In the process of trying to get rid of irritating messages, I'm still trying to find and change the context from default_t. Well, I looked at /public/htdocs, and notice that's default_t. So, looking at another server, I see that one has them as httpd_sys_content_t. I try chcon httpd_sys_content_t /public/htdocs... and chcon: invalid context: httpd_sys_content_t
CentOS 5.5, current rpm -qa | grep policy: selinux-policy-targeted-2.4.6-279.el5_5.1 checkpolicy-1.33.1-6.el5 selinux-policy-2.4.6-279.el5_5.1 policycoreutils-1.33.12-14.8.el5
The other server is the same. Clues for the poor?
mark
On 11/03/2010 08:13 PM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
In the process of trying to get rid of irritating messages, I'm still trying to find and change the context from default_t. Well, I looked at /public/htdocs, and notice that's default_t. So, looking at another server, I see that one has them as httpd_sys_content_t. I try chcon httpd_sys_content_t /public/htdocs... and chcon: invalid context: httpd_sys_content_t
You have typo. Should be
chcon -R -t httpd_sys_content_t /public/htdocs
But you might want to setup public_content_t label for /public directory
# chcon -R -t public_content_t /public
To make the label permanent you need to use semanage command.
CentOS 5.5, current rpm -qa | grep policy: selinux-policy-targeted-2.4.6-279.el5_5.1 checkpolicy-1.33.1-6.el5 selinux-policy-2.4.6-279.el5_5.1 policycoreutils-1.33.12-14.8.el5
The other server is the same. Clues for the poor?
mark
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