Learning Linux
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Using @scottalanmiller 's definition, I think of Big Wig, lol. Must be where my southern heritage shows, lol.
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Why do so many instructions assume selinux is turned off? Don't you want it enabled to protect you?
That and fail2ban?
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@Dashrender said:
Why do so many instructions assume selinux is turned off? Don't you want it enabled to protect you?
That and fail2ban?
Because they are lazy, as are most shops, andn so they just disable it.
Although to be fair, turning it off for an install and enabling again when done is fine. It's running operationally without it that is bad.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Why do so many instructions assume selinux is turned off? Don't you want it enabled to protect you?
That and fail2ban?
Because they are lazy, as are most shops, andn so they just disable it.
Although to be fair, turning it off for an install and enabling again when done is fine. It's running operationally without it that is bad.
OK disable/re-enable fine - but I would think.. there would be some configuration requirements for whatever you installed? i.e. some instructions for said changes to selinux?
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@Dashrender said:
OK disable/re-enable fine - but I would think.. there would be some configuration requirements for whatever you installed? i.e. some instructions for said changes to selinux?
Not always. Traditionally MySQL could not install without SELinux being disabled, but once installed you turn it back on and it runs fine.
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Since only CentOS uses SELinux, I think that a lot of app developers question the value of investing too much time in doing it the "right way" when they can just disable it and move on. Other Linux use different technologies so the time needed to any one of them right can be quite a bit.
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Did I miss it, or are these directions missing the fact that i need to install apache to make ELK work? I'm guessing that's why I can't connect to Kibana (I've disabled selinux just to make sure it wasn't causing problems).
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You certainly need some sort of web server! I thought that DO used NGinx, though.
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@scottalanmiller said:
You certainly need some sort of web server! I thought that DO used NGinx, though.
OK - the instructions do include nginx - though since I'm following a script with little to no actual explanation I had/have no idea what it is.
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NGinx has replaced Apache some time ago as the leading web server for UNIX platforms.
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