2001 FREENIX Track Technical Program - Abstract
Heimdal and Windows 2000 KerberosHow to Get Them to Play Together
Assar Westerlund, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, and Johan Danielsson, Center for Parallel Computers, KTH
Abstract
As a practical means of achieving better security and single sign-on,
the Kerberos network authentication system has been in wide use in the
Unix world for many years.
Microsoft has included its own implementation in Windows 2000,
replacing the NTLM authentication system from older Windows NT
versions. This facilitates sharing account information between Unix
and Windows machines, as there is no need to keep different passwords.
Although Microsoft's Kerberos implementation mostly follows the
specification, there are a number of deviations and extensions, not
all of which are well documented. Consequently, it is not always
obvious how to fit Windows 2000 clients and servers into an existing
Kerberos environment. In this paper we discuss the differences between
the two systems and describe how we got our Kerberos implementation,
Heimdal, to work with Windows 2000.
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