Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Of course, it is not a defect but a 10-minutes "enhancement" :)
Original comment by ymartin1040
on 1 Oct 2013 at 8:36
I don't see how that's going to solve your specific problem. Assuming that the
person who made the serf package does that in a clean staging area, (s)he has
to explicitly choose to build serf with kerberos support, because (s)he has to
install the kerberos libraries in the staging area first. I don't think adding
the GSSAPI flag to the scons build is an extra overhead or possible bottleneck
here.
So you'll probably have to send a mail to the serf packager for your
distribution.
I'm wondering if there are situations where you explicitly don't want to build
serf with kerberos, even it is installed on your system.
Lieven
Original comment by lieven.govaerts@gmail.com
on 1 Oct 2013 at 9:52
I agree I have to contact WanDisco packager to get GSSAPI enabled in their
Debian packages...
By the way, my request aims to get "negotiate" feature compiled "by default"
consistently between Windows and Linux platforms. Similarly the SCons build
detects "openssl".
Original comment by ymartin1040
on 3 Oct 2013 at 7:28
One major difference is that you can not find a Windows NT based platform
without SSPI support DLLs, while kerberos on *nix is 100% optional and requires
extensive configuration to get it working.
Original comment by b...@qqmail.nl
on 3 Oct 2013 at 7:37
I agree SSPI is available on any windows. It does not mean Kerberos and
negotiate will work without a Kerberos server (ActiveDirectory, the workstation
joined in the domain) and an IIS server properly configured with a SPN.
The same way on Linux, you can compile with krb5.h and gssapi.h and link to
related shared libraries without having configured anything else than the
compile chain. On Debian it is as easy as "aptitude install libkrb5-dev" and
serf will compile with GSSAPI without any trouble.
Original comment by ymartin1040
on 3 Oct 2013 at 7:45
For the particular case of OS X, I believe Kerberos is always installed; in any
case, I think it's not unreasonable to treat GSS/Kerberos much as openssl is
automatically detected and used (as pointed out in #3.)
Original comment by secretag...@gmail.com
on 9 Oct 2013 at 12:44
It may be also possible to compile with GSSAPI support as soon as headers file
are available, but use runtime library loading with error handling (instead of
compile-time linkage).
So authentication phase may ignore "negotiate" if GSSAPI lacks at runtime. But
then work as soon as that optional dependency is added to the system.
Original comment by ymartin1040
on 9 Oct 2013 at 10:50
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
ymartin1040
on 1 Oct 2013 at 8:32