SELinux Reset

Justin P. Mattock justinmattock at gmail.com
Sat Aug 8 07:45:07 UTC 2009


Peter Joseph wrote:
>> enforcing =0 should work.
>> are you putting it the right area in grub/lilo?
>> also you should be able to just change
>> /etc/selinux/config
>> set to permissive mode to avoid using the boot command line.
>> or
>> setenforce 0
>> and
>> echo 0>  /selinux/enforce
>> to put the policy in permissive mode until things get cleaned.
>> Justin P. Mattock
>>      
> --
> SELinux has to be completely DISABLED for anybody to log in.  Changing
> /etc/selinux/config to a permissive mode is of no use.
> I am thinking about trying to change all booleans from deny to allow (wow,
> what a monstrous task).  After all, that is how this trouble started in the
> first place.
> PJ
>
> fedora-selinux-list mailing list
> fedora-selinux-list at redhat.com
> https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-selinux-list
>
>
>
>    
yeah but booleans don't mess with the
MBR or the bootloader of the kernel?

Justin P. Mattock




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