On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 6:42 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote: > On 05/10/2010 12:27 PM, David L wrote: >> >> When I upgrade between fedora releases, I usually >> install with only local users, then run system-config-authentication >> and select "Enable LDAP support" on the "User Information" tab >> and on the "Authentication" tab and then click "OK". Then I just >> copy the old /etc/ldap.conf from the previous release over the >> one in /etc on the new release. > > If you want to continue to do that, you'll need to replace > /etc/nsswitch.conf with a version configured to use "ldap" instead of > "sssd". I believe that if you replace both ldap.conf and nsswitch.conf, > the system will function as it used to. I think I already have done that... my nsswitch.conf looks like this: passwd: files ldap shadow: files ldap group: files ldap hosts: files dns bootparams: nisplus [NOTFOUND=return] files ethers: files netmasks: files networks: files protocols: files rpc: files services: files netgroup: files ldap publickey: nisplus automount: files ldap aliases: files nisplus > > sssd does have some compelling features, so you might want to invest a > few minutes into migrating the settings from your old ldap.conf to > /etc/sssd/sssd.conf. Your LDAP directory looks a lot like Active > Directory, so you'll probably use a lot of the settings which are > present in the default sssd.conf, but commented out. Ok, thanks... I'll try that. David -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test