On 02/09/12 15:19, T.C. Hollingsworth wrote:
You can boot into permissive mode by adding "selinux=permissive" to
the kernel command line. (You can also change to it on the fly by
running `setenforce 0` or change it permanently by editing
/etc/sysconfig/selinux.)
A script run during boot checks for the existence of /.autorelabel,
which will trigger a complete scan of your filesystem, relabeling any
strange SELinux contexts to their defaults, so `touch /.autorelabel`
should fix any SELinux issues you might have. You can also reset
individual files with the `restorecon` command.
Te setenforce 0 command appears to solve the problem. What did I break
to make this a requirement? How dd yo learn these ind of details? I am
quite jealous. Thanks again for help. I has been long one:-)
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