PAM should honor the Fedora DS password policy, so I don't think you
need the shadow stuff anymore.
I agree with Rich.
Also, in my testing I found that Solaris 8 native LDAP clients ignore
the shadow attributes, which meant the shadow method is useless for my
particular situation.
Richard Megginson wrote:
Jason Russler wrote:
Hi all,
I imported our Unix/Linux password and shadow files into FDS recently
(using LdapImport.pl) and I'm trying to figure out the difference or
conflicts between the shadowaccount object class attributes
(shdowmax, shadowwarning etc.) and the passwordexpiriationtime and
passwordexpiredwarned etc. attributes that I assume come from the
Password policy settings features of the directory.
I'm having trouble getting inconsistent results when expiring
accounts to test whether or not the PAM ldap client (on RedHat
Enterprise 4 systems) weighs one set of attributes more more over the
other or even cares about them at all. Does anyone have experience
with the PAM clients and the directory's password policy settings vs.
the shadowaccount attributes? Should I quit using the password and
password expiration features and just use the shadowaccount
attributes or ditch the shadowaccount object class altogether?
If PAM will honor the password expiration policy then I may just
write a little something to set the policy attributes from the shadow
attributes of the imported files and then remove shadowaccount OC
altogether. Any thoughts?
PAM should honor the Fedora DS password policy, so I don't think you
need the shadow stuff anymore.
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