Disagree....

   - On modern RH systems, selinux is enabled/enforcing by default.  RHish 
   users are victims here. Their vendor gave them the os set up with selinux 
   enforcing for better or worse as the starting point.  Much like RH systems 
   have to use 'yum' rather than 'apt', they also have to deal with selinux 
   one way or the other.  Few RH users know this, nor know how.


   - On a modern RH system,  no --user installation can possibly work at 
   bootup without fixing the selinux context (the recommended way) or 
   disabling selinux completely (not recommended, and requires editing a file 
   in /etc/sysconfig as root and rebooting before proceeding).

Bottom line is we're talking about needing to add 'two' lines to the 
quickstart (one to install wheel, one to run chcon), and using the system 
init file contents (copy the debian tab verbatim and make it appear in the 
RH tab too).

This also lets you be able to finally kill using init.d for modern RH 
systems and move to systemd like  for modern Debian systems.  Matthew's 
already said he wants to go systemd everywhere in the packages.  Why not 
get there for RH systems (via pip) too ?

Again, I'm happy to do the two minute PR to make the RH --user instructions 
actually correct and able to succeed.  I've already tested that they work.

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