On Sat, 2004-10-23 at 05:03, John H Terpstra wrote:
> On Friday 22 October 2004 10:49, Palle Girgensohn wrote:
> > Hi!
> >
> > I don't use MS products at all, so I have very little knowledge with them,
> > but I believe Microsoft has as protocol where Internet Explorer can
> > automatically authent
On Sat, 2004-10-23 at 06:47, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > What I want is to skip the login prompt and instead authenticate using a
> > NTLM/Kerberos ticket...
>
> Yes.
>
> > > > What is happening between the web server & the web client? Is the
> > > > protocol open or reverse engineered? Can thi
Thanks a lot for these links!
Best regards,
Palle
--On fredag 22 oktober 2004 16.47 -0400 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What I want is to skip the login prompt and instead authenticate using a
NTLM/Kerberos ticket...
Yes.
> > What is happening between the web server & the web client? Is the
> > protocol
> What I want is to skip the login prompt and instead authenticate using a
> NTLM/Kerberos ticket...
Yes.
> > > What is happening between the web server & the web client? Is the
> > > protocol open or reverse engineered? Can this authentication be done
> > > using apache @ unix (perhaps by apac
Hi!
--On fredag 22 oktober 2004 14.21 -0400 Adam Tauno Williams
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I don't use MS products at all, so I have very little knowledge with
them, but I believe Microsoft has as protocol where Internet Explorer
can automatically authenticate against an IIS server, and given t
On Friday 22 October 2004 10:49, Palle Girgensohn wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I don't use MS products at all, so I have very little knowledge with them,
> but I believe Microsoft has as protocol where Internet Explorer can
> automatically authenticate against an IIS server, and given that the server
> and cli
> I don't use MS products at all, so I have very little knowledge with them,
> but I believe Microsoft has as protocol where Internet Explorer can
> automatically authenticate against an IIS server, and given that the server
> and client are on the same NT domain, and the client user is logged i
Hi!
I don't use MS products at all, so I have very little knowledge with them,
but I believe Microsoft has as protocol where Internet Explorer can
automatically authenticate against an IIS server, and given that the server
and client are on the same NT domain, and the client user is logged in to