Introduction
Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux) is an enhanced security mechanism at the kernel level. Follow this guide to reinstall SELinux and reset the policy to default settings. If SELinux is not already installed, go directly to step 2.
Perform these steps as a sudo-enabled user, or root. This guide has been tested on:
- CentOS 8
- CentOS 7
- CentOS 6
1. Disable and Remove SELinux
# setenforce 0
# yum remove selinux-policy\*
# rm -rf /etc/selinux/targeted /etc/selinux/config
2. Install SELinux
# yum install selinux-policy-targeted
# yum install selinux-policy-devel policycoreutils
# touch /.autorelabel; reboot
SELinux will detect the /.autorelabel file on reboot, and then relabel all files with the correct SELinux contexts. If you have many files, the instance may be unavailable for a long time. You can monitor the instance from the Rcs Web console.
Introduction
Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux) is an enhanced security mechanism at the kernel level. Follow this guide to reinstall SELinux and reset the policy to default settings. If SELinux is not already installed, go directly to step 2.
Perform these steps as a sudo-enabled user, or root. This guide has been tested on:
CentOS 8
CentOS 7
CentOS 6
1. Disable and Remove SELinux
# setenforce 0
# yum remove selinux-policy\*
# rm -rf /etc/selinux/targeted /etc/selinux/config
2. Install SELinux
# yum install selinux-policy-targeted
# yum install selinux-policy-devel policycoreutils
# touch /.autorelabel; reboot
SELinux will detect the /.autorelabel file on reboot, and then relabel all files with the correct SELinux contexts. If you have many files, the instance may be unavailable for a long time. You can monitor the instance from the Rcs Web console.
Related Documentation
Disable SELinux without uninstalling
The official CentOS SELinux How To
SELinux Project Wiki