Re: Re: A good primer to User Administration?

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----- Original Message -----
From: "Eric B." <ebenze@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: centos@xxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2007 9:58:15 AM (GMT+1000) Australia/Brisbane
Subject: Re: A good primer to User Administration?

"Shibu C Varughese" <shibucv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote
in message news:4739E414.4060504@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> My question is the following.  I've been searching online for a good
>> reference to describe good practices when building a linux network, but
>> haven't really been able to find much when it comes to best practices for
>> user administration, ACLs, "optimal" (or recommended) file locations,
>> etc. For example, I know I need an LDAP server, but not sure how that
>> ties into system login, or how to use a Linux LDAP server as the basis
>> for a primary domain controller (is it still called that given Windows AD
>> world?), etc. Or even how to properly create group structures and ACLs
>> that accurately reflect group ownership/etc.  The octal permissions at
>> the file level are only good enough for a single group; I need to give
>> multiple groups different permissions on the same files, etc.
>>
>> I realize that there are a lot of questions that I need to research, but
>> I was hoping someone could point me in the direction of some advanced
>> admin docs with best practices, etc.  Most of the stuff I find relates on
>> how to set up a basic standalone PC, without any reference to how to
>> network together a bunch of servers running off central authentication,
>> etc...
>>
>
> Eric,
>
> if you are thinking of setting up ldap, email, address book ...etc.. all
> in one go ... then you need to test out ...something like  zimbra from
> zimbra.com
>


Thanks for the input;  I have already looked at Zimbra, and it looks like a
very interesting soln for me once I have everything else set up.  I see
Zimbra as a nice group-ware pkg, but not as something to help me with
user-authentication to the server (for shell access), setting up file
permissions, shares, SMB permissions/shares, etc, etc, etc.

Tx!

Eric





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I'll vote for zimbra too, has been brilliant for me. It is sort of appliance like in that you typically don't need to do much to a server to turn it into a working system. Mine runs as a Xen VM and I'll soon (5.1) be clustering it.


As far as tutorials go, I found that http://howtoforge.com/ is an excellent source of such types of articles.


Cheers.

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