10-21-2011
Hi,
I never herd of JEDI used in Windows, but I have experience using it with Solaris. In windows the banner is usually a thin line across the top of the desktop with the security label centered. It doesn't work like this in Solaris. Most of the time the banner is on Solaris TX systems and not regular Solaris systems. On the top menu bar of the JDS can display in the blank area to the right, but not across the whole screen. Also the apps like terminal can be setup to have a banner at the top of the window under the menu. At where I work we have both of them setup. Also we have the desktop background the same color as the label color, example green, red, etc..
I'm not at work right now so I can't look at the system and tell you which files to edit.
Why are you setting this up? It is not required to do this to STIG the box. An easy fix would be to create a walpaper with the label and not let the user change it.
Anyway I hope this helps.
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LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
bltocolor
bltocolor(3TSOL) Trusted Extensions Library Functions bltocolor(3TSOL)
NAME
bltocolor, bltocolor_r - get character-coded color name of label
SYNOPSIS
cc [flag...] file... -ltsol [library...]
#include <tsol/label.h>
char *bltocolor(const m_label_t *label);
char *bltocolor_r(const m_label_t *label, const int size,
char *color_name);
DESCRIPTION
The bltocolor() and bltocolor_r() functions get the character-coded color name associated with the binary label label.
The calling process must have PRIV_SYS_TRANS_LABEL in its set of effective privileges to get color names of labels that dominate the cur-
rent process's sensitivity label.
RETURN VALUES
The bltocolor() function returns a pointer to a statically allocated string that contains the character-coded color name specified for the
label or returns (char *)0 if, for any reason, no character-coded color name is available for this binary label.
The bltocolor_r() function returns a pointer to the color_name string which contains the character-coded color name specified for the label
or returns (char *)0 if, for any reason, no character-coded color name is available for this binary label. color_name must provide for a
string of at least size characters.
FILES
/etc/security/tsol/label_encodings
The label encodings file contains the classification names, words, constraints, and values for the defined labels of this system.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Interface Stability |Obsolete |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|MT-Level |MT-Safe with exceptions |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
These functions are obsolete and retained for ease of porting. They might be removed in a future Solaris Trusted Extensions release. Use
the label_to_str(3TSOL) function instead.
The bltocolor() function returns a pointer to a statically allocated string. Subsequent calls to it will overwrite that string with a new
character-coded color name. It is not MT-Safe. The bltocolor_r() function should be used in multithreaded applications.
SEE ALSO
label_to_str(3TSOL), libtsol(3LIB), attributes(5)
NOTES
The functionality described on this manual page is available only if the system is configured with Trusted Extensions.
If label includes a specified word or words, the character-coded color name associated with the first word specified in the label encodings
file is returned. Otherwise, if no character-coded color name is specified for label, the first character-coded color name specified in the
label encodings file with the same classification as the binary label is returned.
SunOS 5.11 20 Jul 2007 bltocolor(3TSOL)