See a part of a context. The context is taken from a file, pid, user input or
the context in which
secon
is originally executed.
-V, --version
shows the current version of secon
-h, --help
shows the usage information for secon
-P, --prompt
outputs data in a format suitable for a prompt
-u, --user
show the user of the security context
-r, --role
show the role of the security context
-t, --type
show the type of the security context
-s, --sensitivity
show the sensitivity level of the security context
-c, --clearance
show the clearance level of the security context
-m, --mls-range
show the sensitivity level and clearance, as a range, of the security context
-R, --raw
outputs the sensitivity level and clearance in an untranslated format.
-f, --file
gets the context from the specified file FILE
-L, --link
gets the context from the specified file FILE (doesn't follow symlinks)
-p, --pid
gets the context from the specified process PID
--pid-exec
gets the exec context from the specified process PID
--pid-fs
gets the fscreate context from the specified process PID
--current, --self
gets the context from the current process
--current-exec, --self-exec
gets the exec context from the current process
--current-fs, --self-fs
gets the fscreate context from the current process
--parent
gets the context from the parent of the current process
--parent-exec
gets the exec context from the parent of the current process
--parent-fs
gets the fscreate context from the parent of the current process
Additional argument
CONTEXT
may be provided and will be used if no options have been specified to make
secon
get it's context from another source.
If that argument is
-
then the context will be read from stdin.
If there is no arugment,
secon
will try reading a context from stdin, if that is not a tty, otherwise
secon
will act as though --self had been passed.
If none of --user, --role, --type, --level or
--mls-range is passed.
Then all of them will be output.