> Offhand since /logs/ isn't a default supplied path, I'd say that these
> files and directories may have improper selinux contexts, thus selinux would
> be preventing the write. You could check this by using ls -lZ on the files,
> or looking in the audit log (assuming you
>

Oh of course, selinux!  Is that what the period "." at the end of the
permissions line indicates in file listings?
I've turned off enforcement, and it works as expected.

Thanks,
Paul
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