yea, that seems to be still a problem/bug. if you have set
SELINUX=enforcing in /etc/sysconfig/selinux, the kernel-param selinux=0
won't work (won't even boot...as you said).
but you may rm /etc/sysconfig/selinux, then selinux=0 should work pretty
fine.
regards
red_alert
Felipe Alfaro Solana schrieb:
On Sat, 2004-04-03 at 12:15, David Kvarnberg wrote:
>On Sat, 2004-04-03 at 12:00 +0200, Axel Jerabek wrote:
>
>
>>I installed the fedora core 2 and i am not really happy with the SElinux
>>behaviour.
>>since i ported our video software to the 2.6 kernel i used the fedora core 2
>>release.
>>but unhappily i installed it with the SElinux option. Is there a way to get
>>rid of the SElinux
>>without having to reinstall the buddy again?
>>
>
>You can turn off SELinux by adding a kernel param to /etc/grub.conf
>Like this:
>
>kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.4-1.300 root=/dev/hda2 ro selinux=0
> ^^^^^^^^^
>
>After rebooting, SELinux will be turned off.
This won't for me. Instead, after booting, kernel panics trying to kill
init as no policy has it seems SELinux is still enable but no policy
been loaded into the kernel.
Instead, I changed SELINUX=enforcing to SELINUX=0 in
/etc/sysconfig/selinux.
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