Well, When I set this environment variable and invoke ssh, it does not recognize the environment variable, instead, it prompts for password.
If set the environment variable and run the kinit command, I see the error: "kinit: Unable to make 'Initial default ccache' the new system default cache" So, I started using SUN's Java class sun.security.krb5.internal.tools.Kinit When I cache the ticket obtained using this Java class on to a file system and if I execute the command klist -c <cache file on the filesystem> it does not recognize any tickets in that cache file. Has this got something to do with the use of Java class sun.security.krb5.internal.tools.Kinit, whose implementation is may be lacking functionality provided by the kinit executable? NOTE: Please note the change in email address. Ranganath Samudrala [EMAIL PROTECTED] Office: 571-521-8659 I am not tired anymore. On Nov 29, 2007, at 6:04 PM, Christopher D. Clausen wrote: > Ranga Samudrala <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> On a Mac OS X machine, is there a way to force the SSH client to use >> a Kerberos TGT from a cache on the file system instead of the >> default - in the memory? > > Change what the KRB5CCNAME variable points to. > > <<CDC > ________________________________________________ Kerberos mailing list [email protected] https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos
