Tim wrote:
Tim:
Ignoring all updates to SELinux (add exlude rules to yum.conf).
Tom Horsley:
I'd assume that would quickly break down as the things
that depend on it decided they needed newer versions
installed.
Try it, and see. I don't see too many changes to the SELinux policy
files (*its* default rules, etc.), I don't recall it forcing other
things to update at the same time. There's only four obvious SELinux
packages on my system:
[tim@bigblack ~]$ rpm -qa \*selinux\*
libselinux-2.0.13-1.fc7
selinux-policy-targeted-2.6.4-21.fc7
libselinux-python-2.0.13-1.fc7
selinux-policy-2.6.4-21.fc7
rpm -qa \*policy\* libse\*
libsepol-2.0.4-1.fc8
checkpolicy-debuginfo-2.0.3-1.fc8
selinux-policy-3.0.1-3.fc8
libsemanage-debuginfo-2.0.3-1.fc7
policycoreutils-2.0.22-3.fc8
libselinux-python-2.0.22-1.fc8
libsemanage-devel-2.0.3-3.fc8
libsepol-devel-2.0.4-1.fc8
libsexy-0.1.11-1.fc7
policycoreutils-gui-2.0.22-3.fc8
libsepol-debuginfo-2.0.3-1.fc7
policycoreutils-debuginfo-2.0.19-4.fc8
libselinux-devel-2.0.22-1.fc8
selinux-policy-targeted-3.0.1-3.fc8
checkpolicy-2.0.3-2.fc8
libselinux-debuginfo-2.0.21-2.fc8
selinux-policy-devel-3.0.1-3.fc8
libselinux-2.0.22-1.fc8
libsemanage-2.0.3-3.fc8
policycoreutils-newrole-2.0.22-3.fc8