On Wednesday 07 January 2009, Stephen Smalley wrote: > On Wed, 2009-01-07 at 10:23 -0500, John Aldrich wrote: > > I thought that by setting selinux to "disabled" in the config file, I > > wouldn't be bothered by it's alerts any more. How do I stop SELinux > > from running, period? I don't want any alerts from SELinux regarding > > stuff I'm trying to install. > > SELINUX=disabled in /etc/selinux/config should have done the trick for > you. Can you provide the output of: > $ cat /etc/selinux/config > $ dmesg | grep SELinux: > [john@SLAVE1 ~]$ cat /etc/selinux/config # This file controls the state of SELinux on the system. # SELINUX= can take one of these three values: # enforcing - SELinux security policy is enforced. # permissive - SELinux prints warnings instead of enforcing. # disabled - SELinux is fully disabled. SELINUX=disabled # SELINUXTYPE= type of policy in use. Possible values are: # targeted - Only targeted network daemons are protected. # strict - Full SELinux protection. SELINUXTYPE=targeted [john@SLAVE1 ~]$ dmesg | grep selinux SELinux: initialized (dev selinuxfs, type selinuxfs), uses genfs_contexts Note that I have not rebooted yet, if that's necessary. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines