On 12/30/2011 08:17 AM, Kees Cook wrote:
Hi John,

What's the reasoning here? "disable" is to avoid processing at all. It doesn't
make sense to me to not skip disabled profiles here. What use-case am I
overlooking?

Probably this is mostly just me, but I find disable really annoying during
dev and testing of the parser.  As I do end up feeding disabled profiles to the
parser.

Thinking about it more though I should fix how disable is being resolved, ie.
actually use the symlink.  Because the problem is that currently its using
the base name to resolve whether a profile is disabled and not whether the
file being tested is actually the file that is disabled.


-Kees

On Tue, Dec 27, 2011 at 06:49:32PM -0800, John Johansen wrote:
Signed-off-by: John Johansen<[email protected]>
---
  parser/parser_main.c |    2 +-
  1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-)

diff --git a/parser/parser_main.c b/parser/parser_main.c
index 721582d..2a39ffc 100644
--- a/parser/parser_main.c
+++ b/parser/parser_main.c
@@ -886,7 +886,7 @@ int process_profile(int option, char *profilename)
                else
                        basename = profilename;

-               if (test_for_dir_mode(basename, "disable")) {
+               if (PRIVILEGED_OPS&&  test_for_dir_mode(basename, "disable")) {
                        if (!conf_quiet)
                                PERROR("Skipping profile in %s/disable: %s\n", 
basedir, basename);
                        goto out;
--
1.7.7.3


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