On 08/06/2012 02:13 PM, Hakan Koseoglu wrote:
There are plenty of reasons for disabling SELINUX (well, this one is for RHEL actually but hey, see http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E11882_01/relnotes.112/e23558/toc.htm#CJADHDFJ) and they're valid. On the other hand, it should be set to permissive as discussed.
I'm not saying that there aren't. However, I've seen several cases here, and more on fedoraforum where people have disabled SELinux because some program's crashing, but there aren't any alerts, and then wondering why it didn't magically fix the problem.
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