On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 06:00:45PM +0200, Wang Shouhua wrote: > I am on Solaris 10U4 - can I access a NFS filesystem with (mandatory) > krb5p authentication via the Solaris /net automounter with kinit only, > without having r/w access to /etc/krb5.conf access)?
You'll need to have Solaris krb configured which stores its config in /etc/krb5 not /etc as is the MIT default. You'll also need read access to /etc/krb5/krb5.conf and have the system properly configured to do NFS with krb in general (read the Solaris 10 online docs). Beyond that, whether a user kinit'ing is enough depends on which version of NFS you are using. On the client side NFSv3 sec=krb5p shares will automount if the user triggering the mount has a krb cred in their ccache (klist will show that) and does not require any keys in the system keytab nor does it require root to have a krb cred in general. NFSv4 on the other hand does require that the root on the NFS client system have a krb cred in its ccache. This can be done either by running kinit as root or having at least one set of keys for either the root/<host> or host/<host> service princ in the system keytab which will be automatically used to acquire a krb cred for root. On the client system "nfsstat -m" will show what version of NFS is being used. -- Will Fiveash Oracle Solaris Software Engineer ________________________________________________ Kerberos mailing list [email protected] https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos
