|
You are here |
daenney.github.io | ||
| | | | |
blog.oddbit.com
|
|
| | | | | There are many guides out there to help you configure your Linux system as an LDAP and Kerberos client to an Active Directory server. Most of these guides solve the problem of authentication by embedding a username and password into a configuration file somewhere on your system. While this works, it presents some problems: If you use a common account for authentication from all of your Linux systems, a compromise on one system means updating the configuration of all of your systems. If you don't want to ... | |
| | | | |
ewintr.nl
|
|
| | | | | ||
| | | | |
blog.ifsg.ca
|
|
| | | | | This post will detail how to setup a pair of active directory domain controllers using Samba 4 on Ubuntu 20.04 Server. One will be a pr... | |
| | | | |
gabevenberg.com
|
|
| | | I've been using Arch Linux for several years now. Of course, my first installs were... blunderous, as i wanted to do full disk encryption from the get-go, and I didn't know what I was doing. After those first one or two installs, I generally settled on LVM on LUKS with a GRUB bootloader and my swap on an LVM volume, mostly because it makes it much easier to setup hibernation/suspend to disk vs, say, a swap file. | ||