Le 01/05/16 à 14:00, Yuri D'Elia a écrit :
I'm_not_  happy with the solution here.

This will*still*  cause regular userland utilities, such as ls on
Debian, to mount /proc when you least expect it to.

libselinux must just bail gracefully if /proc is not mounted.

It's only doing this if /proc is not mounted, something that should happen at early boot.

libselinux needs to determine the status of selinux on the machine. This is done by reading files under /proc.

If you want to change that, see with upstream.

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