Regarding sssd - I wouldn't hold the document for this. I've just been doing some reading on the subject. Even if it is "deployed", that doesn't mean it is configured or started. It looks like authconfig handles the vast majority of the work involved in authentication configuration in CentOS. I'm assuming anyone who wants to use sssd will know how to alter the authconfig to allow that. If not, it can be reviewed in a different HOWTO.
-Adrian
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Adrian Hall (Personal Account)
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Adrian Hall (Personal Account)
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On Tue, Sep 13, 2011 at 2:57 PM, Paul Heinlein <heinlein@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, 13 Sep 2011, Adrian Hall wrote:
> I'm totally with you on the SSL/TLS. I've been swearing at thatHeh. To date, I've only setup CentOS 6 as an LDAP client. All my LDAP
> particular element for over two weeks now. Since there is no
> slapd.conf any more, the method of introducing a certificate is not
> logical, nor documented.
servers run CentOS 5.
Concerning sssd, CentOS 6 kickstart will install and activate it if
> I haven't looked into sssd. Since it isn't installed by default on
> CentOS, why would that be a requirement? (not saying it isn't a
> good thing, but I'd probably defer that to another document as with
> the other elements you suggested)
you specify installation of the "Directory Client" package group.
Since that group looks like something that folks might want to install
on LDAP clients, I suspect it'll be more widely deployed than you
think.
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Paul Heinlein <> heinlein@xxxxxxxxxx <> http://www.madboa.com/
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