From the course: Linux: Firewalls and SELinux
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Allowing an LDAP server - Linux Tutorial
From the course: Linux: Firewalls and SELinux
Allowing an LDAP server
- [Instructor] If you've set up an LDAP server, you may have also Kerberized it. You may have set up SSL authentication. Maybe you've got some other form of authentication database or password database that requires custom ports. I don't know your exact set-up. We're going to talk about LDAP, and we're going to talk about how to enable it. I'm also going to talk about Kerberos a little, and we'll look at how to enable, at the very bare minimum, the Kerberos service here. This is very much similar to what we've done before. We're simply going to run the get services, and get services is going to give us a nice handy list here, right? So you can see right in the middle of the screen there, we've got Kerberos. We've got kadmin. We've got klog and kpassword. We've got these things that allow us to use Kerberos, but we also have LDAP, and this is about LDAP, and we LDAP and LDAPS, an SSL secured LDAP version. We're going to add, so arrow up to wherever you most recently typed Adservice, or…
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Firewall-cmd configuration preparation10m 15s
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Allowing the Apache web server2m 54s
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Allowing any mail server4m 6s
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Allowing an XMPP server2m 59s
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Allowing an SMB server3m 8s
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Allowing an NFS server3m 33s
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Allowing an LDAP server4m 49s
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Allowing a PostgreSQL server3m 41s
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Allowing FTP and SFTP servers4m 25s
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VM Port Forwarding2m 4s
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ShieldsUP! panic mode2m 35s
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