2006/7/3, ACM Staff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Ok, so its working but I realized a slight problem today when went
back to check on things. Its not prompting for a password.
Sudoers isn't on NOPASSWD so I am assuming its my pam.d/sudo
It is on nopasswd, check it I got from you:
notroot ALL=(ALL) N
Ok, so its working but I realized a slight problem today when went
back to check on things. Its not prompting for a password.
Sudoers isn't on NOPASSWD so I am assuming its my pam.d/sudo file.
What am I missing?
risk# cat /etc/pam.d/sudo
#
# $FreeBSD: src/etc/pam.d/su,v 1.16 2003/07/09 18:40:49
Ya, that worked. I didn't think about it from that angel. I suppose it
has to auth the user somehow and I don't have ldap in system, I just
have it in ssh. Thanks.
On 7/2/06, Dan Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
In the last episode (Jul 02), ACM Staff said:
> Ok, so I am running a box with 6.0-
In the last episode (Jul 02), ACM Staff said:
> Ok, so I am running a box with 6.0-STABLE
>
> Problem is I can't get sudo working for my LDAP based users. I
> compiled sudo from the ports tree with LDAP support. Here is some
> output
>
> as a user:
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ id notroot
> uid=2018
Ok, so I am running a box with 6.0-STABLE
Problem is I can't get sudo working for my LDAP based users. I
compiled sudo from the ports tree with LDAP support. Here is some
output
as a user:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ id notroot
uid=2018(notroot) gid=200(acm) groups=200(acm), 203(officers),
201(staff)