I mainly work on rhel4 servers at the moment, good to know though. It was annoying that sudo didn't include it, glad it does now! Cheers Malcolm On Wed, 2008-09-10 at 09:33 +0100, Jonathan Barber wrote: > On Tue, Sep 09, 2008 at 10:42:26PM +0100, Malcolm Amir Hussain-Gambles wrote: > > Redhat sudo doesn't support ldap, recompile it with ldap support and add > > the sudoers base to /etc/ldap.conf and it should work then, annoying! > > I don't know about RHEL5, but centos 5.2 does: > > [root at pirez ~]# rpm -q centos-release > centos-release-5-2.el5.centos > [root at pirez ~]# rpm -q sudo > sudo-1.6.8p12-12.el5 > [root at pirez ~]# ldd $(type -p sudo) | grep ldap > libldap-2.3.so.0 => /usr/lib/libldap-2.3.so.0 (0x00762000) > > And I believe it's been present for all the 5.0 series. > > > Cheers > > > > Malcolm > > > > On Tue, 2008-09-09 at 21:39 +0100, Kashif Ali wrote: > > > Hello all, > > > > > > I have successfully setup FDS on Centos 5.2, and manage to get users > > > signing on without any issues. However if I edit the sudoers file to > > > allow a group on ldap use sudo, the sudo command does not see the > > > members of the group or I think the group itself? > > > > > > I have no idea why this is: > > > > > > if I run the command 'id' as the given user you can clear see the > > > group memberships, however if I do: getent group linuxops I see: > > > > > > linuxops:*:6000: > > > > > > with no members??? however SSHD AllowGroups works? I have configured > > > sshd to only allow members of the linxops group to login and this > > > works fine? so my question is why is sudo behaving differently? > > > > > > -- > > > Fedora-directory-users mailing list > > > Fedora-directory-users at redhat.com > > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-directory-users > > > > -- > > Fedora-directory-users mailing list > > Fedora-directory-users at redhat.com > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-directory-users >