| Title: | NetRider --- Remote Network Access Conference |
| Notice: | Please use keywords! See Note 2 for Directory of Important Notes |
| Moderator: | LAVC::CAHILL ON |
| Created: | Tue Jan 24 1995 |
| Last Modified: | Mon Jun 02 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 554 |
| Total number of notes: | 2264 |
Hi
In wandering your internal Web site, I'm sure I saw something that
talked about DRAS' ability to, instead of using its own static
database, use the authentication database of the node it ran on. Is this
true? Where could I read the details about this? Having just read the
Use for Windows document, I didn't see this mentioned at all.
My problem is a site where all three (OpenVMS, Digital UNIX, Windows
NT) operating systems are used, and we have many instances of each.
The Windows NT world uses the DIGITAL1 domain, so has a common
authentication database, but we have dozens of OpenVMS and Digital UNIX
clusters/clumps. I'd rather not have a static DRAS database if I could
help it. But I'm not seeing a way to use so many disparate
authentication databases.
If I have to have a static database, I'd rather it exist as a table in
a SQL-compliant database. This would give me the greatest hope of
easily weaving it into existing databases.
Thoughts?
Thanks!
tl
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 549.1 | The HOST with the most... | CSC32::R_BUCK | Authenticated and assimilated | Wed May 21 1997 19:22 | 18 |
Going to guess that HOST authentication was the context where DRAS uses
the native authentication database of the system where it is running.
We have configured it for HOST authentication on Windows NT and
OpenVMS. One of the current limitations is that you still have to add
a record to the DRAS Server database for each user. Name must match
the name in the native authentication database, (SYSUAF.DAT for
example). Some great improvements are coming in this area though!
What's not available today, and maybe not for a while, is the ability
to have multiple DRAS servers on different platforms, replicate and/or
communicate with each other to present one single authentication
domain. Today, with a combination of realm names and multiple DRAS servers,
you should be able to setup an environment where a user can be
authenticated using a Username and Password combination that is the
same as their Windows NT, OpenVMS, or Digital UNIX login.
Randall Buck
MCS - Network Support
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