I mentioned elsewhere in the thread, I (well, my employer) picked up a copy of a book on SELinux System Administration (that's the title) and it has served just this function for me.
It won't make you an expert but it takes the voodoo out of the whole process, if that makes sense. And it is reasonably short if you skip the stuff that you're (probably) never going to configure like passing labelled traffic between hosts with IPSEC.
It won't make you an expert but it takes the voodoo out of the whole process, if that makes sense. And it is reasonably short if you skip the stuff that you're (probably) never going to configure like passing labelled traffic between hosts with IPSEC.