afaiu users are there, both local and LDAP, you can login using both types of users using standard AIX tools/procedures, such as "normal" login, telnet, ftp, but you receive some error trying to open ssh session. Am I right?
Do you have problems opening an SSH session with an LDAP user or with a local AIX user or with both types of users?
Currently here's whats going on :
Code:
Connection
su to local user Works
su to LDAP user Works but can't use chuser/rmuser and all user commands (like sudo -l with a LDAP user)
ssh to local user Works
ssh to LDAP user Permission denied, please try again. (Like when you type a wrong passwd)
What i would like to do :
Code:
Connection
su to local user Works
su to LDAP user Works
ssh to local user Works
ssh to LDAP user Works
mkuser Creates local user
rmuser Delete local user
chuser Changes local user
lsuser List local and LDAP user
mkuser/rmuser/chuser -R LDAP works but my LDAP server will block this
In fact i would like AIX users works like Linux users (at least it works like this on my Linux servers)
Last edited by AIX_user_324891; 11-25-2015 at 03:05 AM..
I am implementing LDAP on Linux based system using openldap.
My management objects to the idea that all individual users will authenticate against an LDAP server because “what if it is not available”
Their suggestion is that we run in parallel a set of local configured users and a set of LDAP... (1 Reply)
Besides doing some shell-script which loops through /etc/passwd, I was wondering if there was some command that would tell me, like an enhanced version of getent.
The Operating system is Solaris 10 (recent-ish revision) using Sun DS for LDAP. (5 Replies)
Hi Friends,
I have this script for ftping files from AIX server to local windows xp.
#!/bin/sh
HOST='localsystem.net'
USER='myid_onlocal'
PASSWD='mypwd_onlocal'
FILE='file.txt' ##This is a file on server(AIX)
ftp -n $HOST <<END_SCRIPT
quote USER $USER
quote PASS $PASSWD
put $FILE... (1 Reply)
If I create a new user id test:
mkuser id=400 test
then I want it to LDAP user:
chuser -R LDAP SYSTEM=LDAP registry=LDAP test
It shows:
3004-687 User "test" does not exist.
How to do? (4 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I have a script that requires me to switch from local user to root. Anyone who has an idea on this since when i switch user to root it requires me to input root password.
It seems that i need to use expect module here, but i don't know how to create the object for this.
... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have been asked to create a ksh script that will search against an LDAP directory from various HP-UX, SUSE, and AIX 5.3 and 6.1 machines. The objective is to verify the boxes are successfully authenticating users from the LDAP store. This is something I've never done, and I could use... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I need to switch from local user to root user in a shell script.
I need to make it automated so that it doesn't prompt for the root password.
I heard the su command will do that work but it prompt for the password.
and also can someone tell me whether su command spawns a new shell or... (1 Reply)
Hello,
i configured rhel linux 6 with AD directory to authorize windows users to connect on the system and it works.
i have accounts with high privileges (oracle for example) if an account is created on the AD server i would to block him.
I looked for how to do, for the moment all the... (3 Replies)
I'd like to add some x/linux-based servers to my current AIX-based TDS/SDS server community. Reading the Fine Install Guide (rtfig ?) I believe this may be covered by the section "Upgrade an instance of a previous version to a different computer" i.e. I'm going to install latest/greatest SDS on a... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: maraixadm
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT FREEBSD
nslcd
nslcd(8) System Manager's Manual nslcd(8)NAME
nslcd - local LDAP name service daemon.
SYNOPSIS
nslcd [ options ]
DESCRIPTION
nslcd is a daemon that will do LDAP queries for local processes that want to do user, group and other naming lookups (NSS) or do user au-
thentication, authorisation or password modification (PAM).
nslcd is configured through a configuration file (see nslcd.conf(5)).
See the included README for information on configuring the LDAP server.
OPTIONS
nslcd accepts the following options:
-c, --check
Check if the daemon is running. This causes nslcd to return 0 if the daemon is already running and 1 if it is not.
-d, --debug
Enable debugging mode. nslcd will not put itself in the background and sends verbose debugging info to stderr. nslcd will handle
connections as usual. This option is for debugging purposes only. Specify this option multiple times to also include more detailed
logging from the LDAP library.
--help Display short help and exit.
-V, --version
Output version information and exit.
FILES
/etc/nslcd.conf - the configuration file (see nslcd.conf(5))
SEE ALSO nslcd.conf(5)AUTHOR
This manual was written by Arthur de Jong <arthur@arthurdejong.org>.
Version 0.8.10 Jun 2012 nslcd(8)