@stacksofplates said in Whoap! SELinux Error at Boot for Linux? We got you!:
That's not really a cure, it just turns it off. The better thing to do is boot into recovery mode by adding rd.break at the end of that same line in the bootloader. Then remount the sysroot directory with mount –o remount,rw /sysroot and completely disable SELinux by setting SELINUX=permissive in /etc/selinux/config. Then creating the autorelabel file in / with touch /sysroot/.autorelabel. Reboot and let the system and let SELinux relabel everything. Check your logs to make sure there aren't any issues and then finally re-enable SELinux by setting SELINUX=enforcing in /etc/selinux/config. Then reboot again.
Nice, seriously what are they expecting from MS engineer