4.8. The file_t and default_t Types
When using a file system that supports extended attributes (EA), the
file_t
type is the default type of a file that has not yet been assigned EA value. This type is only used for this purpose and does not exist on correctly-labeled file systems, because all files on a system running SELinux should have a proper SELinux context, and the file_t
type is never used in file-context configuration[4].
The
default_t
type is used on files that do not match any pattern in file-context configuration, so that such files can be distinguished from files that do not have a context on disk, and generally are kept inaccessible to confined domains. For example, if you create a new top-level directory, such as mydirectory/
, this directory may be labeled with the default_t type. If services need access to this directory, you need to update the file-contexts configuration for this location. See Section 4.7.2, “Persistent Changes: semanage fcontext” for details on adding a context to the file-context configuration.
[4]
Files in the
/etc/selinux/targeted/contexts/files/
directory define contexts for files and directories. Files in this directory are read by the restorecon
and setfiles
utilities to restore files and directories to their default contexts.