Manuel Wolfshant wrote:
Jóhann B. Guðmundsson wrote:
Matej Cepl wrote:
On 2008-03-11, 10:38 GMT, Jóhann B. Guðmundsson wrote:
You do so by open a termina and run
echo 0 > /selinux/enforce
You do so by opening a terminal and run (as root, of course):
setenforce 0
Matěj
What both Matej and Tim forget to mention is
the fact that by running setenforce 0 command
it will change your selinux configuration settings permanently to
permissive
hence on next reboot your selinux would be running in permissive mode
instead of enforcing mode and leave your computer less secure...
Since when is this valid? On my system permanent changes must be done
via /etc/sysconfig/selinux. setenforce looses its effects after reboot
Since I apperantly was born stuborn and have to have the last word in
hasting misread the man page
( since I was being criticized by Matej by suggesting to the user the
selinux might be the culprit and showing him
how to set selinux to permissive mode with echo which apparently is not
as as fansy way to do it as setenforce.. ) note Tim showed
him the other way ( the apparently popular way ..setenforce 0 ) 8
minutes after I responded to him to achieve the same thing..
Don't worry I wont bother helping users again that accidental post to
this list...
Best regards.
Johann B.
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email;internet:johannbg@xxxxx
title:Unix System Engineer RHCE,CCSA
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