Hi,
In Fedora Core 2, if we add selinux=0 to the kernel boot line, SELinux will be disabled
completely.
By adding SELINUX=disabled into /etc/sysconfig/selinux. We can "disable" the
SELinux kernel. Surely disabled in here doesn't fully disable the SELinux kernel but
simply boots into permissive mode and skips loading the policy.
Then, If we do this(i.e. adding SELINUX=disabled into /etc/sysconfig/selinux), Will new
files be created without security context information? Need we relabel the entire
filesystem again?
Thanks,
--
Best Regards,
Park Lee <parklee_sel(a)yahoo.com>
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Then, If we do this(i.e. adding SELINUX=disabled
into /etc/sysconfig/selinux), Will new files be created without
security context information? Need we relabel the entire filesystem
again?