Steve Rigler schrieb:
It has a lot to do with user root if you use rootbinddn in
"/etc/ldap.conf" and put the password into "/etc/ldap.secret" which
should only be readable by root.

You are right but I even set the permissions on ldap.secret to 0644 to be sure that there are no acl problems. I expected that nscd would use rootbinddn if ldap.secret was readable for the user "nscd".

fs

PS: This was on a test machine, I won't ever make ldap.secret world readable in a production environment.

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