Op 24-04-13 22:53, m.roth at 5-cent.us schreef: > John R. Dennison wrote: >> On Wed, Apr 24, 2013 at 03:06:11PM -0400, Daniel J Walsh wrote: >>> Disabling SELinux is not going to fix your problem. Since the field is >>> just showing you that you have extended attibutes assigned to yr files. >>> >>> Why not just script around it. >>> >>> ls -l | sed 's/\. / /g' >>> >>> Would replace all ". " from your output. >> Because that would be too easy and people absolutely love to shoot >> themselves in the face by disabling selinux. Because it is, as we all >> know, ridiculously hard to manage. > Don't get me started. I'm fighting it regularly. For example, > SELinux is preventing /usr/bin/perl from getattr access on the file > /sys/devices/system/node/node0/meminfo. For complete SELinux messages. > > And yes, I did post a few things to the selinux list.... > > mark > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos Dear All, thanks again for the reactions. This is the NetworkManager script I'm trying to use: ----------------------------------------------------- #!/bin/sh export LC_ALL=C if [ "$2" = "down" ]; then exit0 fi if [ "$2" = "up" ]; then #LAN Subnet at work NETMASK="192.168.66.128/25" if [ -n "`/sbin/ip addr show $IF to $NETMASK`" ]; then rsync -azvp /home/james/ 192.168.66.129:/home/jvermeulen fi fi -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- as far as I can test this at the moment, it works without Selinux and doesn't work with Selinux enabled. I also want Selinux enabled. So I will do some searching on how to make it work with Selinux. Greetings, J.