From 3afdc12b96c0e249a9e4ff665c3b2147a99381a9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrew Bartlett Date: Sun, 2 Sep 2007 23:43:25 +0200 Subject: r24912: Merge 'use more substituted variables' patch to release branch. Andrew Bartlett (This used to be commit 075147ff1c2679b74d6e28c3ca401453b684bee0) --- source4/setup/named.conf | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to 'source4') diff --git a/source4/setup/named.conf b/source4/setup/named.conf index 6f97adf644..17beb7a2d7 100644 --- a/source4/setup/named.conf +++ b/source4/setup/named.conf @@ -22,15 +22,15 @@ zone "${DNSDOMAIN}." IN { # for named: KRB5_KTNAME so that it points to the keytab generated. # In RedHat derived systems such RHEL/CentOS/Fedora you can add the following # line to the /etc/sysconfig/named file: -# export KRB5_KTNAME=${DNS_KEYTAB} +# export KRB5_KTNAME=${DNS_KEYTAB_ABS} # # Please note that most distributions have BIND configured to run under # a non-root user account. For example, Fedora Core 6 (FC6) runs BIND as # the user "named" once the daemon relinquishes its rights. Therefore, -# the file "dns.keytab" must be readable by the user that BIND run as. -# If BIND is running as a non-root user, the "dns.keytab" file must have its +# the file "${DNS_KEYTAB}" must be readable by the user that BIND run as. +# If BIND is running as a non-root user, the "${DNS_KEYTAB}" file must have its # permissions altered to allow thge daemon to read it. In the FC6 # example, execute the commands: # -# chgrp named /usr/local/samba/private/dns.keytab -# chmod g+r /usr/local/samba/private/dns.keytab +# chgrp named ${DNS_KEYTAB_ABS} +# chmod g+r ${DNS_KEYTAB_ABS} -- cgit