summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/src/providers/krb5/krb5_common.c
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorSumit Bose <sbose@redhat.com>2012-10-23 21:30:17 +0200
committerJakub Hrozek <jhrozek@redhat.com>2012-11-05 00:14:05 +0100
commitef3053bd244cb3b104b608b338c764c6a2e34f29 (patch)
tree6e3405f1da00c2f632a7433c0c606ad3c28ad0c0 /src/providers/krb5/krb5_common.c
parentb3ea76f3c6d32b4fbf29caa2f4f6ec4138da5be1 (diff)
downloadsssd-ef3053bd244cb3b104b608b338c764c6a2e34f29.tar.gz
sssd-ef3053bd244cb3b104b608b338c764c6a2e34f29.tar.xz
sssd-ef3053bd244cb3b104b608b338c764c6a2e34f29.zip
krb5_child: send back the client principal
In general Kerberos is case sensitive but the KDC of Active Directory typically handles request case in-sensitive. In the case where we guess a user principal by combining the user name and the realm and are not sure about the cases of the letters used in the user name we might get a valid ticket from the AD KDC but are not able to access it with the Kerberos client library because we assume a wrong case. The client principal in the returned credentials will always have the right cases. To be able to update the cache user principal name the krb5_child will return the principal for further processing.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/providers/krb5/krb5_common.c')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions