Hi Aaron,

Root is featured in /etc/passwd. Look at the entry below that is taken from
my /etc/passwd :

 cat /etc/passwd
root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash

And my /etc/nsswitch.conf file :
passwd:     files ldap
shadow:     files ldap
group:      files ldap

If I tweak the sequence to ldap files, then root can't login at all!

On Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 8:40 PM, Aaron Richton <[email protected]>wrote:

> On Thu, 22 Mar 2012, SYeen Su wrote:
>
>  sshd: pam_ldap: error trying to bind as user "uid=root, ou=People,
>> dc=example,dc=com" (Invalid credentials).
>>
>> My root user is not even in the ldap database.
>>
>
> Then obviously your root user must be specified somewhere else. Perhaps
> that "somewhere else" should be specified earlier than LDAP in your PAM
> configuration, since you're implying that the "somewhere else" data is more
> important than the LDAP data?
>



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