On Jun 23, 2021, at 7:12 AM, Hooton, Gerard <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> The users are authenticated using OpenLDAP.
> On LDAP the default shell is csh.
> When ssh to login it works, i.e. $SHELL = /bin/csh
> Also, when using xrdp it works.
> However, a login from the keyboard and screen attached computer we get
> $SHELL = /bin/bash
The shell is a symptom, not the core issue here. The core issue is that local
console logins aren’t configured to use LDAP on your system, so they fall back
to the old flat-file-based user info sources. (/etc/passwd, /etc/group,
/etc/shadow…)
The question then is, do you really *want* local logins to require the LDAP
server to be up before it’ll accept a login? If an LDAP package upgrade
roaches things, do you want to be forced to reboot into single-user mode to fix
it? If there’s a network outage between this box and the OpenLDAP server, are
you going to wait to log in locally as well until the network’s fixed?
Me, I’d just do a “chsh” on the users or a sed pass on /etc/passwd to change
all the shells locally so they match the LDAP configuration so I can have it
both ways.
However, if you’re bound and determined to have LDAP be the single source of
all user truth, the bit at the end of Step 2 here looks like it should do that:
https://arthurdejong.org/nss-pam-ldapd/setup
May you live to *not* regret doing that!
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