"those who know me have no need of my name" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>...
> in comp.protocols.kerberos i read: > > >We have Kerberos(an old 4 version I believe) installed on many of our > >Unix systems. It was installed by someone who has since gone. > >Problem now is that we want to remove Kerberos but have no idea what > >that entails. > > this seems a foolish notion, but whatever. Kerberos has caused more headaches than value for us. We also have no need for it anyhow in our environment. > > >I've tried doing some searching to no avail. Are there documented > >procedures somewhere on how to perform an uninstall? If so, can > >someone point that out. Otherwise, I'd be appreciative if someone > >could post something that we could use as a guide > > there are no documents on removing it, though what needs to be done is > implied by the installation instructions. it's hard to say what you > should do since you fail to mention the platforms involved or whether > the kerberos was a custom installation or using the vendor supplied > tools. well, actually that does provide the next step for you: find > out which sort you have. It's installed on Solaris 2.6 systems. > > in general you need to enable some other password authentication > mechanism to each host, e.g., if you are returning to a local password > database then you have to create a password for every user on every > host. I wish to go back to local password database. > > -- > bringing you boring signatures for 17 years ________________________________________________ Kerberos mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos
