> I _think_ no. > I just googled around, to find out what SE is and If it isn't enabled > by default in RHEL5 I didn't enable it...hope this helps > > I just saw in /etc/passwd, that the home-dir of the named-user was > /var/named. I normaly would have created a symlink from /var/named to > /configs/named, but now I changed this into /configs/named.
SE is SELinux - type "sestatus" at a command prompt to tell you if it is enabled. I think that it is enabled by Red Hat by default. It will definitely cause you problems if your named root is in a weird place. If SELinux is preventing access by named to your chroot, you should see messages in /var/log/messages. If you have the setroubleshoot package installed, you should be able to run "sealert -a /var/log/messages" to see what kind of SELinux denials you are getting. -- Sam _______________________________________________ rhelv5-list mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/rhelv5-list
