("/init") failed: Permission denied > > > [ 5.911987] init: Security failure... > > > [ 5.912008] init: panic: rebooting to bootloader > > > [ 5.912034] init: Reboot start, reason: reboot, rebootTarget: > > > bootloader > > > > > > > > > I bisected the issue down to 3ba4bf5f1e2c (selinux: add a map > > > permission check for mmap). > > > > > > It seems every -rc1 I hit something like this w/ selinux, and > > > sometimes it is just that I need to fix my sepolicy files, but > > > I'm not > > > really sure which this one is. > > > > > > Reverting the identified commit allows things to boot normally. > > > > Hello, > > > > The short version is that this is the expected behavior given your > > SELinux policy configuration and isn't a regression; your SELinux > > policy is configured to not be overly permissive when new access > > control points are introduced and that is what it is doing. > > > > The slightly longer version is that your SELinux policy is set to > > deny > > access to any new object classes or permissions that are not > > defined > > in the policy, and we can see from your boot output your SELinux > > policy does not define the new "map" permission for a number of > > object > > classes. The solution is to either update your SELinux policy to > > include the SELinux policy, or to allow unknown object classes and > > permissions. > > > > What distribution are you running (where are you getting your > > SELinux > > policy and userspace)? I would suggest starting a conversation > > there, > > I'm happy to lend a hand if you need some help explaining the > > situation. > > I'm sorry, I just realized you mentioned AOSP in the subject line ... > In that case Jeffery and the rest of the Android folks are a good > place to start, hopefully they will chime in on this thread with > their > plans for supporting these newer kernel features.
Try this change to your policy: https://android-review.googlesource.com/#/c/432339/