> On 2020-04-18 18:46, Sreyan Chakravarty wrote:
> 
> Well, since selinux operates on file/directory contexts and no files or 
> directories are
> involved as mentioned bySamuel: "The header contains pointers to the rest of 
> the
> data. It doesn't have to know anything about the filesystem." And since 
> selinux
> is implemented in
> the kernel and that isn't "running" yet. It stands to reason that you
> won't have problems.
> 
> At least that is my stab at explaining it.  :-)

Thats interesting but then why did I get the problem in the first place then ? 
My other topic is labelled SELinux is blocking Hibernate, and SELinux was 
legitimately interfering with the hibernate process, specifically blocking 
systemd-sleep to read the hibernate file.

The weird thing is why did it stop me once and then didn't stop me once I set 
it back from permissive to enforcing ? Did SELinux "learn" somehow that it is 
ok to allow access to the swap file ? 

This is all very confusing.
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