Mounting drives

shrek-m at gmx.de shrek-m at gmx.de
Fri Apr 2 17:41:57 UTC 2004


William Hooper wrote:

>shrek-m at gmx.de said:
>  
>
>>i had to disable selinux
>>http://people.redhat.com/kwade/fedora-docs/selinux-faq-en/
>>
>># cat /etc/sysconfig/selinux
>>SELINUX=disabled
>>    
>>
>I think better advice would be to try permissive mode first, that way if
>you decided to go back to enforcing mode you have less pain.
>  
>

i had no luck with permissive, this was the reason i did not mentioned it.

enforce  -  reboot, no luck
permissive  -  reboot, no luck

disabled  -  reboot, ok

bootparameter   selinux=0  was ok, but this is not recommended
(my understanding with my little english)



http://people.redhat.com/kwade/fedora-docs/selinux-faq-en/
----
Q: How do I turn SELinux off at boot?
A: Add selinux=0 to your kernel command line

Warning

Be very careful using this option. If you boot with selinux=0, any files 
you create will not have SELinux context information. At the least you 
may need to relabel the file system, and it's possible you will be 
unable to boot with selinux=1.

As an alternative to selinux=0, try using SELINUX=disabled in 
/etc/sysconfig/selinux.

[...]
However, setting the value to disabled is not the same as selinux=0. The 
disabled setting instead turns enforcing off and skips loading a policy.
----


-- 
shrek-m





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