APPARMOR_PARSER(8) AppArmor APPARMOR_PARSER(8)
NAME
apparmor_parser - loads AppArmor profiles into the kernel
SYNOPSIS
apparmor_parser [options] [profiles]...
apparmor_parser [options]
apparmor_parser [-hv] [--help] [--version]
DESCRIPTION
apparmor_parser is used as a general tool to compile, and manage AppArmor policy,
including loading new apparmor.d(5) profiles into the Linux kernel.
AppArmor profiles restrict the operations available to processes.
The profiles are loaded into the Linux kernel by the apparmor_parser program. The profiles
may be specified by file name or a directory name containing a set of profiles. If a
directory is specified then the apparmor_parser will try to do a profile load for each
file in the directory that is not a dot file, or explicitly black listed (*.dpkg-new,
*.dpkg-old, *.dpkg-dist, *-dpkg-bak, *.repnew, *.rpmsave, *orig, *.rej, *~). The
apparmor_parser will fall back to taking input from standard input if a profile or
directory is not supplied.
The input supplied to apparmor_parser should be in the format described in apparmor.d(5).
COMMANDS
The command set is broken into four subcategories.
unprivileged commands
Commands that don't require any privilege and don't operate on profiles.
unprivileged profile commands
Commands that operate on a profile either specified on the command line or read from
stdin if no profile was specified.
privileged commands
Commands that require the MAC_ADMIN capability within the affected AppArmor namespace
to load policy into the kernel or filesystem write permissions to update the affected
privileged files (cache etc).
privileged profile commands
Commands that require privilege and operate on profiles.
Unprivileged commands
-V, --version
Print the version number and exit.
-h, --help
Give a quick reference guide.
Unprivileged profile commands
-N, --names
Produce a list of policies from a given set of profiles (implies -K).
-p, --preprocess
Apply preprocessing to the input profile(s) by flattening includes into the output
profile and dump to stdout.
-S, --stdout
Writes a binary (cached) profile to stdout (implies -K and -T).
-o file, --ofile file
Writes a binary (cached) profile to the specified file (implies -K and -T)
Privileged commands
--purge-cache
Unconditionally clear out cached profiles.
Privileged profile commands
-a, --add
Insert the AppArmor definitions given into the kernel. This is the default action.
This gives an error message if a AppArmor definition by the same name already exists
in the kernel, or if the parser doesn't understand its input. It reports when an
addition succeeded.
-r, --replace
This flag is required if an AppArmor definition by the same name already exists in the
kernel; used to replace the definition already in the kernel with the definition given
on standard input.
-R, --remove
This flag is used to remove an AppArmor definition already in the kernel. Note that
it still requires a complete AppArmor definition as described in apparmor.d(5) even
though the contents of the definition aren't used.
OPTIONS
-B, --binary
Treat the profile files specified on the command line (or stdin if none specified) as
binary cache files, produced with the -S or -o options, and load to the kernel as
specified by -a, -r, and -R (implies -K and -T).
-C, --Complain
Force the profile to load in complain mode.
-b n, --base n
Set the base directory for resolving #include directives defined as relative paths.
-I n, --Include n
Add element n to the search path when resolving #include directives defined as an
absolute paths.
-f n, --subdomainfs n
Set the location of the apparmor security filesystem (default is
"/sys/kernel/security/apparmor").
-M n, --features-file n
Use the features file located at path "n" (default is
/etc/apparmor.d/cache/.features). If the --cache-loc option is present, the
".features" file in the specified cache directory is used.
-m n, --match-string n
Only use match features "n".
-n n, --namespace-string n
Force a profile to load in the namespace "n".
-X, --readimpliesX
In the case of profiles that are loading on systems were READ_IMPLIES_EXEC is set in
the kernel for a given process, load the profile so that any "r" flags are processed
as "mr".
-k, --show-cache
Report the cache processing (hit/miss details) when loading or saving cached profiles.
-K, --skip-cache
Perform no caching at all: disables -W, implies -T.
-T, --skip-read-cache
By default, if a profile's cache is found in the location specified by --cache-loc and
the timestamp is newer than the profile, it will be loaded from the cache. This option
disables this cache loading behavior.
-W, --write-cache
Write out cached profiles to the location specified in --cache-loc. Off by default.
