The Southeast Seattle Tool Library provides access to a wide variety of tools, training, and a basic workshop space. We aim to inspire and equip our neighbors to participate in both personal and community projects. Check out this video for a guided tour!

The Southeast Seattle Tool Library is a non-profit organization where you can borrow tools for home maintenance, woodworking, gardening, and creative projects of all kinds. Tools are borrowed for a week at a time. This website lets everyone browse our tool collection and allows members to see what tools they have checked out.


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For detailed information about the organization, including how to become a member, please see our main site at setools.org, send us an email, or just drop by and chat with our friendly volunteer tool librarians and we'll get your membership set up on the spot!

Give friends and family a gift they can use all year - a membership to the tool library! Purchase an attractive gift certificate at the tool library or send us an email and we can mail it to a local address with some fascinating literature describing our purpose and hours. Your gift is tax deductible and keeps the doors open at this wonderful community resource. Or just spread the word to let folks know we're here. Many people have never even heard of the tool library concept and are thrilled when they learn about it. So go ahead - make someone's day! We also have a limited number of t-shirts available - send us an email or ask the staff volunteers for details when you stop by.

Configuring high-end SELinux (Security-enhanced Linux) policies can be a daunting challenge to system administrators, especially those who are new to the concepts and processes. But there are a number of useful tools available that will help you write, analyze and report on your policy. In this tip we'll look at one of these tools: SETools, a free open source product from Tresys Technology.

Should you need to install SETools via source or you would just like a more recent version, then you need to install some applications. In addition to requiring the standard suite of development tools, SETools also requires the following:

The package names assume you're running Red Hat Enterprise Linux or a variation such as Fedora or CentOS. Many of these prerequisites may already be present on your host. The apol tool also requires, BWidget (version 1.7 or later). A BWidget package is included with SETools in the packages directory or you can install it via your distribution's package manager. If you don't need or want to use the GUI tools, you can disable the requirement for BWidget using the --disable-bwidget-check configure script option.

This will install the required scripts and configuration files into the /etc/logwatch directory. The tools will send email reports via the Logwatch framework. You can also customize those reports to suit your requirements by altering the installed configuration file.

Now that you have SETools installed, you can make some use of it. The most interesting tools to try first are the graphical tools. The first of these tools is the apol policy analyzer. It is a graphical interface that provides the ability to browse and search through your SELinux policy. It has a variety of automated analysis reports that allow you to see how your policies interact and flow.

Next is the seaudit graphical tool which parses the /var/log/messages file and displays all SELinux audit messages. It provides a link between this output and your policies and can query policy for rules related to a particular message. It is also a convenient way of browsing your current SELinux-related log messages.

Secdiffx is a graphical diff engine that can compare two policies. There is also a command line version of this tool called secdiff. It highlights and lists differences between rules, roles, types, classes and permissions amongst other attributes of your policies. It is particularly useful after incrementing your policy to a new version to ensure you haven't missed, orphaned or not updated any elements of your policy.

Aside from the graphical tools, a popular and probably the most useful tool in the SETools kit is the command line based sechecker. The sechecker tool performs modular checks on policy and creates a report that details any errors or security issues. To do this sechecker has a number of profiles. Profiles analyze policies according to particular criteria, for example, the profile called attribs_wo_rules will return all attributes not used in any rule. To use sechecker we specify the particular profile to run against your policy and the location of our policy file:

In addition to sechecker there are also a number of other command line tools: for example, seinfo, which returns statistics about your policy. There is also the sesearch tool, a policy search tool and a variety of tools to work with file contexts.

With the many challenges and complexities of implementing SELinux, the SETools package provides a number of useful and powerful tools to help you through the process of implementing and managing your policy.

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