Does Emerald append information to the files that it will
write on the Samba share? Does it overwrite? How do you
manage a thing like that? Sed/Awk? Any examples that anyone
may know of?
To be a little bold with an opinion, I think that it is not
a very "clean" solution. I think that the ability to send
an E-mail to an Admin each time a user of particular service
is added/modified/deleted is more manageable (Yes, as manual
as it may be :) than the Samba thing (not that I'm opposed
to the solution). I guess that's probably skeptical opinion
since I haven't actually set things up to try it yet, but...
maybe I'm leading up to a feature request:
the least complex solution, that I can imagine, is a program
designed by and for Emerald, that operates on a port of a
UNIX machine. The program can accept requests from Emerald.
There could be a proprietary protocol with a username, password,
and maybe encryption. The program could be wrapped via inetd, so
that connections are accepted only from the IP address where
Emerald is running. In Emerald's definition of a service, there
could be a check box, maybe "Use Unix server", with a text box
to indicate the IP address of the Unix server. It could include
a mandatory shell (no telnet shell), allow/disallow FTP access
toggle switch, etc.) A Help button would reveal that you need
to download and compile such-and-such file from
ftp://such-and-such and read the docs contained in the archive.
?
*********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
On 7/7/99 at 2:59 PM Dale E. Reed Jr. wrote:
>Alexander Blauvelt wrote:
>>
>> > ADD login password accounttype expire ...
>> > DEL login
>> > PWD login password
>> >
>> > etc into that file, which you can then write a script to interpret
>> > and process. Usually ISPs already have a set of scripts they
>> > manually use, which they just need to write a front-end piece
>> > for.
>>
>> What would one do if they wanted just type of service for this to work
>> for?
>
>You go into the Emerald Admin, Accounting section and you can
>specify which service types have that external system. Then only
>those types will be sent (the rest are ignored).
>
>As a side note, the two files can go to two different unix machines,
>or you can use one as a log and one as the working file. You can
>also define multiple external systems to multiple servers (say for
>example you have to boxes, one does personal webs and one does
>commercial webs) you could create two service types and associate
>one to each external system.
>
>--
>
>Dale E. Reed Jr. Emerald and RadiusNT
>__________________________________________
>IEA Software, Inc. www.iea-software.com
>
>For more information about this list (including removal) go to:
>http://www.iea-software.com/support/maillists/liststart
-C.
--Chris Cover <ccover@signature-is.com>Systems AdministratorSignature Internet Solutions
For more information about this list (including removal) go to:http://www.iea-software.com/support/maillists/liststart