On 07/06/07, Matthew J. Roth <mroth@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
There was recently an article about SELinux on Slashdot. The comments contain some useful ideas, including enabling SELinux in permissive mode. In permissive mode, security violations are logged but not enforced. This allows you to configure SELinux for your system prior to setting it to enforcing mode, which is a good alternative to simply disabling it as soon as it causes a problem.
This is exactly how I do it. Permissive, to learn and to test, but not to interrupt. Dotan Cohen http://lyricslist.com/ http://what-is-what.com/