I planned to use Squid on my W2k3 network, because I’m tired of ISA2k6… it’s a **** factory in itself. So, I just installed a VM with OpenSuse 11.2 and joined it to my AD W2k3 domain. After correcting the clock problems, everything is running fine except a strange feature that I was not able to solve.
After a reboot, I’m not able to login with a domain account. I enter the username/password, choose the domain then it the input fields become grey for 1-2 seconds then the password field is reset and nothing happens.
The most strange part comes when you logon with the local root account. You login as root, then logoff and login with any domain account : works like a charm…
Kerberos is working fine, systemclock’s correct… well, any idea please ? Tell me if you need the conf files and which ones.
Ennki wrote:
> No idea anyone ? I’m kinda desperate,
sorry i have no idea how to get anything to work with a Windows
network (having none to connect to–yipee), but some few folks here do…
but tell me, doesn’t your question have more to do with the networking
of openSUSE with alien systems rather than with installing, booting or
logging into openSUSE itself?
if so, then maybe the lack of attracting openSUSE <-> Windows
networking gurus to look into your thread is a matter of your
selection for its placement in our install-boot-login forum…
did you get similar help from questions you asked in Windows
install-boot-login fora?
you might consider sending a PM to a mod and ask it be moved [we have
an anti-double posting rule] to “Network/Internet - Questions about
internet applications, network configuration, usage (SAMBA, network
printing, NFS)” here: http://forums.opensuse.org/get-help-here/network-internet/
DenverD wrote:
> Ennki wrote:
>> No idea anyone ? I’m kinda desperate,
oh, i forgot to mention about your subject line: the only reason i
looked in on this thread was i had no idea what “AD Authentication”
meant…
because i didn’t know what “AD” was, and wondered…imo it is not a
good idea to use abreviations like that…sure they may be well known
in some circles, but not all…