Run this command to see if selinux is running : getenforce
If you see permissive , then you should be fine, if you see the output
to be enforcing , then set it to permissive, without having to restart :
setenforce permissive
If this solves the problem, then yes it was selinux, however the above
settings is temporary and for next reboot you will have to edit :
/etc/sysconfig/selinux and set the selinux to permissive from enforcing.
This way you don't have to reboot machine to have selinux change applied.
Thanks
*Amit K Nepal
Infrastructure Engineer (RHCE)
omNovia Technologies Inc. <http://www.omnovia.com>
Amit K Nepal <http://www.amitnepal.com>
<http://www.amitnepal.com>*
On 2/19/2013 11:21 AM, Eric Cope wrote:
Hi all,
I am trying to get Samba to installed on a CentOS 6.2 machine. I have
read-only access working, but when I try to make edits to files, it
claims I don't have permissions. I copied my smb.conf file from
another machine that had things working, so the conf file should be good.
I read some online about SELinux settings. I tried setting a few, but
it had no change. Does anyone have any ideas?
Thanks,
Eric
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