Did you make sure that you enabled "Any host" in the login parameters (or whatever it's called, I forget) or specified the host that you're trying to log into using your user?
Is this something you set on the client it self or on the freeipa server for the host?. I never set such a option for any client though. i did enroll the other clients with the "freeipa-client-install" command and tried fedora with the initial setup. so their might be a difference in it how to enrolls?
Ah, my apologies - that was for sudo rules. No, I don't think you'd need to define that whilst setting up the user.
Maybe this video will help you a bit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GAHVU42ouOE&t=335s
Also, check the authentication methods you enabled for the user
I found the allow_all rule and it is enabled.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=GAHVU42ouOE&t=335s
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Yep. The accounts don’t have permissions to log into the machine.
OP needs to fix the perms in FreeIPA. There are several ways todo this, and I’m not around a FreeIPA server at the moment.
I found the allow_all rule that is enabled. Mind you it is only on fedora I seem to have this issue with. Ubuntu and opensuse users can login just fine.
That doesn’t change the fix.
The accounts need to be allowed to login to the host in FreeIPA.
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