1setfiles(8)                  SELinux User Command                  setfiles(8)
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NAME

6       setfiles - set SELinux file security contexts.
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SYNOPSIS

10       setfiles  [-c policy] [-d] [-l] [-m] [-n] [-e directory] [-E] [-p] [-s]
11       [-v] [-W] [-F] [-I|-D] spec_file pathname ...
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DESCRIPTION

15       This manual page describes the setfiles program.
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17       This program is primarily  used  to  initialize  the  security  context
18       fields  (extended  attributes)  on one or more filesystems (or parts of
19       them).  Usually it is initially run as part of the SELinux installation
20       process (a step commonly known as labeling).
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22       It can also be run at any other time to correct inconsistent labels, to
23       add support for newly-installed policy or, by using the -n  option,  to
24       passively  check  whether the file contexts are all set as specified by
25       the active policy (default behavior) or by some other policy  (see  the
26       -c option).
27
28       If  a  file  object  does  not  have a context, setfiles will write the
29       default context to the file object's extended  attributes.  If  a  file
30       object has a context, setfiles will only modify the type portion of the
31       security context.  The -F option will force a replacement of the entire
32       context.
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OPTIONS

35       -c     check  the validity of the contexts against the specified binary
36              policy.
37
38       -d     show what specification matched each file (do not abort  valida‐
39              tion after 10 errors). Not affected by "-q"
40
41       -e directory
42              directory  to  exclude  (repeat  option for more than one direc‐
43              tory).
44
45       -E     treat conflicting specifications as errors, such  as  where  two
46              hardlinks for the same inode have different contexts.
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48       -f infilename
49              infilename contains a list of files to be processed. Use “-” for
50              stdin.
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52       -F     Force reset of context to match  file_context  for  customizable
53              files,  and  the  default file context, changing the user, role,
54              range portion as well as the type.
55
56       -h, -? display usage information and exit.
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58       -i     ignore files that do not exist.
59
60       -I     ignore digest to force checking of labels  even  if  the  stored
61              SHA1  digest  matches the specfiles SHA1 digest. The digest will
62              then be updated provided there are no errors. See the NOTES sec‐
63              tion for further details.
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65       -D     Set  or  update  any  directory SHA1 digests. Use this option to
66              enable usage of the security.sehash extended attribute.
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68       -l     log changes in file labels to syslog.
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70       -m     do not read /proc/mounts to obtain a list of non-seclabel mounts
71              to  be  excluded from relabeling checks.  Setting this option is
72              useful where there is a non-seclabel fs mounted with a  seclabel
73              fs mounted on a directory below this.
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75       -n     don't change any file labels (passive check).
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77       -o outfilename
78              Deprecated - This option is no longer supported.
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80       -p     show  progress  by  printing  the  number  of files in 1k blocks
81              unless relabeling the entire OS, that will then show the approx‐
82              imate  percentage  complete. Note that the -p and -v options are
83              mutually exclusive.
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85       -q     Deprecated, was only used to  stop  printing  inode  association
86              parameters.
87
88       -r rootpath
89              use  an alternate root path. Used in meta-selinux for OpenEmbed‐
90              ded/Yocto builds to label files under rootpath as if  they  were
91              at /
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93       -s     take  a  list  of  files  from standard input instead of using a
94              pathname from the command line (equivalent to “-f -” ).
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96       -v     show changes in file labels and  output  any  inode  association
97              parameters.  Note that the -v and -p options are mutually exclu‐
98              sive.
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100       -W     display warnings about entries that had  no  matching  files  by
101              outputting the selabel_stats(3) results.
102
103       -0     the  separator  for  the  input  items is assumed to be the null
104              character (instead of the white  space).   The  quotes  and  the
105              backslash  characters are also treated as normal characters that
106              can form valid input.  This option finally also disables the end
107              of  file string, which is treated like any other argument.  Use‐
108              ful when input items might contain white space, quote  marks  or
109              backslashes.   The  -print0  option  of  GNU find produces input
110              suitable for this mode.
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ARGUMENTS

114       spec_file
115              The specification file which contains  lines  of  the  following
116              form:
117
118              regexp [type] context | <<none>>
119                     The  regular  expression  is  anchored at both ends.  The
120                     optional type field specifies the file type as  shown  in
121                     the  mode  field  by the ls(1) program, e.g.  -- to match
122                     only regular files or -d to match only directories.   The
123                     context can be an ordinary security context or the string
124                     <<none>> to specify that the file is not to have its con‐
125                     text changed.
126                     The  last  matching  specification  is used. If there are
127                     multiple hard links to a file that match different speci‐
128                     fications  and  those  specifications  indicate different
129                     security contexts, then a warning is  displayed  but  the
130                     file is still labeled based on the last matching specifi‐
131                     cation other than <<none>>.
132
133       pathname ...
134              The pathname for the root directory of each file  system  to  be
135              relabeled  or  a  specific  directory  within  a filesystem that
136              should be recursively descended and relabeled or the pathname of
137              a  file  that should be relabeled.  Not used if the -f or the -s
138              option is used.
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NOTES

142       1.  setfiles operates recursively on directories. Paths leading up  the
143           final  component of the file(s) are not canonicalized before label‐
144           ing.
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146       2.  If the pathname specifies the root directory and the -v  option  is
147           set  and  the audit system is running, then an audit event is auto‐
148           matically logged stating that a "mass relabel" took place using the
149           message label FS_RELABEL.
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151       3.  To improve performance when relabeling file systems recursively the
152           -D option to setfiles will cause it to store a SHA1 digest  of  the
153           spec_file  set  in  an  extended attribute named security.sehash on
154           each directory specified in pathname ...  once the  relabeling  has
155           been  completed  successfully. These digests will be checked should
156           setfiles -D be rerun with the same spec_file and  pathname  parame‐
157           ters. See selinux_restorecon(3) for further details.
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159           The -I option will ignore the SHA1 digest from each directory spec‐
160           ified in pathname ...  and provided the -n option is NOT set, files
161           will  be  relabeled as required with the digests then being updated
162           provided there are no errors.
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AUTHOR

166       This man page was written by Russell Coker <russell@coker.com.au>.  The
167       program was written by Stephen Smalley <sds@tycho.nsa.gov>
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SEE ALSO

171       restorecon(8), load_policy(8), checkpolicy(8)
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175                                 10 June 2016                      setfiles(8)
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