Hello,
I have found out that on new NM at RHEL hostnames are not sent (so no host
authentication)
https://access.redhat.com/site/documentation/de-DE/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/5/html-single/5.3_Release_Notes/
NetworkManager attempted to set a hostname, but only after X had already
done so. The
On Fri, 2014-04-04 at 12:07 +0300, Omer Faruk SEN wrote:
Hello all,
I see that Ubuntu mistakenly do that.
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2202941 Sending
host/machine_name mistakenly then I see that it is achieved
NetworkManager but i am trying to figure out how can i do that on
Hello all,
I see that Ubuntu mistakenly do that.
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2202941 Sending
host/machine_name mistakenly then I see that it is achieved
NetworkManager but i am trying to figure out how can i do that on rhel
since rhel NetworkManager on RHEL6 uses at
On 04/03/2014 10:00 AM, Omer Faruk SEN wrote:
Hello,
I want to ask how can i use Computer Authentication on
NetworkManager-0.8.1. Is this a supported mode? If so where can i
configure it on the NM GUI?
I think that's something you'd do with samba (probably specifically the
samba-winbind
Hello Dan,
AFAIK this EAP identity package was sent by 802.1x supplicant so as far as
I know it is Network Manager to do this so i think it is NM that sends
user/pass or machine name as host/machine.name
Regards
On Fri, Apr 4, 2014 at 3:26 PM, Dan Winship d...@gnome.org wrote:
On 04/03/2014
On 04/04/2014 10:23 AM, Omer Faruk SEN wrote:
Hello Dan,
AFAIK this EAP identity package was sent by 802.1x supplicant so as far
as I know it is Network Manager to do this so i think it is NM that
sends user/pass or machine name as host/machine.name http://machine.name
Ah. I don't know all
Hello,
I want to ask how can i use Computer Authentication on
NetworkManager-0.8.1. Is this a supported mode? If so where can i configure
it on the NM GUI?
I am using RHEL 6.5 and I use NetworkManager-0.8.1-66.el6.x86_64
I want to state that RHEL 6.5 has joined to Microsoft AD environment. On
Not as far as I have been able to tell per how windoze handles it. I
asked this a while back, and short answer is no.
Working in an enterprise wireless environment, of course windoze does
this (only at boot/logout), macs do this too (somewhat poorly), but
there is nothing analogous in linux