shashi wrote:
And in the log file , the given bellow message is printed
Feb 2 13:53:42 SuSE kernel: dazuko: module not supported by Novell, setting U taint flag. Feb 2 13:53:42 SuSE kernel: dazuko: info: using chroot events for chroot'd processes Feb 2 13:53:42 SuSE kernel: There is already a security framework initialized, register_security failed. Feb 2 13:53:42 SuSE kernel: dazuko: failed to register
Dazuko and AppArmor cannot share a kernel. They both want to use the LSM security framework, and they can't share it. I'm always curious why people even want an in-kernel antivirus product for Linux. There is no virus threat against Linux in practice. Caveats: * There are threats against Linux, they just aren't viruses. That's what AppArmor is for. * There are Linux machines that serve Windows clients that are vulnerable to viruses. Then you need AV filtering on the Linux server, but you don't need it in the kernel: o If it is a mail server, you need it in the MTA. Use ClamAV or similar. o If it is a file server, use one of the many AV plugins for Samba http://www.google.com/search?q=samba+antivirus&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official So there is no case that I understand where AV filtering is actually required in a Linux kernel, you only ever need user-level AV filtering. Unless maybe you have Windows clients mounting NFS volumes from a Linux server, but I've never seen that. But perhaps I'm missing something. What problem are you trying to solve? Crispin -- Crispin Cowan, Ph.D. http://crispincowan.com/~crispin/ Director of Software Engineering, Novell http://novell.com Hacking is exploiting the gap between "intent" and "implementation" --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-security+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-security+help@opensuse.org