On Sunday 22 January 2006 15:44, Andrew Zenk wrote: > My guess is that you have a group (wheel) defined in /etc/group that > is conflisting with the one in ldap. I've had this issue before. I > solved it by deleteing the offending group from the group file. > Another solution would be to tell sudo to look for a different group > and make sure the LDAP group is unique.
Yeah, I worked around it by adding the few sudo/su users to the group file. I am surprised that this is necessary though - I would expect nss to look through all resources and merge group entries. -- Daniel O'Connor software and network engineer for Genesis Software - http://www.gsoft.com.au "The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose from." -- Andrew Tanenbaum GPG Fingerprint - 5596 B766 97C0 0E94 4347 295E E593 DC20 7B3F CE8C
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