On Wed, 2002-10-16 at 20:12, anton heryanto wrote: <snip> > Rick Romero wrote: > >I'm not familiar with squid, but I'd do this: > > > >1. make sure squid is using the same database/table as vpopmail > >2. make sure squid is looking at the right columns for the username > >password. > > > >I think it's pretty straight forward. Add the necessary squid columns > >to the vpopmail table, and tell squid to use pw_name and pw_clear_passwd > >to auth, if you can. > > i have do this, and i successes but ionly if i use the clear password and only > username and password field, thing that I want to know is how to read > vpopmail password encryption using mysql query :-)
I don't know know anything about the encryption, but IIRC, you can't READ the vpopmail encryption, you have to encrypt the password received, and compare that to what vpopmail has stored. > > >Your best resource for where to do that in Squid would be the Squid > >list.. > > > >But then, I would recommend also taking a look at what samba requires. > >You wouldn't want to spend time hacking up Squid auth, only to find that > >it doesn't work with Samba. (I would think Squid would be the easiest to > >integrate) > > yea, you right i have think it too, and next i want to vpopmail using samba (NT) > encryption method, because it come from windows and cannot be change!! > I would think the hardest integration would be the Samba side, so I would start there, then add vpopmail and squid your Samba PDC. It looks like the Red Hat link I gave you isn't quite done with their integration, but if you have the time - work with the Red Hat guys to get it all working. I'd bet that whatever they do on that site will end up as a minimum $300 server product. Single Sign-on (SSO) is on everyones wish list, but it's hard to accomplish. At work, I use Netware 5.1 and Mercury/32 to accomplish file/mail SSO integration, and export NDS as LDAP to allow for non Pegasus Mail (NDS mail client) address books. If I wanted squid/proxy auth, I assume I could use LDAP, or just buy Novell's BorderManager. It's not free, but it's stable and it works. I'm sure you can do it with MS products also - but I don't know what your motivation is: Free? Non-MS? Stability? Reliability? OS of the Month? :) > >Please reply to the list, while I try to be helpful, I'm not necessarily > >knowledgeable, and peer review can hopefully correct any mistakes I may > >make (or give you a different road to follow). > >thank's a lot for you attention and advice >(btw sorry my english very bad :-[ ) > Your English is fine, your quoting sucks :) See if your mail client does inline quoting. Rick