Change to enforcing mode
When you run SELinux in enforcing mode, the SELinux utility is enforcing the configured
policy. SELinux governs the capabilities of select applications by allowing or denying access based on the policy’s
rules.
To find the current SELinux mode, run the getenforce command.
getenforcePermissive
Edit config file to enable enforcing mode
To change the mode to enforcing, use the following steps.
-
Edit the
/etc/selinux/configfile to change toenforcingmode. TheSELINUXsetting should look like the following example.SELINUX=enforcing -
Restart your system to complete the change to
enforcingmode.$sudo reboot
On the next boot, SELinux relabels all files and directories in the system. SELinux also adds the SELinux context
for files and directories that were created when SELinux was disabled.
After changing to enforcing mode, SELinux might deny some actions because of incorrect or missing
SELinux policy rules. You can view the actions that SELinux denies with the following command.
$sudo ausearch -m AVC,USER_AVC,SELINUX_ERR,USER_SELINUX_ERR -ts recent
Use cloud-init to enable enforcing mode
As an alternative, when you launch your instance, pass the following cloud-config as user-data to
enable enforcing mode.
#cloud-config selinux: mode: enforcing
By default, this setting causes the instance to reboot. For greater stability, we recommend rebooting your
instance. However, if you prefer, you can skip the reboot by providing the following cloud-config.
#cloud-config selinux: mode: enforcing selinux_no_reboot: 1