On 08/06/2009 06:21 PM, Peter Joseph wrote: > While experimenting with SELinux, I finally managed to lock myself out of the > system. The only way to get back in, I had to add "selinux=0" to the end of > the kernel line. > Now, if I run in a permissive mode the following message appears when I try > to log in: > > "Could not connect to session bus: An SELinux policy prevents this sender > from sending this message to this recipient (rejected message had sender > "(unset)" interface "org.freedesktop.DBus" member "Hello" error name > "(unset)" destination "org.freedesktop.DBus)." > > I am forced to go back to the grub prompt and disable SELinux again, in > order to get in. What is the best way to reset SEL to its original state? I have no idea what is going on on your system. I would figure you either have a problem with labeling, or you have a problem upgrading from an older version of SELInux. Did you upgrade or was this a fresh install? If an Upgrade, what version to what version Also what does # semanage login -l show? # semodule -l | grep unconfined Show? -- fedora-selinux-list mailing list fedora-selinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-selinux-list