Daniel J Walsh (dwalsh@xxxxxxxxxx) said: > 5. Tools and libraries (fixfiles, libselinux, init, and setools) will be > modified to use the /etc/sysconfig/selinux file to determine which > policy to currently use on the system and where the policy files are > located. > > 6. If during the install /etc/sysconfig/selinux does not exist or does > not contain an entry for the type of policy, the first one installed > will set the context to itself. > > cat /etc/sysconfig/selinux > # > # Change the following line to enforcing, permissive or disabled. > # On the next boot the machine will come up in one the selected mode > # > SELINUX=enforcing > # > # Select the type of policy that you are running current values are > # strict and targeted > # > SELINUXTYPE=strict This requires rewriting the config tool to handle this (and not blow it away each time it's run... currently it will.) Bill