Yes. The Kerberos protocol simply allows users to get credentials and it provides a way for applications to check them. A user can have more than one credential at a time. Asssociating credential with a session is up to you. You can certainly store a credential in a session-specific place.
> On Jan 20, 2021, at 10:39 PM, Shobha Sangappa, Mukti (Nokia - US/San Jose) > <mukti.shobha_sanga...@nokia.com> wrote: > > Hi Team, > > I am using Kerberos in my product. I wanted to know if Kerberos supports > concurrent sessions per user or is it configurable, can you please provide > the information? > > Thank you > Mukti > ________________________________________________ > Kerberos mailing list Kerberos@mit.edu > https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos ________________________________________________ Kerberos mailing list Kerberos@mit.edu https://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/kerberos