Currently, a 'base' policy can only be created with some clever configuration. The base policy is almost always required, so the architecture/configuration should reflect that. That is, perhaps we directly define these base states, and tie them to a policy as the 'unset' limits.
Currently, a 'base' policy can only be created with some clever configuration. The base policy is almost always required, so the architecture/configuration should reflect that. That is, perhaps we directly define these base states, and tie them to a policy as the 'unset' limits.