* sabah salih [2008-03-25 13:47:23 +]:
> I installed SL43 last week with "heimdal"
>
> openafs-krb5-1.4.4-46.SL4
> kernel-module-openafs-2.6.9-34.EL-1.4.0-8.SL
> openafs-firstboot-1.2.11-5.SL
> openafs-1.4.4-46.SL4
> openafs-kpasswd-1.4.4-46.SL4
> openafs-client-1.4.4-46.SL4
> kernel-module-o
Dear All,
This is not a direct afs question:
I installed SL43 last week with "heimdal"
openafs-krb5-1.4.4-46.SL4
kernel-module-openafs-2.6.9-34.EL-1.4.0-8.SL
openafs-firstboot-1.2.11-5.SL
openafs-1.4.4-46.SL4
openafs-kpasswd-1.4.4-46.SL4
openafs-client-1.4.4-46.SL4
kernel-module-opena
On Fri, 3 May 2002, Daniel Blakeley wrote:
> The lastest version of openssh doesn't seem to pass tokens
> like the version 1.x did.
It still passes tokens, but it does it during the session initiation loop
instead of the authentication loop like it used to. If you point an old
ssh client at
On Sat, May 04, 2002 at 02:34:09PM -0400, Ray Link wrote:
> There is a way to do this with the newer versions of OpenSSH, but it
> involves dorking with the structure of your ~/.ssh directory.
>
> Background info first:
>
> In older (pre-2.9, iirc) versions of OpenSSH, it would pass your AFS
> t
On Fri, May 03, 2002 at 02:53:40PM -0400, Derek T. Yarnell wrote:
> damn...
>
I attacked this problem a slightly different way. I took the aklog code
from the krb5-afs toolkit and made it into a linkable library. Now you
can link against -laklog which exports an aklog() and unlog() function.
I
> > > To clarify, the question Daniel was asking is how to do this when
> > > you're still running kaserver.
> >
> > Um, I think the answer is: you don't.
>
> There is a way to do this with the newer versions of OpenSSH, but it
> involves dorking with the structure of your ~/.ssh directory.
Anoth