Solved. Gosch big F F-word. It was this very fantastic hidden feature
everyone (?) longs for:
SELinux which is integral to Fedora Linux it seems
Making my system secure, from badasses like myself.
well, I found a verb; setenforce 0 -- made it, now I have the right to do
what should be done
possibly I one day will learn how to use it in a proper way to actually
secure my server
and then I might even be happy about it.
realizing this has not been PHP at all, and thanks for all advice
for now
/georg
----- Original Message -----
From: "Serge Fonville" <serge.fonville@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <larry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "georg" <georg.chambert@xxxxxxxxx>; "PHP Mailinglist"
<php-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2013 5:25 PM
Subject: Re: ODBC
better would be to allow apache acces to the module
i.e. http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=711418
Kind regards/met vriendelijke groet,
Serge Fonville
http://www.sergefonville.nl
Convince Microsoft!
They need to add TRUNCATE PARTITION in SQL Server
https://connect.microsoft.com/SQLServer/feedback/details/417926/truncate-partition-of-partitioned-table
2013/5/19 Larry Martell <larry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
On Sun, May 19, 2013 at 9:06 AM, georg <georg.chambert@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Actually who the heck has put SELinux in my machine ?
>
> anyone knows (is this a part of fedora ?)
Never used Fedora, but it's part of Red Hat and Centos, so would guess
it's also part of fedora. You can disable SELinux with this:
echo 0 > /selinux/enforce
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