The local directory is on the disl of the user's computer, but the pam directory is a NFS file system. The user can use differents computers and can find his data everywhere (on the pam directory). But he can do something confidentially on his own system (a local directory). Sometimes we have problem with the NFS storage and with this solution (connection on the pam directory), the use can't connect anywhere. The problem is on Unix. So the symbolic link is not the solution. Thank you Chris 2011/2/21 Guillaume Allegre <allegre.guillaume@xxxxxxx>: > Le lun. 21 fïvr. 2011 à 16:09 +0100, chris job.fr a ecrit : >>  Hello, >> >>  Our users have two home directories : a local one (/home/user1) and >> the "pam directory" (/pam/users1). ÂWhen a user goes on a unix >> platform of the laboratory, he is automatically on the pam directory >> (/pam/users1). >>  Is it possible to do this thing : if the pam directory is >> inaccessible, the user is automatically on their local directory >> (/home/user1). >> > > Maybe you could explain how (and when) the /pam/* directories > are mounted, and which filesystem ? nfs... > > > A very basic solution would be to have each /pam/userN as a symbolic > link on /home/userN, which would be the fallback. > When automounting (?) is OK, it would be replaced by the real "shared" /pam/userN > > > -- >  /\  ÂGuillaume AllÃgre      ÂMembre de l'April > Â/~~\/\  Allegre.Guillaume@xxxxxxx ÂPromouvoir et dÃfendre le logiciel libre > Â/  /~~\  ÂtÃl. 04.76.63.26.99   Âhttp://www.april.org > > _______________________________________________ > Pam-list mailing list > Pam-list@xxxxxxxxxx > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/pam-list _______________________________________________ Pam-list mailing list Pam-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/pam-list