I wish I could, but unfortunately these are RHEL 5 because the client has not
yet upgraded their software to work on 6 or 7, so I’m stuck with a RHEL 5
infrastructure for awhile.
As long as it authenticates and sudo works we may just have to live with the
keys not working.
Thanks for the inf
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 04:32:30PM +0200, Lukas Slebodnik wrote:
> On (30/04/15 15:34), Jakub Hrozek wrote:
> >On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 03:13:44PM +0200, Martin Kosek wrote:
> >> On 04/30/2015 02:56 PM, Aric Wilisch wrote:
> >> > Is there a trick to getting a users SSH key that’s attached to their
On (30/04/15 15:34), Jakub Hrozek wrote:
>On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 03:13:44PM +0200, Martin Kosek wrote:
>> On 04/30/2015 02:56 PM, Aric Wilisch wrote:
>> > Is there a trick to getting a users SSH key that’s attached to their
>> > FreeIPA account to work on RHEL 5 servers? users can ssh into the RH
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 03:13:44PM +0200, Martin Kosek wrote:
> On 04/30/2015 02:56 PM, Aric Wilisch wrote:
> > Is there a trick to getting a users SSH key that’s attached to their
> > FreeIPA account to work on RHEL 5 servers? users can ssh into the RHEL 6
> > clients with no issues but they sti
On 04/30/2015 02:56 PM, Aric Wilisch wrote:
> Is there a trick to getting a users SSH key that’s attached to their FreeIPA
> account to work on RHEL 5 servers? users can ssh into the RHEL 6 clients with
> no issues but they still get prompted for their passwords on the RHEL 5
> server, so it’s n
Is there a trick to getting a users SSH key that’s attached to their FreeIPA
account to work on RHEL 5 servers? users can ssh into the RHEL 6 clients with
no issues but they still get prompted for their passwords on the RHEL 5 server,
so it’s not pushing down their ssh keys.
Thanks!
Regards,