On Tue, 29 Sep 2015, TomK wrote:
Hey Guy's,
(Sending this again as I didn't have this email included in the
freeipa-users mailing list so not sure if the other message will get
posted.)
Before I post a ticket to RH Support for an RFE, I'll post the request
here to get some feedback on optio
Hey Guy's,
(Sending this again as I didn't have this email included in the
freeipa-users mailing list so not sure if the other message will get
posted.)
Before I post a ticket to RH Support for an RFE, I'll post the request
here to get some feedback on options and what ideas folks have. I'v
oh thx! it would be really nice to have it...
Greetz
Christoph Kaminski
Pavel Březina schrieb am 29.09.2015 13:48:14:
>
> Hi, I filed a ticket:
> https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/5332
--
Manage your subscription for the Freeipa-users mailing list:
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listi
On Tue, 29 Sep 2015, Sadettin Albasan wrote:
I have a freeipa server and a trust relation with AD domain with almost
everything working the way I planned except automounting NFS home
directories for domain users. I have been reading about this on the net for
almost a week, ended up trying a lot o
I have a freeipa server and a trust relation with AD domain with almost
everything working the way I planned except automounting NFS home
directories for domain users. I have been reading about this on the net for
almost a week, ended up trying a lot of different configurations, but I had
no succes
Brian Mathis wrote:
> No. FreeIPA requires a *CA* certificate, which is a cert that has the
> ability to sign other certs. Unless you're in a large company with an
> expensive agreement in place with GoDaddy, that is not a permission they
> grant to regular certs. A wildcard cert is only allowed
On 9/28/15 11:33 AM, Rob Crittenden wrote:
Simo Sorce wrote:
On 27/09/15 09:21, Janelle wrote:
Hello,
I continue to see these a lot, but only on some servers. It causes a lot
of confusions with my users. There must be a way to troubleshoot this
and find the issue. Also, there is nothing wrong
No. FreeIPA requires a *CA* certificate, which is a cert that has the
ability to sign other certs. Unless you're in a large company with an
expensive agreement in place with GoDaddy, that is not a permission they
grant to regular certs. A wildcard cert is only allowed to be used on
simple things
On 09/21/2015 10:42 PM, Andy Thompson wrote:
On Mon, Sep 21, 2015 at 07:39:01PM +, Andy Thompson wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Jakub Hrozek [mailto:jhro...@redhat.com]
Sent: Monday, September 21, 2015 3:29 PM
To: Andy Thompson
Cc: freeipa-users@redhat.com; pbrez...@redhat.com
Subj
On 09/15/2015 09:10 AM, Molnár Domokos wrote:
"Molnár Domokos" írta:
On 09/14/2015 03:08 PM, Pavel Březina wrote:
On 09/11/2015 02:40 PM, Molnár Domokos wrote:
Full log attached.
"Molnár Domokos" írta:
"Pavel Březina" írta:
On 09/09/2015 09:31 PM, Mol
On 09/25/2015 01:12 PM, Jakub Hrozek wrote:
On Fri, Sep 25, 2015 at 11:48:27AM +0200, Pavel Březina wrote:
On 09/25/2015 10:06 AM, Jakub Hrozek wrote:
On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 03:39:48PM +0200, Christoph Kaminski wrote:
Hi
I have 3 problems/questions with ipa and sudo...
1. How to make a GLOB
Hi!
I'm testing FreeIPA 4.1.0 on Centos 7 (1503).
I have a *wildcard *certificate for my domain issued by GoDaddy.
Could I use it with FreeIPA primary and replica servers instead of
self-signed certificate?
If yes, how could I replace the self-signed certificate in existing two
servers installatio
On Mon, Sep 21, 2015 at 04:49:42PM -0600, Duncan McNaught wrote:
> Dear freeipa-users,
>
> I'm having an issue with otp in freeipa. I can set up the service as
> described in the blog post for TOTP or HOTP, and sync the token fine.
> When I try to login to the admin tools or an ipa-managed client
13 matches
Mail list logo