# $Id$ # ------------------------------------------------------------------ # # Copyright (C) 2002-2005 Novell/SUSE # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of version 2 of the GNU General Public # License published by the Free Software Foundation. # # ------------------------------------------------------------------ # (Note that the ldd profile has inlined this file; if you make # modifications here, please consider including them in the ldd # profile as well.) # The __canary_death_handler function writes a time-stamped log # message to /dev/log for logging by syslogd. So, /dev/log, timezones, # and localisations of date should be available EVERYWHERE, so # StackGuard, FormatGuard, etc., alerts can be properly logged. /dev/log w, /dev/urandom r, /etc/locale/** r, /etc/localtime r, /usr/share/locale/** r, /usr/share/zoneinfo/** r, /usr/lib64/locale/** r, /usr/lib64/gconv/*.so r, /usr/lib64/gconv/gconv-modules* r, /usr/lib/locale/** r, /usr/lib/gconv/*.so r, /usr/lib/gconv/gconv-modules* r, # used by glibc when binding to ephemeral ports /etc/bindresvport.blacklist r, # ld.so.cache and ld are used to load shared libraries; they are best # available everywhere /etc/ld.so.cache r, # 'px' requires a profile to be available for the transition to # function; without a loaded profile, the kernel will fail the exec. /lib/ld-*.so px, /lib64/ld-*.so px, /lib/ld64-*.so px, /lib64/ld64-*.so px, /opt/*-linux-uclibc/lib/ld-uClibc*so* px, # we might as well allow everything to use common libraries /lib/lib*.so* r, /lib/tls/lib*.so* r, /lib/power4/lib*.so* r, /lib/power5/lib*.so* r, /lib/power5+/lib*.so* r, /lib64/power4/lib*.so* r, /lib64/power5/lib*.so* r, /lib64/power5+/lib*.so* r, /usr/lib/*.so* r, /usr/lib/tls/lib*.so* r, /usr/lib/power4/lib*.so* r, /usr/lib/power5/lib*.so* r, /usr/lib/power5+/lib*.so* r, /lib64/lib*.so* r, /lib64/tls/lib*.so* r, /usr/lib64/*.so* r, /usr/lib64/tls/lib*.so* r, # /dev/null is pretty harmless and frequently used /dev/null rw, # as is /dev/zero /dev/zero rw, # Sometimes used to determine kernel/user interfaces to use /proc/sys/kernel/version r, # Depending on which glibc routine uses this file, base may not be the # best place -- but many profiles require it, and it is quite harmless. /proc/sys/kernel/ngroups_max r, # glibc's sysconf(3) routine to determine free memory, etc /proc/meminfo r, /proc/stat r, /proc/cpuinfo r,