ogram (included on the
package with the same name):
# sysv-rc-conf foobar off
The advantage of using this program instead of doing things manually is that
if you re-enable the service:
# sysv-rc-conf foobar on
the rc.d links are returned to the status they had before the 'off' call.
smbldap-password, not the systems password command).
Hope that it helps.
Greetings,
Sergio.
--
Sergio Talens-Oliag <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://people.debian.org/~sto/>
Key fingerprint = 29DF 544F 1BD9 548C 8F15 86EF 6770 052B B8C1 FA69
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rmit_sasl_authenticated,check_relay_domains
Maybe you need to change you 'smtpd_client_restrictions' and
'smtpd_sender_restrictions' and disable the 'permit_mynetworks'?
--
Sergio Talens-Oliag <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://people.debian.org/~sto/>
rmit_sasl_authenticated,check_relay_domains
Maybe you need to change you 'smtpd_client_restrictions' and
'smtpd_sender_restrictions' and disable the 'permit_mynetworks'?
--
Sergio Talens-Oliag <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://people.debian.org/~st
ired pam_ldap.so use_first_pass
---
With this setup the user is only asked once; if 'pam_unix' succeds the user
is authorized and if it fails 'pam_ldap' tries to authenticate using the
same password entered.
Hope this helps.
--
Sergio Talens-Oliag <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Key fingerprint = 29DF 544F 1BD9 548C 8F15 86EF 6770 052B B8C1 FA69
ired pam_ldap.so use_first_pass
---
With this setup the user is only asked once; if 'pam_unix' succeds the user
is authorized and if it fails 'pam_ldap' tries to authenticate using the
same password entered.
Hope this helps.
--
Sergio Talens-Oliag <[EMAIL
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