On 01/14/2014 12:34 PM, Madhav V Diwan wrote:
to set selinux permissive without reboot , use the setenforce command

this threads issue was NFS permissions though..

I would check both, as Sven suggested. If SELinux is enforced, the policy might be blocking NFS service, you never know. Easy enough to try.

-Bob


-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Doolittle <b...@doolittle.us.com>
To: Sven Kieske <s.kie...@mittwald.de>, users@ovirt.org
<users@ovirt.org>
Subject: Re: [Users] issue with conversion of ESXi 5 centos VM to
fedora19 ovirt host
Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2014 11:47:48 -0500

The first thing I do in a situation like this is to disable iptables and
firewalld, to see if the problem clears up.

systemctl stop iptables; systemctl stop firewalld

Then, if I actually need them (usually I don't), I drill deeper.

Also, I always configure SELinux to "permissive" in /etc/selinux/config
(but I don't know how to make that take effect immediately without
reboot on Fedora).

-Bob

On 01/14/2014 11:38 AM, Sven Kieske wrote:
Hi,

I didn't reread the whole thread, but did you check firewall settings
and SELinux if they permit NFS to those directorys?

Am 14.01.2014 17:33, schrieb Matthew Booth:
Hi, Madhav.

I don't see a response from you about the NFS permission test. Did you
do it? I remain convinced that this is your problem.

Matt
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