I generally disable SELinux after installing CentOS, once and for all, and
I guess I am not the only guy who repeat this.
SELinux was likely to be designed not for regular use.
On Thu, Dec 21, 2017 at 3:06 PM, Aziz Rozyev wrote:
> no problem, btw, check out this post
>
> https://www.nginx.com/bl
no problem, btw, check out this post
https://www.nginx.com/blog/nginx-se-linux-changes-upgrading-rhel-6-6/
br,
Aziz.
> On 21 Dec 2017, at 03:33, li...@lazygranch.com wrote:
>
> Well that was it. You can't believe how many hours I wasted on that.
> Thanks. Double thanks.
> I'm going to men
This time, SELinux again, seems to be a real problem for new talents. I
remembered my hours headached with that.
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Well that was it. You can't believe how many hours I wasted on that.
Thanks. Double thanks.
I'm going to mention this in the Digital Ocean help pages.
I disabled selinx, but I have a book laying around on how to set it up.
Eh, it is on the list.
On Wed, 20 Dec 2017 14:17:18 +0300
Aziz Rozyev
Hi,
have you checked this with disabled selinux ?
br,
Aziz.
> On 20 Dec 2017, at 11:07, li...@lazygranch.com wrote:
>
> I'm setting up a web server on a Centos 7 VPS. I'm relatively sure I
> have the firewalls set up properly since I can see my browser requests
> in the access and error lo
I'm setting up a web server on a Centos 7 VPS. I'm relatively sure I
have the firewalls set up properly since I can see my browser requests
in the access and error log. That said, I have file permission problem.
nginx 1.12.2
Linux servername 3.10.0-693.5.2.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Fri Oct 20 20:32:50 UT