How to take out to selinux so I cannot instal neither ntfs nor the kernel.
Thaks for your help
Horacio
At 5:48 PM +0100 11/2/05, Horacio Ferrero wrote:
How to take out to selinux so I cannot instal neither ntfs nor the kernel.
Huh? Do you want SELinux on or off? Do you want to install something or prevent installing something?
Although this list is supposed to be in English, you might post again in your native language (French?) and hope someone will translate. ____________________________________________________________________ TonyN.:' mailto:tonynelson@georgeanelson.com ' http://www.georgeanelson.com/
So,
I've put selinux in permisive mode then to the command: yum update kernel I got the following result
Resolving Dependencies --> Populating transaction set with selected packages. Please wait. ---> Package kernel.i686 0:2.6.12-1.1381_FC3 set to be installed --> Running transaction check --> Processing Conflict: kernel conflicts selinux-policy-targeted< 1.17.30-3.16 --> Finished Dependency Resolution Error: kernel conflicts with selinux-policy-targeted< 1.17.30-3.16 [
Le mercredi 02 novembre 2005 à 13:03 -0500, Tony Nelson a écrit :
At 5:48 PM +0100 11/2/05, Horacio Ferrero wrote:
How to take out to selinux so I cannot instal neither ntfs nor the kernel.
Huh? Do you want SELinux on or off? Do you want to install something or prevent installing something?
Although this list is supposed to be in English, you might post again in your native language (French?) and hope someone will translate. ____________________________________________________________________ TonyN.:' mailto:tonynelson@georgeanelson.com ' http://www.georgeanelson.com/
Disable SELinux: EDIT '/etc/selinux/config' Change: SELINUX=enforcing to: SELINUX=disabled
Disable SELinux from grub. Previous method is recommended. EDIT /boot/grub/grub.conf (as above http://www.mjmwired.net/resources/mjm-fedora-fc4.html#boot): ADD 'selinux=0' on your kernel line in grub.
PS:taken from http://www.mjmwired.net/resources/mjm-fedora-fc4.html#selinux -------------------------- Gaston Martres Tech IT - Soluciones IT Cel: 15-5614-3012 http://www.tech-it.com.ar --------------------------
Horacio Ferrero wrote:
How to take out to selinux so I cannot instal neither ntfs nor the kernel.
Thaks for your help
Horacio
On 11/2/05, Horacio Ferrero horace.linux@noos.fr wrote:
How to take out to selinux so I cannot instal neither ntfs nor the kernel.
Thaks for your help
If you'd like to continue using SELinux, I'd suggest the following instead:
# setenforce Permissive
Then conduct your maintenance. Then perform:
# setenforce Enforcing
It's my opinion that it's better to figure out why what you're doing isn't working with SELinux than it is to remove it entirely. At anyrate, if you do plan to use SELinux in the future, do not follow the advice to disable it entirely. Instead set SELinux to behave permissively. This means that SELinux is still running, still logging, and still setting file contexts, but is not enforcing any policies. If you disable it entirely, you may run into unpredictable behavior should you choose to re-enable it in the future.
If you do disable it completely and then decide you want to run it again, use this procedure for re-enabling it:
1. Set SELinux to "enforcing" in /etc/sysconfig/selinux 2. Touch the file /.autorelabel 3. Reboot the machine immediately.
Good luck with your endevors!
-- Chris
"`The enemy we fight has no respect for human life or human rights. They don't deserve our sympathy,' he said. `But this isn't about who they are. This is about who we are. These are the values that distinguish us from our enemies.' - Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona
On Wed, 2 Nov 2005, Christofer C. Bell wrote:
On 11/2/05, Horacio Ferrero horace.linux@noos.fr wrote:
How to take out to selinux so I cannot instal neither ntfs nor the kernel.
Thaks for your help
If you'd like to continue using SELinux, I'd suggest the following instead:
# setenforce Permissive
Then conduct your maintenance. Then perform:
# setenforce Enforcing
It's my opinion that it's better to figure out why what you're doing isn't working with SELinux than it is to remove it entirely. At anyrate, if you do plan to use SELinux in the future, do not follow the advice to disable it entirely. Instead set SELinux to behave permissively. This means that SELinux is still running, still logging, and still setting file contexts, but is not enforcing any policies. If you disable it entirely, you may run into unpredictable behavior should you choose to re-enable it in the future.
If you do disable it completely and then decide you want to run it again, use this procedure for re-enabling it:
- Set SELinux to "enforcing" in /etc/sysconfig/selinux
- Touch the file /.autorelabel
- Reboot the machine immediately.
Also, if you are doing something that ought to work and works in permissive mode, post the denied AVC messages in /var/log/audit/audit.log to fedora-selinux mailing list and/or Fedora selinux in Bugzilla. That's how these issues get resolved in future releases.
Good luck with your endevors!
-- Chris
"`The enemy we fight has no respect for human life or human rights. They don't deserve our sympathy,' he said. `But this isn't about who they are. This is about who we are. These are the values that distinguish us from our enemies.' - Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona