It is needed for actions where local user is root, so local root
could, if necessary change users passwords in LDAP.
If that is not desirable, you do not have to use it. You can put same
name/password that you have put for ordinary lookups.
On Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 9:30 PM, Juan Asensio Sánchez <[
On Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 09:30:41PM +0200, Juan Asensio Sánchez wrote:
> Hi
>
> I have setup a server with LDAP and Samba. Now i want to LDAP hosts
> authenticate with the LDAP server too, so i have installed in each
> host libnss-ldap, libpam-ldap and nscd. Everything works fine, but I
> don't kno
On Thursday 19 May 2005 07:36, Lars Jensen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Where is the ldap admin password. I'm trying to set up ldap and are
> getting some authentication errors when running the migrationtools. I
> noticed that there's no rootpw statement in slapd.conf.
>
> Don't I need a rootpw statement to ru
On Wed, 2005-05-18 at 22:36 -0700, Lars Jensen wrote:
> Don't I need a rootpw statement to run the ldaptools?
>
Yes. You need the 'rootpw' statement in your slapd.conf.
Srinidhi.
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B S Srinidhi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
DeepRoot Linux Pvt. Ltd.
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On Wed, 2005-05-18 at 22:36 -0700, Lars Jensen wrote:
> Don't I need a rootpw statement to run the ldaptools?
>
Yes. You need the 'rootpw' statement in your slapd.conf.
Srinidhi.
--
B S Srinidhi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
DeepRoot Linux Pvt. Ltd.
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