disabling selinux required reboot, logging "permissive mode" is possible
without rebooting.

you can use setenforce 0 to temporary disable selinux ("permissive mode"),
but you should make change permanent (in redhat configation file is located
in /etc/sysconfig/selinux)

Anyway, disabling selinux is not required, permissive mode works also fine.

--
Eero

2015-07-10 17:35 GMT+03:00 Ian Samuel <[email protected]>:

>
> How should I disable SELinux?  setenforce doesn't show that as an option:
>
> ~]# setenforce
> usage:  setenforce [ Enforcing | Permissive | 1 | 0 ]
> ~]# getenforce
> Permissive
>
> ~]# setenforce 0
> ~]# getenforce
> Permissive
>
> i.
>
> On Fri, Jul 10, 2015 at 04:29:20PM +0200, Reindl Harald wrote:
> >
> >
> > Am 10.07.2015 um 16:24 schrieb W Scott Lockwood III:
> > >I'm sorry, but you're just plain wrong. We're done here.
> >
> > no, he is *not* wrong, RTFM SELinux manpages and *if* disabled/permissive
> > makes a single difference you need to *exactly* specify your envirnoment
> > *and* report a bug - period
> >
>
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