Ok, so I've never had selinux enabled. The config is
__BEGIN__ # This file controls the state of SELinux on the system. # SELINUX= can take one of these three values: # enforcing - SELinux security policy is enforced. # permissive - SELinux prints warnings instead of enforcing. # disabled - SELinux is fully disabled. SELINUX=disabled # SELINUXTYPE= type of policy in use. Possible values are: # targeted - Only targeted network daemons are protected. # strict - Full SELinux protection. SELINUXTYPE=targeted __END__
I've got selinux=0 as a boot arg,
so why am I getting this message at boot time??
"Failed to load SELinux policy."
Just started after the update to
Updated: selinux-policy-3.9.16-10.fc15.noarch Updated: selinux-policy-targeted-3.9.16-10.fc15.noarch
thanks.
On 04/04/2011 09:14 AM, Brian Millett wrote:
Ok, so I've never had selinux enabled. The config is
__BEGIN__ # This file controls the state of SELinux on the system. # SELINUX= can take one of these three values: # enforcing - SELinux security policy is enforced. # permissive - SELinux prints warnings instead of enforcing. # disabled - SELinux is fully disabled. SELINUX=disabled # SELINUXTYPE= type of policy in use. Possible values are: # targeted - Only targeted network daemons are protected. # strict - Full SELinux protection. SELINUXTYPE=targeted __END__
I've got selinux=0 as a boot arg,
so why am I getting this message at boot time??
"Failed to load SELinux policy."
Just started after the update to
Updated: selinux-policy-3.9.16-10.fc15.noarch Updated: selinux-policy-targeted-3.9.16-10.fc15.noarch
thanks.
Seeing the same thing here. Had to add selinux=0 to the boot line to get it to boot at all.
On 04/05/2011 03:09 AM, Phil Meyer wrote:
On 04/04/2011 09:14 AM, Brian Millett wrote:
Ok, so I've never had selinux enabled. The config is
__BEGIN__ # This file controls the state of SELinux on the system. # SELINUX= can take one of these three values: # enforcing - SELinux security policy is enforced. # permissive - SELinux prints warnings instead of enforcing. # disabled - SELinux is fully disabled. SELINUX=disabled # SELINUXTYPE= type of policy in use. Possible values are: # targeted - Only targeted network daemons are protected. # strict - Full SELinux protection. SELINUXTYPE=targeted __END__
I've got selinux=0 as a boot arg,
so why am I getting this message at boot time??
"Failed to load SELinux policy."
Just started after the update to
Updated: selinux-policy-3.9.16-10.fc15.noarch Updated: selinux-policy-targeted-3.9.16-10.fc15.noarch
thanks.
Seeing the same thing here. Had to add selinux=0 to the boot line to get it to boot at all.
We're just discussing this in #fedora-qa...
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=693410
On Tue, 2011-04-05 at 03:27 +1000, Steven Haigh wrote:
We're just discussing this in #fedora-qa...
Thanks,
CC'd to that bug. Now, patience my young padawan.
There is another bug, but it has to deal with relabeling of the filesystem. Since I've never had selinux enabled, that can't be it.