How to set enforcing to 0?

Paul Smith phhs80 at gmail.com
Mon Jan 28 20:50:10 UTC 2013


On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 8:45 PM, Daniel J Walsh <dwalsh at redhat.com> wrote:
>>>>> Boot your machine with enforcing=0 on the kernel line.  If you still
>>>>> have the problem, then it is probably not SELinux.  If it works, then
>>>>> I would try to relabel.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Thanks, Daniel. I have meanwhile overcome the problem by re-installing
>>>> Fedora. Now, everything seems to be working perfectly.
>>>>
>>>> By the way,
>>>>
>>>> enforcing=0
>>>>
>>>> was to be placed in the line that starts with the word
>>>>
>>>> 'linux',
>>>>
>>>> right?
>>>>
>>>> How can one do the relabeling?
>>>>
>>> touch /.autorelabel; reboot
>>
>>
>> Thanks, Daniel. But what is the kernel line? The one that starts with the
>> word 'linux' when one at the booting time presses the key 'e'?
>>
>> Paul
>>
> Yes, something like:
>
>         linux   /vmlinuz-3.8.0-0.rc4.git1.1.fc19.x86_64
> root=UUID=43a08079-a288-4e6f-8767-404eb56b8df3 ro rd.md=0 rd.lvm=0 rd.dm=0
> SYSFONT=True  KEYTABLE=us
> rd.luks.uuid=luks-d78a7fd8-3aba-4152-82c6-e9000fb2ca83
> rd.luks.uuid=luks-f1cc16a9-e403-4eeb-b5c7-5a6aa567f7c6 LANG=en_US.UTF-8 rhgb quiet


Thanks, Daniel. I had done that but with no success. However, I did
not do any relabeling, unfortunately. Anyway, the problem seems to be
overcome now.

Paul


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