Book Image

Learning RHEL Networking

By : Andrew Mallett, Adam Miller
Book Image

Learning RHEL Networking

By: Andrew Mallett, Adam Miller

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Learning RHEL Networking
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Logging on to RHEL 7 using Active Directory credentials


Welcome to the world of centralized accounts. I think you will have to concede that the process was very simple using RHEL 7 and vastly more simple than the previous releases of RHEL. We are now ready to make use of central user accounts from the Active Directory.

To log on to the RHEL 7 server, we can use the Active Directory UPN (User Principal Name). This is in the format of user@<Fully Qualified Domain Name>. For example, if we have an account in the example.com domain named jjones, we can log on to the RHEL server using the following command:

The following screenshot shows this process as we use the switch user command to log on as the AD account for jjones. Note that as the home directory for jjones does not exist, oddjob kindly creates it for us, as shown in the following screenshot:

To connect remotely using SSH tools, such as PuTTY for Windows, we will use the following syntax implementing two @ symbols...