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Oracle Solaris Trusted Extensions Administrator's Procedures Oracle Solaris 10 8/11 Information Library |
1. Trusted Extensions Administration Concepts
2. Trusted Extensions Administration Tools
3. Getting Started as a Trusted Extensions Administrator (Tasks)
4. Security Requirements on a Trusted Extensions System (Overview)
5. Administering Security Requirements in Trusted Extensions (Tasks)
6. Users, Rights, and Roles in Trusted Extensions (Overview)
7. Managing Users, Rights, and Roles in Trusted Extensions (Tasks)
8. Remote Administration in Trusted Extensions (Tasks)
9. Trusted Extensions and LDAP (Overview)
10. Managing Zones in Trusted Extensions (Tasks)
Zones and IP Addresses in Trusted Extensions
Zones and ICMP in Trusted Extensions
Global Zone Processes and Labeled Zones
How to Display Ready or Running Zones
How to Display the Labels of Mounted Files
How to Loopback Mount a File That Is Usually Not Visible in a Labeled Zone
How to Disable the Mounting of Lower-Level Files
How to Share a ZFS Dataset From a Labeled Zone
How to Enable Files to be Relabeled From a Labeled Zone
How to Configure a Multilevel Port for NFSv3 Over udp
How to Create a Multilevel Port for a Zone
11. Managing and Mounting Files in Trusted Extensions (Tasks)
12. Trusted Networking (Overview)
13. Managing Networks in Trusted Extensions (Tasks)
14. Multilevel Mail in Trusted Extensions (Overview)
15. Managing Labeled Printing (Tasks)
16. Devices in Trusted Extensions (Overview)
17. Managing Devices for Trusted Extensions (Tasks)
18. Trusted Extensions Auditing (Overview)
19. Software Management in Trusted Extensions (Tasks)
A. Quick Reference to Trusted Extensions Administration
Some zone administration tasks can be performed from the command line. However, the simplest way to administer zones is to use the GUIs that Trusted Extensions provides:
The configuration of zone security attributes is performed by using the Trusted Network Zones tool in the Solaris Management Console. For a description of the tool, see Trusted Network Zones Tool. For examples of zone configuration and creation, see Chapter 4, Configuring Trusted Extensions (Tasks), in Oracle Solaris Trusted Extensions Configuration Guide and How to Create a Multilevel Port for a Zone.
The shell script, /usr/sbin/txzonemgr, provides a menu-based wizard for creating, installing, initializing, and booting zones. If you are administering zones from Solaris Trusted Extensions (JDS), use the txzonemgr script rather than Trusted CDE actions. txzonemgr uses the zenity command. For details, see the zenity(1) man page.
In Trusted CDE, the configuration and creation of zones can be performed by using actions in the Trusted_Extensions folder. For a description of the actions, see Trusted CDE Actions. For procedures that use the actions, see How to Start CDE Administrative Actions in Trusted Extensions.