Jacques B. wrote: >>> For my home system I used the GUI to change SELinux to >>> none as I was having a minor flash plugin install problem. Tim: >> Care to elaborate? We tried installing plugins for Flash, and the >> installation appeared to work, but Flash didn't. On a hunch, I tried >> changing SELinux to permissive, and loaded a test page. This time Flash >> did work. Roger Grosswiler: > sorry, i am not at home, and cannot check. Whenever you get a chance, or anybody else who can check, I'd be interested to know. > is enforcing the policy which is installed by default? It was for us. Started an install without customising anything other than where GRUB was supposed to be (which didn't work, by the way, I had to hand install it afterward). > i remember testing it with go.icq.com, it launched the login page, but > login was not possible, so perhaps, this was the issue. otherwise on > disabled it worked fine. so, in permissive mode it works too? Permissive is supposed to allow you do what you're trying, but log any errors that SELinux *would* have produced had it stopped what was being done. -- Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.