On Sun, Jul 05, 2015 at 07:57:15PM +0200, Wolfgang Schweer wrote: > Hi, > > cc'ing to the debian-edu mailing list, where more people could give > advice. Please consider to subscribe to the list if not yet done. > > On Sat, Jul 04, 2015 at 09:01:00AM +0000, Tom Duguid wrote: > > > > I have a SckoleLinux server installed with the main server and > > workstation options selected for install. > > I have 10 workstations with SkoleLinux installed. > > I made a mistake when installing some of the workstations using > > sitesummary2ldap so I removed them using GOSA2. > > I used 'sitesummary2ldap -a -i ether-xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx -t workstations' > > to put the workstations back on the server. > > The workstations that I had NOT added and removed previous to this > > worked. > > The workstations that I had added by mistake and removed previous to > > this came up with the following error whenever any user attempts to log > > in: 'Cannot enter home directory. Using /.' > > > > I can recreate this on a Virtual Machine setup by adding a workstation > > client to the VM server (it works at this point) and then removing it > > through GOSA2 and adding it again through sitesummary2ldap. When I try > > to log into the VM workstation I get the 'Cannot enter home directory. > > Using /.' error again. > > Confirmed for a combined server (jessie) and clients in a VirtualBox > test environment. > > I was able log in after disabling the nscd netgroup cache using these > steps (on tjener): > > service nscd stop > rm /var/cache/nscd/netgroup > sed -i '/netgroup/ s/yes/no/' /etc/nscd.conf > service nscd start > service nslcd restart > service nfs-kernel-server restart > > Please consider to test the workaround. > > Wolfgang >
Aha, that's it. Looks like the same problem as mine. Regards -- Giorgio Pioda - Sysadmin SPSE-Tenero Cell +41 79 629 20 63 Tel +41 58 468 62 48 Fax +41 58 468 61 98 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected] Archive: https://lists.debian.org/[email protected]

