
Hi, I just checked on my Fedora 19 box: setenforce 0 odes the trick you can switch back by using setenforce 1 and control it via getenforce these changes do not persist over reboot. for further documentation refer to: https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/13/html/Security-Enhanced_Linux/... (most of it should still be true on F19 and even F20) Am 14.01.2014 18:14, schrieb Bob Doolittle:
Maybe, I don't know.
On RH I used to just do "echo 0 > /selinux/enable" but that's not on Fedora.
-Bob
On 01/14/2014 12:08 PM, Sven Kieske wrote:
Does setenforce 0 not do the job on fedora?
Am 14.01.2014 17:47, schrieb Bob Doolittle:
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).
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