Ed, try using the openldap command line tools to do simple binds
against the server and see if both passwords really work.
It will let you narrow it down to server side or client side:
ldapsearch -h ldapserver -b "dc=your,dc=base" -D
"cn=someuser,ou=People,dc=your,dc=base" "(objectClass=*)" dn -w pass1
ldapsearch -h ldapserver -b "dc=your,dc=base" -D
"cn=someuser,ou=People,dc=your,dc=base" "(objectClass=*)" dn -w pass2
ldapsearch -h ldapserver -b "dc=your,dc=base" -D
"cn=someuser,ou=People,dc=your,dc=base" "(objectClass=*)" dn -w pass3
On Dec 3, 2007 4:10 PM, Edward Ned Harvey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > pam_ccreds?
>
> I don't know what that means. I don't see any pam_ccreds anywhere.
>
>
> > nscd -i passwd?
>
> nscd 0:off 1:off 2:off 3:off 4:off 5:off 6:off
> (also ps shows nscd not running)
> Just for the heck of it, I edited /etc/nscd.conf and set these anyway:
> enable-cache passwd no
> persistent passwd no
>
>
> > Is there an entry in /etc/shadow for $user? (there shouldnt be)
>
> There is no reference to the user in /etc/{passwd,shadow,group,gshadow}
>
>
> ...
> Thanks for trying, please keep 'em coming, if u have any more ideas.
>
>
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