All dbus rules are labelled under the name of the given profiles that provide dbus data. It is one of the value added by this project, as we have profiles for *everything*, we can restrict the bus further by limiting connection to a given peer label (the profile name). In the case of renaming a profile, all dbus rules related in this profile need to be updated accordingly.
Regardless of the Dbus implementation used (`dbus-daemon` or `dbus-broker`), all dbus daemons are handled under the same set of profiles: [`dbus-system`](https://github.com/roddhjav/apparmor.d/blob/main/apparmor.d/groups/bus/dbus-system), [`dbus-session`](https://github.com/roddhjav/apparmor.d/blob/main/apparmor.d/groups/bus/dbus-session), and [`dbus-accessibility`](https://github.com/roddhjav/apparmor.d/blob/main/apparmor.d/groups/bus/dbus-accessibility). This structure largely improves the confinement of each profile.
To ensure the system and session bus are handled by a different profile, a [systemd drop-in](https://github.com/roddhjav/apparmor.d/blob/main/systemd/default/system/dbus.service) configuration file is used to set the specific dbus profile that a dbus service must use.
Access to common dbus interfaces is done using the abstractions under **[`abstractions/bus/`](https://github.com/roddhjav/apparmor.d/tree/main/apparmor.d/abstractions/bus)**. They are kept minimal on purpose. The goal is not to give full talk access an interface but to provide a *read-only* like view of it. It may be required to have a look at the dbus interface documentation to check what method can be safely allowed.
-`abstractions/bus/*` will provide more restriction, and possibly more issue. In the future, these rules will be automatically generated from the interface documentation.
We use a special [directive](directives.md) to generate more advanced dbus access. The directive format is on purpose very similar to the AppArmor dbus rule.