Am 08. Oct, 2002 schwätzte Scott H so: > >From: Bill Warner : > >I have been looking into this as well. NIS > works >in a way that you can basically store half > your >passwd/shadow/group files on one central > server. > > Half? What do you mean "half"? I don't > understand that. I presume he means userland stuff on the server and system stuff locally. root, bin, etc. need to stay on the local box. > >Sort of an NFS for single files. > > Please explain this a bit, too? I know what NFS > is, but I don't understand how you mean this. With NIS you're importing the files from the server. It's closer to DNS zone transfers than NFS. > >I am still looking into LDAP as an option. The > >only thing that I don't like about the Linux > >authentication options is the fact that unlike > >windows it typical applications don't maintain > >the authentication, ... every time you start > >a web browser you have to re-authenticate with > >any servers there. It makes for a difficult use > >experience for the non techies. > >Bill W > > Is this true for both NIS and LDAP? Anyone know > a way around this? (Other than configuring > various client software to store passwords?) I > want my clients to be able to access shared > folders, pass through the proxy server, attach to > email, etc - ideally just logging on once to the > network. Kerberos is the main mechanism for that. Talk to Paul Thu and he'll help you pronounce it properly :). Anyone out there want to give a presentation ( or two ) on kerberos or LDAP? ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.TOLISGroup.com/ # It's up to the reader to make the book interesting. # An author has only the opportunity to make it uninteresting. - der.hans