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Full Discussion: Active Directory and UNIX
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Active Directory and UNIX Post 73381 by rm -r * on Tuesday 31st of May 2005 03:58:45 PM
Old 05-31-2005
Active Directory and UNIX

Hello - I have a very vague question, which will probably result in vague answers because I don't have a lot of detailed information and I don't know a whole lot about active directory.

Our Windows/NT admin has been rolling out Active Directory over the past several weeks and as time goes on, there are issues with my Unix servers (UnixWare 7.1.1 - soon to be upgraded to 7.1.4). Users on the Unix servers are experiencing slowness and sometimes their processes "appear" to get hung momentarily, but the servers are running optimally.

I don't know a lot about Active Directory, but I do believe that's what is causing the problems, I just don't know where to begin to find the solution. We have experienced some DNS issues recently and I will make my Unix servers look to themselves for DNS resolution in the near future, so that problem will be fixed.

Does anyone know of common problems with Unix servers on Active Directory domains and if so, what are those problems and what are the solutions, if any?

I apologize for not having more detailed information, but as I said, I don't know a lot about Active Directory and my Unix Admin experience is somewhat limited.

Thanks in advance for any correspondence...

Dave
 

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KRB5-SYNC(8)							     krb5-sync							      KRB5-SYNC(8)

NAME
krb5-sync - Synchronize passwords and status with Active Directory SYNOPSIS
krb5-sync [-d | -e] [-p password] user krb5-sync -f file DESCRIPTION
krb5-sync provides a command-line interface to the same functions provided by the password and status synchronization plugin. It can push a new password to Active Directory (actually, to any password store that supports the Kerberos set-password protocol) or activate or deactivate an account in Active Directory. To synchronize passwords, provide the -p option and specify the password. Note that the password is given on the command line and must be quoted if it contains special characters, and the password will be exposed to any other users on the system where this command is run. This is useful primarily for testing and should not be used with production passwords. Synchronization to Active Directory will be attempted based on the configuration in krb5.conf (see below). To enable or disable an account, provide the -e or -d option respectively. These options can also be provided in conjunction with the -p option to take both actions at once. In either case, user should be the principal name for which these actions should be taken. user may be either unqualified or in the local realm; either way, the Active Directory realm in which to make changes will be taken from the krb5.conf configuration. Alternately, krb5-sync also supports processing actions from a file. To do this, use the -f flag and give the file on the command line. The format of the file should be as follows: <account> ad password | enable | disable <password> where the fourth line is present only if the <action> is "password". <account> should be the unqualified name of the account. The second line should be the string "ad" to push the change to Windows Active Directory. The third line should be one of "password", "enable", or "disable", corresponding to the -p, -e, and -d options respectively. The "enable" and "disable" actions are only supported for AD. The file format is not particularly forgiving. In particular, all of the keywords are case-sensitive and there must not be any whitespace at the beginning or end of the lines (except in the password, and only if that whitespace is part of the password), just a single newline terminating each line. When the -f option is given, the file will be deleted if the action was successful but left alone if the action failed. The configuration block in krb5.conf should look something like this: krb5-sync = { ad_keytab = /etc/krb5kdc/ad-keytab ad_principal = service/sync@WINDOWS.EXAMPLE.COM ad_realm = WINDOWS.EXAMPLE.COM ad_admin_server = dc1.windows.example.com ad_ldap_base = ou=People } If the configuration required for an action is not given, that action will not be performed but will apparently succeed from the perspective of the krb5-sync utility. Therefore, if this utility reports success but no change is happening, double-check the configuration to ensure that all required options are present. The "ad_keytab" option specifies the location of a keytab for authenticating to the other realm, the "ad_principal" option specifies the principal to authenticate as (using the key in the keytab), and the "ad_realm" option specifies the foreign realm. "ad_admin_server" is the host to contact via LDAP to push account status changes. "ad_ldap_base" specifies the base tree inside Active Directory where account information is stored. Omit the trailing "dc=" part; it will be added automatically from "ad_realm". OPTIONS
-d Disable the specified user in Active Directory. Requires that all of the ad_* options be set in krb5.conf. This option may not be specified at the same time as -e. -e Enable the specified user in Active Directory. Requires that all of the ad_* options be set in krb5.conf. This option may not be specified at the same time as -e. -f file Rather than perform a particular action based on a username given on the command line, read a queue file and take action based on it. The format of the queue file is described above. If the action fails, the file will be left alone. If the action succeeds, the file will be deleted. -p password Change the user's password to password in Active Directory. EXAMPLES
Disable the account "jdoe" in Active Directory (using the AD configuration found in krb5.conf): krb5-sync -d jdoe Change the password of the account "testuser" in Active Directory to "changeme": krb5-sync -p changeme testuser@EXAMPLE.COM The same, except also enable the account in Active Directory: krb5-sync -e -p changeme testuser Note that the realm for the user given on the command line is optional and ignored. Given a file named jdoe-ad-1168560492 containing: jdoe ad password changeme the command: krb5-sync -f jdoe-ad-1168560492 will change jdoe's password to "changeme" in Active Directory and then delete the file. SEE ALSO
The current version of this program is available from its web page at http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/krb5-sync/ <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/krb5-sync/>. AUTHOR
Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu> 2.2 2012-01-10 KRB5-SYNC(8)
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