
On Tue, 30 Jun 2009 22:17:54 -0700, Graham Lauder <yorick_(a)openoffice.org> wrote:
On Tue, 30 Jun 2009 01:33:55 -0700, Hakuna Matata <narender.hooda(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, Jun 30, 2009 at 1:57 PM, Daniel Lawson<daniel(a)meta.net.nz> wrote:
You'll need to set up libpam-ldap (it may be called something else in CentOS) for pam to perform authentication. You'll also need libnss-ldap to resolve usernames
Thanks a million for the quick reply. Do i need to modify few files or is there some handy tool for doing this stuff. I am not able to find a suitable doc by googling the web :(
It's been a while since I've looked it; I can't tell you if there is any easier way to do it. There are various documents on the WLUG wiki (edited by myself and others), but these were all focused on debian based systems, and are sadly out of date.
Your LDAP server is possibly overkill. If all you want to do is provide multiple user accounts, then you don't need LDAP at all.
You may find the the LTSP (Linux Terminal Server Project) more use - it's packaged together to do what you want. It even supports freenx, it seems (although freenx isn't the only way to do remote X logins)
Wlug wiki: www.wlug.org.nz LTSP page: www.ltsp.org
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Thanks again... i got something.... http://www.mpipks-dresden.mpg.de/~mueller/docs/suse10.1/suselinux-manual_en/...
I am using LDAP for centralized authentication , we are looking for possibilities to remove MS Active directory from org. I am looking LTSP now if this work as alternative to FreeNX. Thanks for the tip.
we have windows terminal server and 6 users are using it, i have a job given to shift it to linux.
Best Regards H
LTSP has gone away from a standalone application and post LTSP4.2 is now being integrated within distributions geared toward school environments.
LTSP5 is now part of some distributions and others are working on the integration. Unfortunately RedHat and CentOS are behind the eight ball on this.
OpenSUSE has the best LTSP5 application called KIWI also available on SLES10.2 Debian and EdUbuntu are also excellent, up there with OpenSUSE.
Redhat's version is still not the best and K12LTSP-EL is still using LTSP4.2
On the other foot, if your thin clients PXE boot, LTSP4.2 is trivial to set up which is a big plus
Cheers G
Oh and I forgot to point out, lots of useful help on the list at K12OSN(a)redhat.com http://www.k12os.org Jim McQuillan (Mr LTSP) hangs out on both lists and is usually available on irc -- Graham Lauder OpenOffice.org Marketing Contact New Zealand http://marketing.openoffice.org/contacts.html INGOTs Gold assessor Trainer http://www.theingots.org