Kadm5 administration server
kadmind [-x db_args] [-r realm] [-m] [-nofork] [-port port-number] [-P pid_file] [-p kdb5_util_path] [-K kprop_path] [-F dump_file]
kadmind starts the Kerberos administration server. kadmind typically runs on the master Kerberos server, which stores the KDC database. If the KDC database uses the LDAP module, the administration server and the KDC server need not run on the same machine. kadmind accepts remote requests from programs such as kadmin(1) and kpasswd(1) to administer the information in these database.
kadmind requires a number of configuration files to be set up in order for it to work:
The KDC configuration file contains configuration information for the KDC and admin servers. kadmind uses settings in this file to locate the Kerberos database, and is also affected by the acl_file, dict_file, kadmind_port, and iprop-related settings.
kadmind's ACL (access control list) tells it which principals are allowed to perform administration actions. The pathname to the ACL file can be specified with the acl_file kdc.conf(5) variable; by default, it is /etc/krb5kdc/kadm5.acl.
After the server begins running, it puts itself in the background and disassociates itself from its controlling terminal.
kadmind can be configured for incremental database propagation. Incremental propagation allows slave KDC servers to receive principal and policy updates incrementally instead of receiving full dumps of the database. This facility can be enabled in the kdc.conf(5) file with the iprop_enable option. Incremental propagation requires the principal kiprop/MASTER\@REALM (where MASTER is the master KDC's canonical host name, and REALM the realm name) to be registered in the database.
-r realm
specifies the realm that kadmind will serve; if it is not specified, the default realm of the host is used.
-m
causes the master database password to be fetched from the keyboard (before the server puts itself in the background, if not invoked with the -nofork option) rather than from a file on disk.
-nofork
causes the server to remain in the foreground and remain associated to the terminal. In normal operation, you should allow the server to place itself in the background.
-port port-number
specifies the port on which the administration server listens for connections. The default port is determined by the kadmind_port configuration variable in kdc.conf(5).
-P pid_file
specifies the file to which the PID of kadmind process should be written after it starts up. This file can be used to identify whether kadmind is still running and to allow init scripts to stop the correct process.
-p kdb5_util_path
specifies the path to the kdb5_util command to use when dumping the KDB in response to full resync requests when iprop is enabled.
-K kprop_path
specifies the path to the kprop command to use to send full dumps to slaves in response to full resync requests.
-F dump_file
specifies the file path to be used for dumping the KDB in response to full resync requests when iprop is enabled.
-x db_args
specifies database-specific arguments.
Options supported for LDAP database are:
-x nconns=number_of_connections
specifies the number of connections to be maintained per LDAP server.
-x host=ldapuri
specifies the LDAP server to connect to by URI.
-x binddn=binddn
specifies the DN of the object used by the administration server to bind to the LDAP server. This object should have read and write privileges on the realm container, the principal container, and the subtree that is referenced by the realm.
-x bindpwd=bind_password
specifies the password for the above mentioned binddn. Using this option may expose the password to other users on the system via the process list; to avoid this, instead stash the password using the stashsrvpw command of kdb5_ldap_util(8).
-x debug=level
sets the OpenLDAP client library debug level. level is an integer to be interpreted by the library. Debugging messages are printed to standard error, so this option must be used with the -nofork option to be useful. New in release 1.12.
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