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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-07 14:37:39 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-07 14:37:39 +0000 |
commit | c015179efce5825c16d68ec81530d82631cd2cf7 (patch) | |
tree | 186c902f87903d06ece7d840b230c37383e86f50 /debian/patches/sudo-ldap-docs | |
parent | Adding upstream version 1.9.13p3. (diff) | |
download | sudo-c015179efce5825c16d68ec81530d82631cd2cf7.tar.xz sudo-c015179efce5825c16d68ec81530d82631cd2cf7.zip |
Adding debian version 1.9.13p3-1+deb12u1.debian/1.9.13p3-1+deb12u1debian
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | debian/patches/sudo-ldap-docs | 59 |
1 files changed, 59 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/debian/patches/sudo-ldap-docs b/debian/patches/sudo-ldap-docs new file mode 100644 index 0000000..10378dd --- /dev/null +++ b/debian/patches/sudo-ldap-docs @@ -0,0 +1,59 @@ +Description: Adapt README.LDAP to the actual state of the sudo-ldap package +Author: Marc Haber <mh+debian-packages@zugschlus.de> +Forwarded: not-needed +--- a/README.LDAP.md ++++ b/README.LDAP.md +@@ -35,22 +35,8 @@ They are one and the same. + + ## Build instructions + +-The simplest way to build sudo with LDAP support is to include the +-`--with-ldap` option. +- +- $ ./configure --with-ldap +- +-If your ldap libraries and headers are in a non-standard place, you will need +-to specify them at configure time. E.g. +- +- $ ./configure --with-ldap=/usr/local/ldapsdk +- +-Sudo is developed using OpenLDAP but Netscape-based LDAP libraries +-(such as those present in Solaris) and IBM LDAP are also known to work. +- +-If special configuration was required to build an LDAP-enabled sudo, +-let the sudo workers mailing list <sudo-workers@sudo.ws> know so +-we can improve sudo. ++The Debian package of sudo-ldap is already built with LDAP support ++using the OpenLDAP libs. + + ## Schema Changes + +@@ -177,13 +163,10 @@ I recommend using any of the following L + + There are dozens of others, some Open Source, some free, some not. + +-## Configure your /etc/ldap.conf and /etc/nsswitch.conf ++## Configure your /etc/sudo-ldap.conf and /etc/nsswitch.conf + +-The /etc/ldap.conf file is meant to be shared between sudo, pam_ldap, nss_ldap +-and other ldap applications and modules. IBM Secureway unfortunately uses +-the same file name but has a different syntax. If you need to change where +-this file is stored, re-run configure with the `--with-ldap-conf-file=PATH` +-option. ++The Debian package sudo-ldap uses /etc/sudo-ldap.conf as configuration file ++and is configured to use nsswitch. + + See the "Configuring ldap.conf" section in the sudoers.ldap manual + for a list of supported ldap.conf parameters and an example ldap.conf +@@ -195,10 +178,7 @@ After configuring /etc/ldap.conf, you mu + /etc/nsswitch.conf file to tell sudo to look in LDAP for sudoers. + See the "Configuring nsswitch.conf" section in the sudoers.ldap + manual for details. Sudo will use /etc/nsswitch.conf even if the +-underlying operating system does not support it. To disable nsswitch +-support, run configure with the `--with-nsswitch=no` option. This +-will cause sudo to consult LDAP first and /etc/sudoers second, +-unless the ignore_sudoers_file flag is set in the global LDAP options. ++underlying operating system does not support it. + + ## Debugging your LDAP configuration + |