On Dec 29, 2013, at 11:37 PM, Ralf Corsepius <rc040203(a)freenet.de> wrote:
On 12/30/2013 07:01 AM, Chris Murphy wrote:
>
> On Dec 28, 2013, at 8:15 PM, Patrick Dupre <pdupre(a)gmx.com> wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I tried to set relabel by using system-config-selinux,
>> but nothing happens I have to keep selinux=0 to be able to boot!
>
> Try autorelabel=1, and in the future if you have selinux problems you don't want
to troubeleshoot use enforcing=0. Disabling selinux is a hammer and eventually causes more
problems.
With all due respect, disabling SELinux *must not cause problems*.
The instant you disable SELinux, labeling is no longer being done at all, so any software
updates while disabled lack labeling. Upon intentional or inadvertent re-enabling of
SELinux, there will be problems due to that. This is why disabling isn't a good idea,
and isn't necessary. Use enforcing=0 instead.
If it does, somebody is critically broken and needs to be fixed,
ASAP.
Feel free to rebuild your kernel ASAP, and actually disable SELinux at the source.
Chris Murphy