On Fri, Jan 1, 2010 at 11:02 AM, Kwan Lowe <kwan.lowe@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hello all: > > Happy New Year to everyone and thank you for all the knowledge this past year. > > I have a hopefully simple question about kickstart. In the > authconfig section I can enable ldap, credential caching, etc.. Using > the GUI tool there's an option to create the user home directories on > first login. The docs don't show a similar option for authconfig in > kickstart. For now I'm using a sed script in the %post section of the > kickstart to replace the entry in /etc/login.defs, but was curious if > there is a standard method via a system utility to change this option. > Still having issues with this... Here's the relevant line from my kickstart: authconfig --enableshadow --enablemd5 --enableldap --enableldapauth --ldapserver=ldapserver.digitalhermit.com --ldapbasedn=dc=digitalhermit,dc=com --enablecache And the sed scripts to enable the pieces that don't seem to have a passable keyword to change: %post yum -y groupinstall xfce sed -i -e "s/^\(USEMKHOMEDIR=\).*$/\1\yes/" /etc/sysconfig/authconfig sed -i -e "s/^\(USEPAMACCESS=\).*$/\1\yes/" /etc/sysconfig/authconfig sed -i -e "s/^\(USELOCAUTHORIZE=\).*$/\1\yes/" /etc/sysconfig/authconfig Unfortunately this doesn't work. When I login immediately after the initial reboot it authenticates properly but complains that the user home directory does not exist. If I then go in as root and run system-config-authentication and change one item, it will start creating the home directories. I checked the following files (all opened by the system-config-authentication utility), but none except the /etc/sysconfig/authconfig appear to be related: "/etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc" "/etc/gtk-2.0/x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu/gdk-pixbuf.loaders" "/etc/hesiod.conf" "/etc/krb5.conf" "/etc/ldap.conf" "/etc/ld.so.cache" "/etc/localtime" "/etc/nsswitch.conf" "/etc/openldap/cacerts" "/etc/pam.d/system-auth-ac" "/etc/pam_smb.conf" "/etc/pango/pangorc" "/etc/pango/x86_64-redhat-linux-gnu/pango.modules" "/etc/samba/smb.conf" "/etc/selinux/config" "/etc/shells" "/etc/sysconfig/authconfig" "/etc/sysconfig/network" "/etc/yp.conf" Anyone can shed light on why it does not auto-create the home directories on initial boot? _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos