SELinux exists in a very disturbed state if it is enabled at
boot time, but no policy is loaded. In particular, it messes
up the security.selinux extended attributes on files in a
not-very-useful way.
We can't enable SELinux because we don't know what policy
can or should be loaded. Therefore it's best to disable it
completely.
"udevtimeout=300 " /* good for very slow systems (RHBZ#480319) */ \
"noapic " /* workaround for RHBZ#502058 - ok if not SMP */ \
"acpi=off " /* we don't need ACPI, turn it off */ \
- "cgroup_disable=memory " /* saves us about 5 MB of RAM */
+ "cgroup_disable=memory " /* saves us about 5 MB of RAM */ \
+ "selinux=0 " /* SELinux is messed up if there's no policy */
/* Linux kernel command line. */
snprintf (append, sizeof append,