I can get the passwordexpirationtime value, but I'm unsure what you mean by "set the password expiration to occur immediately". I'm coming from the Windows world, so I'm used to the "User must change password at next logon" checkbox. I don't see that anywhere on the GUI, so I'm unclear how you set that. Also, how do I manipulate the dates? I get something similar to 20110122161029Z (for example) for passwordexpirationtime. How do I convert that to a proper date format? Also, I just changed my account's password while testing, and I see that passwordexpirationtime got reset to 19700101000000Z. What does the 1970xxx value represent? Thanks, Harry Harry Devine Common ARTS Software Development AJT-144 (609)485-4218 Harry.Devine at faa.gov From: James Roman <james.roman at ssaihq.com> To: 389-users at lists.fedoraproject.org Date: 01/21/2011 10:17 AM Subject: Re: Determine when a password is about to expire Sent by: 389-users-bounces at lists.fedoraproject.org Most LDAP servers use a different schema than the Microsoft version and work from the opposite direction. Try querying "passwordexpirationtime". You can do a search for the specific password schema with the following info: 2.16.840.1.113730.3.2.12 passwordObject I think it is more common to: 1. administratively set the password on a user account 2. set the password expiration to occur immediately. 3. set the passwordGraceUserTime for a time period that allows the user to log in solely to change their password. However, you must explicitly program your site to gracefully handle this situation (condition where passwordexpirationtime < now < passwordGraceUserTime) , since the user's LDAP authentication attempt against the directory will fail (with an error indicating the password has expired). On 01/21/2011 09:45 AM, harry.devine at faa.gov wrote: I am in the process of creating a web-based mechanism to allow our users to change their password on our new 389-ds server. I would like to display the date that their password is due to expire, and while Googling around, I see a lot of references to pwdLastSet, but about 95% of the articles are referring to Active Directory. I don't see pwdLastSet amongst the attributes in my default 389-ds setup. Is it there, or do I have to add that attribute to every account? Also, I currently have my pages set up where, when the user logs in, it detects our 'default' password and forces them to change it. Is there some attribute in their account that I can set that I can key off of and force them to change their password when they login to my site? Thanks for any tips! Harry Harry Devine Common ARTS Software Development AJT-144 (609)485-4218 Harry.Devine at faa.gov -- 389 users mailing list 389-users at lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/389-users -- 389 users mailing list 389-users at lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/389-users -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/389-users/attachments/20110121/34e91f6d/attachment.html