It’s like NTFS permissions in the windows world, just worse. It tries to do file level security, but a good number of people go your route and disable it.
Justin Wilson [email protected] --- http://www.mtin.net Owner/CEO xISP Solutions- Consulting – Data Centers - Bandwidth http://www.midwest-ix.com COO/Chairman Internet Exchange - Peering - Distributed Fabric > On Nov 16, 2015, at 11:54 PM, Ken Hohhof <[email protected]> wrote: > > The opinions from the list were about evenly divided, so I burned DVDs of > both and flipped a coin which came up 7. > > So far I don’t see what all the complaints are about. Installation was a > little different. systemctl is a little different. Ethernet port names are > a little different. Not the end of the world. I may actually like systemctl > better. > > What I still can’t wrap my head around is selinux. I am a bad person, I > disable it. > > > From: Josh Luthman <mailto:[email protected]> > Sent: Tuesday, November 10, 2015 7:44 AM > To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > Subject: Re: [AFMUG] CentOS 6.7 or 7? > > New server? 7 no question. > Josh Luthman > Office: 937-552-2340 > Direct: 937-552-2343 > 1100 Wayne St > Suite 1337 > Troy, OH 45373 > On Nov 10, 2015 1:34 AM, "Eric Kuhnke" <[email protected] > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: >> 7, for the 3.x series kernel if nothing else. >> >> >> >> On Mon, Nov 9, 2015 at 9:41 PM, Ken Hohhof <[email protected] >> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: >>> There seems to be a fair bit of dissatisfaction with RHEL7/CentOS 7. I'm >>> building a couple new servers, if my others are running CentOS 6 and do >>> what I need, should I resist the temptation to jump to 7? I think CentOS 6 >>> EOS dates are 2017 for full updates and 2020 for maintenance updates? >>> >>> I know some people will say switch to Ubuntu or Debian or whatever, let's >>> assume I am staying with CentOS, I'm just asking 6 or 7? >>> >> >>
