Hi Marc, If rangerusersync Unix user exists, then you may want to modify the unix_user and unix_group in install.properties to adapt to your case. Now for Kerberos, this applies only if you are in a kerberised environment. Otherwise you leave this blank. Best regards,
Loïc Le mar. 11 juin 2024 à 14:28, Marc Hoppins <marc.hopp...@eset.com> a écrit : > Hi all, > > > > Sorry to appear dumb but am still trying to get this working. > > > > Why does install.properties have: > > > > #User and group for the usersync process > > unix_user=ranger > > unix_group=ranger > > > > If the rangerusersync ID exists? > > > > #change password of rangerusersync user. Please note that this password > should be as per rangerusersync user in ranger > > rangerUsersync_password= > > > > and KERBEROS > > > > #Set to run in kerberos environment > > usersync_principal= > > usersync_keytab= > > hadoop_conf=/etc/hadoop/conf > > > > What does HADOOP Kerberos have to do with LDAP – our LDAP is active > directory. > > > > Marc Hoppins >