Hi,
One of the reasons I'm using Fedora is because the exceptional support for SELinux and auditd that so far - despite a known incompatibility with Docker + Btrfs - is working great.
Said that, kudos to everyone who makes SELinux integration such smooth.
On Tue, Jun 23, 2015 at 1:36 AM Kevin Wilson wkevils@gmail.com wrote:
Dan, Thanks a lot for your reply. In fact, I ran pm -e selinux-policy-targeted rpm -e selinux-policy And after reboot I got some message about freeze from systemd, I could not login (tried twice), so I reinstalled Linux on this machine. The question is: what do you mean by "If you disable SELinux".
Does that mean adding "selinux=0" on command line? Or is it enough to set, in /etc/selinux/config
SELINUX=disabled
(or maybe better is SELINUX=permissive, as Ali suggested ). Regards, Kevin
Yes, as Ali suggested in this particular use case the best approach would be to set SELINUX=permissive and reboot.
Regards, -Martín