I have executed the following command at centos pc and command output are placed below
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# rpm -qa | grep -i -e selinux
libselinux-devel-1.19.1-7.2
selinux-doc-1.14.1-1
libselinux-1.19.1-7.2
selinux-policy-targeted-sources-1.17.30-2.140
selinux-policy-targeted-1.17.30-2.140
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# cat /proc/cmdline
auto BOOT_IMAGE=linux ro BOOT_FILE=/boot/vmlinuz-2.6.9-42.EL rhgb quiet root=LABEL=/

Regards
-S.Balaji

Did you try my previous suggestion of adding "selinux=1 enforcing=1" to the kernel line in your grub.conf? While you're at it .. make sure that you're editing /boot/grub/grub.conf .. most people use /etc/grub.conf .. which is a symlink to /boot/grub/grub.conf .. if the symlink is broken and /etc/grub.conf is an independent file, you can edit it all day and not affect grub. Same goes for /etc/selinux/config which is the real file, and /etc/sysconfig/selinux which is what most people edit.

Barry
_______________________________________________
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos

Reply via email to