Karl Larsen wrote:
Well it has been SELINUX=disabled for quite a while after I had the
problem, but when I read dmesg after reboot I still see
SELINUX=passive. So there is something not right yet.
Do yourself a favor and scan for ALL SELinux messages in dmesg, not
just the first occurrence you see:
This is what it says on a server where I have it disabled:
:~> grep SELinux /var/log/dmesg
SELinux: Initializing.
SELinux: Starting in permissive mode
SELinux: Registering netfilter hooks
SELinux: Disabled at runtime.
SELinux: Unregistering netfilter hooks
As you can see, yes SELinux does come up active, but then gets
disabled further down into the boot sequence.
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