This series adds a couple of patches to make the software more crosscompilation friendly. They are based on the work I'm doing to fix the package on buildroot
PR: https://gitlab.com/apparmor/apparmor/-/merge_requests/485
Acked-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
(cherry picked from commit 9ba2334423)
Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
Exit rather than returning from shell snippets in Makefiles. It is
reported that returning causes the following error message with bash:
/bin/sh: line 4: return: can only `return' from a function or sourced script
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Reported-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
binutils 'make install' failed if 'make' wasn't run before.
This patch adds the missing dependency 'install-indep: indep'
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>
The binutils (aa-enabled and aa-exec) get installed into /usr/bin/ and
are meant to be used by non-root users. Therefore the manpages should be
in section 1 instead of 8 (which is for sysadmin commands).
Acked-by: Seth Arnold <seth.arnold@canonical.com>
Remove the Perl aa-exec implementation, move the aa-exec(8) man page to
binutils/, and point the regression test to the C based aa-exec in
binutils/.
Note that the new C aa-exec does not implement the --file option which
was present in the Perl aa-exec. It encouraged running programs as root,
since root privileges were required to load the specified profile.
All other features of the Perl aa-exec are present in the C aa-exec.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Acked-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
Create a simple aa-exec implementation, written in C, matching the
--help, --debug, --verbose, and --profile options present in the current
Perl implementation.
The new aa-exec sources reside in the binutils/ directory.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Acked-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
aa-enabled should live in /usr/bin, rather than /sbin, since it is not
used in early boot and requires no root privileges.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
Clean up the Makefile by removing distro-related install targets. These
should not be needed.
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>
Acked-by: Christian Boltz <apparmor@cboltz.de>
The new aa-enabled program can be used as a barebones replacement for
`aa-status --enabled`. It is written in C, rather than Python, which
keeps its dependencies to a minimum.
By default, aa-enabled prints a human-readable status of AppArmor's
availability to stdout. It supports a --quiet option which allows for
functionality equivalent to `aa-status --enabled`, which does not print
any messages.
The aa-enabled exit statuses mimic the behavior documented in the
aa-status(8) man page.
Signed-off-by: John Johansen <john.johansen@canonical.com>
[tyhicks: Incorporated feedback from the code review process]
Signed-off-by: Tyler Hicks <tyhicks@canonical.com>