You may want to speak with him about compartmentalizing areas of "like
security". You can then create a classification system like so:
Class A
Email
Webmail
Normal Web Apps
Class B
HR/ERP
Finance
Then create a Class A and a Class B account for each user. That's very
reasonable and gives you so
André Ribas wrote:
> You understood well Justin and I agree with you but it's the way that my
> supervisor wants. =(
>
> His reason is supposed to be "security".
Probably he wants service accounts (not separate user accounts) which is
indeed a reasonable thing to do.
Ciao, Michael.
> Justin De
You understood well Justin and I agree with you but it's the way that my
supervisor wants. =(
His reason is supposed to be "security".
Justin Dearing wrote:
So let me understand this,
You have a person with their information stored in ldap. Several
services (unix login, a php web site running
Hello list, I'm trying to implement distinct passwords for each service
that will authenticate on LDAP. Anyone have any glue to me? =D
Thanks.
--
André Ribas