No kidding--it took me a good while to get mod_auth_sspi configured to
work, and Kerberos would be greatly preferable. Can (has) anyone
document(ed) the procedures for getting Kerberos working?
Arthur
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Dwire [mailto:sdwire@parkcitysolutions.com]
Sent: Thursday, August 26, 2004 5:43 PM
To: Jason Taylor
Cc: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: RE: "Windows Authentication" Was: "Credentials Caching -
Security Guy Not Happy" from users list
Oh, REALLY??? I'm gonna have to try this! We use TortoiseSVN, too.
Everything I've always seen for authenticating against a Windows Domain
always referred to mod_auth_sspi. If we can get mod_auth_kerb working
instead, it looks like a FAQ update will be in order... (Or if someone
else wants to do a FAQ update, I wouldn't mind that, either <grin>)
Steve Dwire
-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Taylor [mailto:jtaylor@bastyr.edu]
Sent: Thursday, August 26, 2004 4:32 PM
To: Steve Dwire
Cc: users@subversion.tigris.org
Subject: Re: "Windows Authentication" Was: "Credentials Caching -
Security Guy Not Happy" from users list
I use TortoiseSVN and it just works.
Steve Dwire wrote:
>I would imagine that SVN does not currently handle the client-side half
>of the Kerberos negotiation, however. Would that be correct?
>
>Is that all ("all" ha!) that would be necessary to provide seamless
>authentication, then? the existing mod_auth_kerb on Apache (properly
>configured) and a smarter SVN client?
>
>Steve Dwire
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Received on Fri Aug 27 13:17:55 2004