[Date Prev][Date Next]
[Chronological]
[Thread]
[Top]
[no subject]
- To: openldap-technical@openldap.org
- Subject:
- From: Tio Teath <tioteath@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 27 Sep 2012 13:09:06 +0300
- Dkim-signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=gmail.com; s=20120113; h=mime-version:sender:date:x-google-sender-auth:message-id:subject :from:to:content-type; bh=dRWjtq7GNJXNJWKiHlRRoITGvxam42BCtYftoNEmvFQ=; b=yx9dUGGYm8ZL7mx/MJODCVTNjKD0pXU+19nD+qYqL+z6YPy8K6cD0rQMBxtd0xrX5L KuTXftmEUBDdqW9CTYbdiOk/2gh7o0uMaMEsulnjmZ+AhJi5KpmV+5ekkqHbENqKcqrg 31Tyf2pmc6XCveW/7vpl3uM9eYQxL33NY9Ss7SOcB9GoK5JdUBahkD4JrWFjrj14+jl9 fEIUloCM6kxMf0gShEP19cnXAhm4Cdcfxs6thiCyBTyqM11qAo+omLGGvaQte9tiSG0g 7CYNZUv5t83Tfh8wA58YfoEErzl1wB8MZEvsLx8GmE4dXUtEDnxGwRGSPxqZ6TW94YNG Tbxw==
Is it possible to implement ACL, using groups which are accessed via
ldap-proxy, i.e. non-local groups? I've managed to setup
authentication for users, which are in remote LDAP server only, but
looks like remote groups are ignored in case of using 'group.exact='
statement.