Public bug reported:
Please include an abstraction file for TCP wappers - e.g.
abstractions/tcpwap
This would include, at minimum,
```
/etc/hosts.allow r,
/etc/hosts.deny r,
```
Software built to read hosts.allow (e.g. built with libwrap0) will
usually have these permissions incorporated into their AppArmor
profiles.
However, the hosts.allow/deny files can reference other files in
arbitrary filesystem locations - so any file references in hosts.allow
must also then be added to all profiles that reference hosts.allow.
Using an abstraction would allow this to be added once.
from man 5 hosts.allow
```
A string that begins with a '/' character is treated as a file name. A host
name or address is matched if it matches any host name or address pattern
listed in the named file. The file format is zero or more lines with zero or
more host name or address patterns separated by whitespace. A file name pattern
can be used anywhere a host name or address pattern can be used.
```
** Affects: apparmor (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1864466
Title:
abstraction file for tcpwrappers
Status in apparmor package in Ubuntu:
New
Bug description:
Please include an abstraction file for TCP wappers - e.g.
abstractions/tcpwap
This would include, at minimum,
```
/etc/hosts.allow r,
/etc/hosts.deny r,
```
Software built to read hosts.allow (e.g. built with libwrap0) will
usually have these permissions incorporated into their AppArmor
profiles.
However, the hosts.allow/deny files can reference other files in
arbitrary filesystem locations - so any file references in hosts.allow
must also then be added to all profiles that reference hosts.allow.
Using an abstraction would allow this to be added once.
from man 5 hosts.allow
```
A string that begins with a '/' character is treated as a file name. A host
name or address is matched if it matches any host name or address pattern
listed in the named file. The file format is zero or more lines with zero or
more host name or address patterns separated by whitespace. A file name pattern
can be used anywhere a host name or address pattern can be used.
```
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