Your welcome. You might try system-config-securitylevel and edit the
HTTPD settings. Try:
Allow HTTPD cgi support.
Allow HTTPD scripts to connect to the network.
Allow HTTPD to support built-in scripting.
Unify HTTPD handling of all content files. (maybe? try last)
Unify HTTPD to communicate with the terminal.
You can then use 'chcon' and 'ls -alZ' to help work with the SELinux
permissions. Check your messages log to see the SELinux access denied
messages to get a better understanding of what is going on in the
background. This resource might help you use SELinux:
http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/selinux-apache-fc3/
Cheers to Linux,
Jonathan Steffan
P.S. I think you need to restart for the changes by
system-config-securitylevel to take effect.
Blair Copeland wrote:
Thanks to the brilliance of Jonathan Steffan it turns out that Fedora 4
has SELinux enabled by default. "Hello problem."
Thank you sir and hopefully no one will waste thier time now.
I appreciate it Jon and I appreciate the list maintainers here.
Sorry it turned out to be off topic.
Blair