> From: [email protected] [mailto:discuss-
> [email protected]] On Behalf Of dan moylan
> 
> > Become root. Although you could do this with sudo, it's more of a pain.
> > You must ensure the auditd service is installed and started.
> > yum -y install auditd policycoreutils-python
> > service auditd start
> 
> root conf[651] yum -y install auditd policycoreutils-python
> Loaded plugins: langpacks, refresh-packagekit
> updates/20/x86_64/metalink                                   |  18 kB  
> 00:00:00
> updates                                                      | 4.9 kB  
> 00:00:00
> updates/20/x86_64/primary_db                                 |  12 MB  
> 00:00:09
> (1/2): updates/20/x86_64/pkgtags                             | 1.3 MB  
> 00:00:00
> (2/2): updates/20/x86_64/updateinfo                          | 1.7 MB  
> 00:00:03
> No package auditd available.
> Package policycoreutils-python-2.2.5-4.fc20.x86_64 already installed and
> latest version
> Nothing to do

That's ok.  Continue!

(Also, you could start by simply checking the status of selinux to see if it's 
enforcing.  If it's not enforcing, then selinux is obviously not the problem.)
sestatus

First, make sure there's nothing in your audit log.
audit2allow -m local -l -i /var/log/audit/audit.log

If there is anything in there, clear it out with
semodule --reload

Now, temporarily disable selinux
setenforce 0

Do whatever would normally get blocked.
And re-enable selinux
setenforce 1
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