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![]() Also add some history to the changelog in the specfile, clean up some whitespace issues, eliminate no longer needed bogus LC_MESSAGES dir to work around SUSE autobuild, seems to have been addressed. |
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pcre | ||
po | ||
tst | ||
apparmor-parser.spec.in | ||
COPYING.GPL | ||
frob_slack_rc | ||
immunix.h | ||
Makefile | ||
parser.h | ||
parser_include.c | ||
parser_include.h | ||
parser_interface.c | ||
parser_lex.l | ||
parser_main.c | ||
parser_merge.c | ||
parser_misc.c | ||
parser_policy.c | ||
parser_regex.c | ||
parser_symtab.c | ||
parser_variable.c | ||
parser_yacc.y | ||
rc.aaeventd.suse | ||
rc.apparmor.debian | ||
rc.apparmor.functions | ||
rc.apparmor.redhat | ||
rc.apparmor.slackware | ||
rc.apparmor.suse | ||
README | ||
subdomain.conf |
Package Contents ------------------ README - This file. subdomain_parser - This program loads the subdomain database into the kernel via the sysctl(2) interface. subdomain.5 - Man page explaining the structure of the subdomain profile file. change_hat.2 - Man page explaining the usage of the change_hat syscall. subdomain_parser takes all of its input from STDIN. Thus, if you want to use it to load a description file, you want to do something like: ./subdomain_parser < /path/to/database/file Of course, you can use cat, etc. to load the contents of multiple files at the same time. subdomain_parser allows you to add, replace, and remove definitions through the use of command line options. The default is to add. `subdomain_parser --help` shows what the command line options are. You can also find more information at <http://forge.novell.com/modules/xfmod/project/?apparmor>. Please send all complaints, bug reports, feature requests, rants about the software, and questions to apparmor-general@forge.novell.com. Security issues should be directed to security@suse.de or secure@novell.com, where we will attempt to conform to the RFP vulnerability disclosure protocol: http://www.wiretrip.net/rfp/policy.html The parser uses the PCRE (Perl Compatible Regular Expression) engine, which was written by Philip Hazel and is copyright by the University of Cambridge, England. For more information on the PCRE engine, see <ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/> Thanks. -- The AppArmor development team