2017-08-18 22:09 GMT+02:00 Riccardo Murri <[email protected]>:

> I have been a bit wary of doing this: I am not using CentOS/RHEL and I
> know very little about the whole SELinux management in RHEL/CentOS.  I
> have the impression people tend to just disable it,


In our cluster we disable it by default. We also use ansible and this is
something we do in our "common" role.

We have to run many applications (mostly scientific software) that nobody
has ever tested with selinux enabled and we have found many issues with
software not running properly when selinux is enabled. We don't have the
resources to tweak the selinux configuration for each piece of software we
have to deploy so we keep it disabled. My guess is that is this the most
common in scientific clusters.

regards,
Pablo.

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