Bug 980234
Summary: | SELinux is preventing alsactl from using the signal access on a process. | ||
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Product: | [Fedora] Fedora | Reporter: | Adam Williamson <awilliam> |
Component: | alsa-utils | Assignee: | Jaroslav Kysela <jkysela> |
Status: | CLOSED EOL | QA Contact: | Fedora Extras Quality Assurance <extras-qa> |
Severity: | unspecified | Docs Contact: | |
Priority: | unspecified | ||
Version: | 19 | CC: | dwalsh, jkysela |
Target Milestone: | --- | ||
Target Release: | --- | ||
Hardware: | Unspecified | ||
OS: | Unspecified | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Fixed In Version: | Doc Type: | Bug Fix | |
Doc Text: | Story Points: | --- | |
Clone Of: | Environment: | ||
Last Closed: | 2015-02-17 15:46:44 UTC | Type: | Bug |
Regression: | --- | Mount Type: | --- |
Documentation: | --- | CRM: | |
Verified Versions: | Category: | --- | |
oVirt Team: | --- | RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host: | |
Cloudforms Team: | --- | Target Upstream Version: | |
Embargoed: |
Description
Adam Williamson
2013-07-01 19:25:13 UTC
Actually, now I look at the date, this pre-dates my Rawhide upgrade. Sorry. Does alsactl send a signal to every process on the system? I have no idea. Well these two processes have no relationship, so this is very strange. Why would a package used to manage sound be sending signal to the audit dispather? The alsactl utility may notify the alsactl task in the daemon mode to exit or to force to save the sound state. The PID file is /var/run/alsactl.pid . It looks like an inconsistency of this the PID file contents due to a fatal system halt or so. Is this problem hit in each boot ? I don't seem to have an occurrence of it since the first one (June 28), no. Since the PID files are cleared at boot, this is very strange. I would figure that for some reason the alsactl.pid file had bogus data in it that matched the pid of the audispd process and alsactl tried to send a signal to it. Seems SELinux did its job in preventing this, but hard to reproduce. This message is a notice that Fedora 19 is now at end of life. Fedora has stopped maintaining and issuing updates for Fedora 19. It is Fedora's policy to close all bug reports from releases that are no longer maintained. Approximately 4 (four) weeks from now this bug will be closed as EOL if it remains open with a Fedora 'version' of '19'. Package Maintainer: If you wish for this bug to remain open because you plan to fix it in a currently maintained version, simply change the 'version' to a later Fedora version. Thank you for reporting this issue and we are sorry that we were not able to fix it before Fedora 19 is end of life. If you would still like to see this bug fixed and are able to reproduce it against a later version of Fedora, you are encouraged change the 'version' to a later Fedora version prior this bug is closed as described in the policy above. Although we aim to fix as many bugs as possible during every release's lifetime, sometimes those efforts are overtaken by events. Often a more recent Fedora release includes newer upstream software that fixes bugs or makes them obsolete. Fedora 19 changed to end-of-life (EOL) status on 2015-01-06. Fedora 19 is no longer maintained, which means that it will not receive any further security or bug fix updates. As a result we are closing this bug. If you can reproduce this bug against a currently maintained version of Fedora please feel free to reopen this bug against that version. If you are unable to reopen this bug, please file a new report against the current release. If you experience problems, please add a comment to this bug. Thank you for reporting this bug and we are sorry it could not be fixed. |