In cases where abstractions have been changed, and the parser is running with
"--replace", it may make sense to also use "--skip-read-cache" with the
"--write-cache" option.
--skip-bad-cache
Skip updating the cache if it contains cached profiles in a bad or inconsistent state
-L, --cache-loc
Set the location of the cache directory. If not specified the cache location defaults
to /etc/apparmor.d/cache
-Q, --skip-kernel-load
Perform all actions except the actual loading of a profile into the kernel. This is
useful for testing profile generation, caching, etc, without making changes to the
running kernel profiles.
This also removes the need for privilege to execute the commands that manage policy in
the kernel
-q, --quiet
Do not report on the profiles as they are loaded, and not show warnings.
-v, --verbose
Report on the profiles as they are loaded, and show warnings.
--warn=n
Enable various warnings during policy compilation. A single dump flag can be specified
per --warn option, but the --warn flag can be passed multiple times.
apparmor_parser --warn=rules-not-enforced ...
Use --help=warn to see a full list of which warn flags are supported.
-d, --debug
Given once, only checks the profiles to ensure syntactic correctness. Given twice,
dumps its interpretation of the profile for checking.
-D n, --dump=n
Debug flag for dumping various structures and passes of policy compilation. A single
dump flag can be specified per --dump option, but the dump flag can be passed multiple
times. Note progress flags tend to also imply the matching stats flag.
apparmor_parser --dump=dfa-stats --dump=trans-stats
Use --help=dump to see a full list of which dump flags are supported
-j n, --jobs=n
Set the number of jobs used to compile the specified policy. Where n can be
# - a specific number of jobs
auto - the # of cpus in the in the system
x# - # * number of cpus
Eg.
-j8 OR --jobs=8 allows for 8 parallel jobs
-jauto OR --jobs=auto sets the jobs to the # of cpus
-jx4 OR --jobs=x4 sets the jobs to # of cpus * 4
-jx1 is equivalent to -jauto
The default value is the number of cpus in the system.
--max-jobs n
Set a hard cap on the value that can be specified by the --jobs flag. It takes the
same set of options available to the --jobs option, and defaults to 8*cpus
-O n, --optimize=n
Set the optimization flags used by policy compilation. A single optimization flag can
be toggled per -O option, but the optimize flag can be passed multiple times. Turning
off some phases of the optimization can make it so that policy can't complete
compilation due to size constraints (it is entirely possible to create a dfa with
millions of states that will take days or longer to compile).
Note: The parser is set to use a balanced default set of flags, that will result in
resonable compression but not take excessive amounts of time to complete.
Use --help=optimize to see a full list of which optimization flags are supported.
--abort-on-error Abort processing of profiles on the first error encountered, otherwise
the parser will continue to try to compile other profiles if specified.
Note: If an error is encountered while processing profiles the last error encountered
will be used to set the exit code.
--skip-bad-cache-rebuild The default behavior of the parser is to check if a cached
version of a profile exists and if it does it attempt to load it into the kernel. If that
load is rejected, then the parser will attempt to rebuild the cache file, and load again.
This option tells the parser to not attempt to rebuild the cache on failure, instead
the parser continues on with processing the remaining profiles.
CONFIG FILE
An optional config file /etc/apparmor/parser.conf can be used to specify the default
options for the parser, which then can be overridden using the command line options.
The config file ignores leading whitespace and treats lines that begin with # as comments.
Config options are specified one per line using the same format as the longform command
line options (without the preceding --).
Eg.
#comment
optimize=no-expr-tree
optimize=compress-fast
As with the command line some options accumulate and others override, ie. when there are
conflicting versions of switch the last option is the one chosen.
Eg.
Optimize=no-minimize
Optimize=minimize
would result in Optimize=minimize being set.
The Include, Dump, and Optimize options accululate except for the inversion option (no-X
vs. X), and a couple options that work by setting/clearing multiple options (compress-
small). In that case the option will override the flags it sets but will may accumulate
with others.
All other options override previously set values.
BUGS
If you find any bugs, please report them at
.
SEE ALSO
apparmor(7), apparmor.d(5), subdomain.conf(5), aa_change_hat(2), and
.
AppArmor 2.10.95 2016-10-07 APPARMOR_PARSER(8)
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