Closed LoganDark closed 3 years ago
maybe I'll make the setting of SELinux to be optional.
If you now don't do it yourself, you should still make sure to let people know that setting SELinux to permissive may be required to make Linux behave properly.
The chroot is working properly with Enforcing SELinux, As far as I know now, no alsa support if SELinux is Enforcing.
In your README.md, the fact that this module changes SELinux to permissive is a small footnote at the bottom. I think it should be more prominent, because MagiskHide can not always hide permissive SELinux (it can still break safetynet)