On Mon, Oct 24, 2016 at 11:29:06AM -0400, William Muriithi wrote:
> Morning Jakub,
>
> >> However, I would like to tune this configuration to drop the domain
> >> component of the user and group names. I tried to do this by adding
> >> these settings to the [sssd] section in sssd.conf on the c
Morning Jakub,
>> However, I would like to tune this configuration to drop the domain
>> component of the user and group names. I tried to do this by adding
>> these settings to the [sssd] section in sssd.conf on the client:
>>
>>default_domain_suffix = example.au
>> full_name_format =
On Fri, Oct 21, 2016 at 04:07:16PM +1100, Robert Sturrock wrote:
> > On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 04:46:01PM +1100, Robert Sturrock wrote:
> > […]
> > > However, when I try logging in as a student domain user
> > > (student.example.au),
> > > I don't see any of the groups (there should be 8):
> > >
>
> On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 04:46:01PM +1100, Robert Sturrock wrote:
> […]
> > However, when I try logging in as a student domain user
> > (student.example.au),
> > I don't see any of the groups (there should be 8):
> >
> > $ ssh -l rnst student example au ipa-client-rh7.ipa.example.au
> >
On Thu, Oct 20, 2016 at 04:46:01PM +1100, Robert Sturrock wrote:
> Hello,
>
> We have an IPA (4.2) server setup on RHEL 7.2 in a trust arrangement with
> our University organisational AD. The AD forest contains *two*
> domains:
>
> EXAMPLE.AU (staff users)
> STUDENT.EXAMPLE.AU (student users
Hello,
We have an IPA (4.2) server setup on RHEL 7.2 in a trust arrangement with
our University organisational AD. The AD forest contains *two*
domains:
EXAMPLE.AU (staff users)
STUDENT.EXAMPLE.AU (student users)
The IPA domain that trusts these is called:
IPA.EXAMPLE.AU
The basic confi