It seems there are some bugs discussed around this.
http://sources.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=2132 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=488597 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=599192
That being said, it does not seem like nscd is the way to solve this. Or at very least there are reported complaints about this issue that have not been addressed to date.
Has anyone out there found a good solution for caching network authentication data?
On Jul 15, 2010, at 9:52 AM, Todd Denniston wrote:
Brian Marshall wrote, On 07/15/2010 11:37 AM:
Yes but I have worked in many organizations that use directory services for authentication and my machines with them have always cached authentication data so I can login if I'm not online. I can't expect laptop users to always have a network connection. If Mac OS and Windows can manage to cache network authentication for offline use, I can't believe that linux does not have this capability.
Perhaps my wanting to cache my shadow data or use nscd for this purpose is not the correct way to achieve this. But the only other well discussed option I have found is nsscache which doesn't seem to work very well and their library doesn't seem to install on centos 5. Unfortunately I'm way to much of a hack C programmer to fix it, especially since they don't provide a configure file.
So, assuming maybe we put the conversation of nscd shadow caching aside and just talk about how to cache ldap data on a centos system so it can authenticate users in the absence of a network. Creating local passwd/group/shadow data is not an option.
Again, I can't stress this enough. I am convinced I am doing something wrong or going about this the wrong way. I'm just not understanding how to either fix the problem at hand or solve it another or proper way.
Any advice?
authconfig -help
authconfig --enablecache --update
For some of the folks I work with, it works quite reliably, I on the other hand have had problems _because_ it caches the info.
Thanks
Brian
On Jul 15, 2010, at 4:58 AM, Alexander Dalloz wrote:
The problem I am having is that shadow does not seem to get cached by nscd. Here's how I have tracked this down.
NSCD not caching shadow user credentials is a fact. There is nothing wrong with your configuration. NSCD just does not do what you seem to expect from it. You can't make it what you like to.
If your LDAP server is gone, you will not be able to login. Run a replica server to avoid a single point of failure.
Brian
Alexander
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-- Todd Denniston Crane Division, Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC Crane) Harnessing the Power of Technology for the Warfighter _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos