Somebody in the thread at some point said: >> Well, none of these are normal avcs that you would see if selinux was >> denying access to something. >> >> A classical avc that makes trouble looks like this: >> >> Sep 2 05:03:13 hostname kernel: audit(1188705793.190:416): avc: denied >> { search } for pid=12965 comm="wpa_supplicant" name="netdev:wlan0" >> dev=debugfs ino=2841020 scontext=user_u:system_r:NetworkManager_t:s0 >> tcontext=system_u:object_r:debugfs_t:s0 tclass=dir > Come on Andy, there are a whole lot of AVC things and they explain why > the computer came up so slow. SELinux was trying to get some things done > and they were not succeeding so it slowed everything to a crawl. > > What is there are reports of error, and I got them from > /var/log/messages/ and explains to me how SELinux slowed down my computer. How many of these "AVC things" that are not avcs are there? Unless there are hundreds of thousands per boot it doesn't in itself explain why it "slowed everything to a crawl". If permissions are denied on opening a file or whatever, it's recorded in a single avc and that is the end of the story, it failed -- bang, exit. It doesn't hang around weeping and feeling bad until it gets the energy to go on. There has to be a reason why a process hangs on until it times out, and "selinux problems" is not enough of an explanation. As proposed by others, network timeouts are a pretty common source of hanging around for 'long' periods -- 'long' considering the 2 or 3 billion operations a second your CPU is always wanting to do. -Andy -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list