On 02/25/2016 07:23 AM, Brandon Vincent wrote:
On Thu, Feb 25, 2016 at 12:34 AM, Frank Cox <thea...@melvilletheatre.com> wrote:
Turns out you get the "Could not downgrade policy file 
/etc/selinux/targeted/policy/policy.24" error if you're running with SELinux 
disabled and something tries to install or reload policy: semodule -vR does it.

This is why if anyone is opposed to running SELinux it should be left
in permissive mode.

Even in permissive mode you still incur the system overhead cost (7% performance hit, last I read) and the excessive logging.

And don't even get me started about having /tmp mounted on a tmpfs filesystem! :-)

There are good reasons to prefer disabled over permissive if you've sure you won't need to re-enable SELinux later.
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