On 11/04/2016 02:42 PM, Brian Candler wrote:
> On 04/11/2016 12:20, Petr Vobornik wrote:
>> You can check with what options authconfig was called by:
>> # cat /var/log/ipaclient-install.log | grep authconfig
>>
>> if --enablemkhomedir is not there then it is possible that something
>> else enabl
On 04/11/2016 12:20, Petr Vobornik wrote:
You can check with what options authconfig was called by:
# cat /var/log/ipaclient-install.log | grep authconfig
if --enablemkhomedir is not there then it is possible that something
else enabled it.
It's not there:
$ sudo cat /var/log/ipaclient-ins
On 11/04/2016 12:52 PM, Brian Candler wrote:
> On 04/11/2016 11:32, Brian Candler wrote:
>>
>> I notice that both ipa-server-install and ipa-replica-install have the
>> following option:
>>
>> --mkhomedir create home directories for users on their first
>> login
>>
>> but I did not su
On 04/11/2016 11:32, Brian Candler wrote:
I notice that both ipa-server-install and ipa-replica-install have the
following option:
--mkhomedir create home directories for users on their
first login
but I did not supply this option in either case. I believe the actual
options I
I have set up freeipa using CentOS 7 and the default 4.2.0 packages.
I found that on the master, the user's home directory is created
automatically, but on the replicas it is not. Looking into the contents
of /etc/pam.d, the following files are different:
fingerprint-auth-ac
password-auth-ac