"No, files in /etc/selinux are configuration files, which must not be deleted at "apt-get remove". You have to use "apt-get purge" for that. See the debian policy or the manpages for apt."
Unchanged configuration files should be removed. I have not changed any of these files so they should be removed. Non-removal is a bug. "Well, I guess you still booted with kernel command line security=selinux and selinux=1, probably in enforcing mode. Which doesn't work because then you need a working selinux policy installed." Is it a kernel bug? I think it should use an empty policy if there are no policy installed. The system should not cease to work only because there are no currently installed policy. It is a bug (of Debian or of kernel, I don't know). I don't propose to disable selinux when uninstalling selinux-policy-default but to work with an empty policy. -- Victor Porton - http://portonvictor.org _______________________________________________ SELinux-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/selinux-devel
