From Fedora Project Wiki
Fedora SELinux Project Pages
- Understanding SELinux
- Discussion of Policies
- Troubleshooting SELinux
- Multi Category Security/MCS
- Multi Level Security/MLS
- Loadable Modules
- Policy Generation Tools
- Troubleshoot Tool
- Shipping custom policy modules
- Policy writing resources
Topics
Documentation
- FAQs
- Fedora 22 - SELinux User's and Administrator's Guide
- Fedora 13 - Security-Enhanced Linux User Guide
- Fedora 13 - SELinux FAQ
- Fedora 13 - Managing Confined Services Guide
- Fedora 12 - Security-Enhanced Linux User Guide
- Fedora 12 - SELinux FAQ
- Fedora 11 - Managing Confined Services Guide
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7: SELinux User's and Administrator's Guide
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 - SELinux Guide
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 - SELinux Guide
- Red Hat Magazine: What is Security-Enhanced Linux? (November 2004)
- Red Hat Magazine: Taking advantage of SELinux in Red Hat® Enterprise Linux (April 2005)
- What’s new in SELinux for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5? (May 2007)
- SELinux: Past, Present And Future (Daniel Walsh, Red Hat SELinux developer)
- - Dan Walsh's Blog - continous discourse on understanding and using SELinux
- Five ways SELinux may surprise you (May 2007)
- SELinux Policy IDE (SLIDE) - by Tresys Technology
- Security-Enhanced Linux (nsa.gov)
- 2013 Red Hat Summit: SELinux for Mere Mortals (2013, video)
- Security Enhanced Linux for Mere Mortals (2014, PDF)
- Grammar for policy language
If you want to work on formal documentation, you can use the Docs/Drafts/SELinux namespace. When you are done editing the draft, it can migrate to Docs/SELinux . Doing this lends an air of formality and provides higher immutability and accountability in the wiki, as only the DocWritersGroup can edit the Docs/ namespace