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source: http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/rhel-fedora-redhat-selinux-protection/ SELinux enforces the idea that programs should be limited in what files they can access and what actions they can take. However, by default it is turned off under RHEL / CentOS 5.x server? How do I turn it on? SELinux is a kernel security extension, which can be used to guard against [...]
Aug 19th, 2010 | Filed under linux
You can control and configure Linux kernel and networking settings via /etc/sysctl.conf Download article as PDF
Aug 19th, 2010 | Filed under linux
