On Tue, Jun 8, 2010 at 10:48 PM, Matthew Delves <[email protected]>wrote:
> > > >>> On 9/06/2010 at 1:22 pm, Robert LeBlanc <[email protected]> wrote: > > If you configure SSH and NFS, you get passwords logins and mounts. I > think > > mount.smb can use it as well as smbclient. I know that KDE auto logs me > into > > Samba/WIndows file shares without a password just like Windows. If you > have > > Kerberos websites, you can configure your browser to pass tickets and get > > single-signon. There are quiet a few things you can do. If you have to > enter > > a password, there is usually a way to enable Kerberos for it. > > > > Thanks for that explanation. That's more when using Linux as a workstation. > I'm using Linux as a server and am wanting to use Kerberos authentication as > a way of achieving SSO. > > Currently I have the linux server setup so that it retrieves a kerberos > ticket when a user logs in via ssh, though when I tell PuTTY to authenticate > using kerberos, it still asks for a password. > > Is there a way to track down just what is going on there? > > It took me a long time to get Kerberos SSH working. My best friends were ssh -vvvv and running sshd in debug mode. It will take a while, but the passwordless login is very nice. I was able to do if from Mac and Linux, I think I got Putty working on one Window's machine, but it required a special version of Putty from what I remember. Robert LeBlanc Life Sciences & Undergraduate Education Computer Support Brigham Young University -- To unsubscribe from this list go to the following URL and read the instructions: https://lists.samba.org/mailman/options/samba
