@realn2s I don't recall ever having any problems with apparmor ...ever.
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@realn2s I don't recall ever having any problems with apparmor ...ever.
@realn2s Personally, I wouldn't completely disable AppArmor, as this would mean that other applications such as DHCP and NTP clients would no longer be restricted. I would check whether the app is also available in Flatpak or similar. And regardless of whether you create an "allow everything" (unconfied) or a custom profile, I wouldn't completely disable AppArmor.
https://ubuntu.com/tutorials/beginning-apparmor-profile-development
@realn2s I don't recall ever having any problems with apparmor ...ever.
@mattesilver
I really had some problem creating a profile for the #appimage. Using aa-genprof seems to have missed the fuse stuff leading to errors when starting the app.
I ended up disabling #apparmor for the app
@realn2s Depends. If you expect daily problem, disable it. If you expect a problem once a month, leave it. If you ship the laptop (and the teen) outside of your easy access, disable it... and if she's around, leave it on. At least for a week or two, to see if any new issues arise. And decide in a week or two.
Its a security feature. Its nice to have on a kids laptop. Unless its frustrating for the user or admin.
@realn2s Depends. If you expect daily problem, disable it. If you expect a problem once a month, leave it. If you ship the laptop (and the teen) outside of your easy access, disable it... and if she's around, leave it on. At least for a week or two, to see if any new issues arise. And decide in a week or two.
Its a security feature. Its nice to have on a kids laptop. Unless its frustrating for the user or admin.
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