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Solaris Trusted Extensions Installation and Configuration for Solaris 10 11/06 and Solaris 10 8/07 Releases
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Document Information

Preface

1.  Security Planning for Trusted Extensions

2.  Installation and Configuration Roadmap for Trusted Extensions

3.  Installing Solaris Trusted Extensions Software (Tasks)

4.  Configuring Trusted Extensions (Tasks)

Setting Up the Global Zone in Trusted Extensions

Check and Install Your Label Encodings File

Enable IPv6 Networking in Trusted Extensions

Create ZFS Pool for Cloning Zones

Reboot and Log In to Trusted Extensions

Initialize the Solaris Management Console Server in Trusted Extensions

Make the Global Zone an LDAP Client in Trusted Extensions

Creating Labeled Zones

Run the txzonemgr Script

Configure the Network Interfaces in Trusted Extensions

Name and Label the Zone

Install the Labeled Zone

Boot the Labeled Zone

Verify the Status of the Zone

Customize the Labeled Zone

Create Another Zone in Trusted Extensions

Add a Network Interface to an Existing Labeled Zone

Creating Roles and Users in Trusted Extensions

Create the Security Administrator Role in Trusted Extensions

Create Users Who Can Assume Roles in Trusted Extensions

Verify That the Trusted Extensions Roles Work

Enable Users to Log In to a Labeled Zone

Creating Home Directories in Trusted Extensions

Create the Home Directory Server in Trusted Extensions

Enable Users to Access Their Home Directories in Trusted Extensions

Adding Users and Hosts to an Existing Trusted Network

Add an NIS User to the LDAP Server

Troubleshooting Your Trusted Extensions Configuration

netservices limited Was Run After Trusted Extensions Was Installed

Cannot Open the Console Window in a Labeled Zone

Labeled Zone Is Unable to Access the X Server

Additional Trusted Extensions Configuration Tasks

How to Copy Files to Portable Media in Trusted Extensions

How to Copy Files From Portable Media in Trusted Extensions

How to Remove Trusted Extensions From the System

5.  Configuring LDAP for Trusted Extensions (Tasks)

6.  Configuring a Headless System With Trusted Extensions (Tasks)

A.  Site Security Policy

B.  Using CDE Actions to Install Zones in Trusted Extensions

C.  Configuration Checklist for Trusted Extensions

Glossary

Index

Creating Home Directories in Trusted Extensions

In Trusted Extensions, users need access to their home directories at every label at which the users work. To make every home directory available to the user requires that you create a multilevel home directory server, run the automounter on the server, and export the home directories. On the client side, you can run scripts to find the home directory for every zone for each user, or you can have the user log in to the home directory server.

Create the Home Directory Server in Trusted Extensions

Before You Begin

You must be superuser, in the root role, or in the Primary Administrator role.

  1. Install and configure the home directory server with Trusted Extensions software.
    • If you are cloning zones, make sure that you use a Solaris ZFS snapshot that has empty home directories.

    • Because users require a home directory at every label that they they can log in to, create every zone that a user can log in to. For example, if you use the default label_encodings file, you would create a zone for the PUBLIC label.

  2. If you are using UFS and not Solaris ZFS, enable the NFS server to serve itself.
    1. In the global zone, modify the automount entry in the nsswitch.conf file.

      Use the trusted editor to edit the /etc/nsswitch.conf file. For the procedure, see How to Edit Administrative Files in Trusted Extensions in Solaris Trusted Extensions Administrator’s Procedures.

      automount: files
    2. In the global zone, run the automount command.
  3. For every labeled zone, follow the automount procedure in How to NFS Mount Files in a Labeled Zone in Solaris Trusted Extensions Administrator’s Procedures. Then, return to this procedure.
  4. Verify that the home directories have been created.
    1. Log out of the home directory server.
    2. As a regular user, log in to the home directory server.
    3. In the login zone, open a terminal.
    4. In the terminal window, verify that the user's home directory exists.
    5. Create workspaces for every zone that the user can work in.
    6. In each zone, open a terminal window to verify that the user's home directory exists.
  5. Log out of the home directory server.

Enable Users to Access Their Home Directories in Trusted Extensions

Users can initially log in to the home directory server to create a home directory that can be shared with other systems. To create a home directory at every label, each user must log in to the home directory server at every label.

Alternatively, you, as administrator, can create a script to create a mount point for home directories on each user's home system before the user first logs in. The script creates mount points at every label at which the user is permitted to work.

Before You Begin

The home directory server for your Trusted Extensions domain is configured.