Hi, once upon tested PERL we had experience some problem on involving CGI- PERL in order to manage Kerberos with PERL with a WEB APPLICATION.
We want to know what do u think about involving JPL for calling perl (interface to kerberos) from JAVA (Web Application). According to you which is the better solution between CGI-BIN and JPL?? Thanks in advance guys!!! Best regards, Andrea On 15 Gen, 09:48, Andrea <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello, > i work with Vincenzo Carnuccio. > Now we have tried the Perl extension and it seems that it works fine. > We are trying also with jni project on ONNV-gate. > We will inform you about. > > Thank you! > > On 14 Gen, 21:33, Russ Allbery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > "Greg Wallace" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > At the Fedora Users and Developer Conference yesterday they announced a > > > new remote maagement project that might be interesting to people > > > following this thread. > > > > You can find out more about it here: https://fedorahosted.org/func > > > func a lot like remctl except with more access to the programming language > > and a different authentication strategy. It's yet another retread of a > > very old idea (going back at least to the old IBM sysctl that used > > Kerberos v4), also represented by CERN ARC and various other systems. (I > > think that both adm and Moira have some capabilities along these lines as > > well.) > > > Our experience at Stanford was that we never actually needed to be able to > > embed programs into the server and the additional complexity of supporting > > that wasn't worth it, so remctl always runs an external program. This has > > worked quite well for us. > > > remctl doesn't use any of the XML languages in part because dealing with > > the parsing libraries was too painful for the benefit gained in our > > opinion when we started the project. We wanted something with a > > lightweight server that didn't require dependencies on scripting languages > > since at the time we had a huge Solaris infrastructure. These days, with > > Linux being more common, the Python dependencies aren't as big of a deal. > > > You can get remctl from <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/remctl/>. > > It's in widespread production use at Stanford. > > > -- > > Russ Allbery ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/> ________________________________________________ Kerberos mailing list [email protected] https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos
