Research Administration Tasks: Difference between revisions

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  /etc/init.d/KeyServer
  /etc/init.d/KeyServer
which, in turn, is launched upon startup by the Gentoo rc-update scripts.  No manual intervention is necessary (normally :-) ).<br>
which, in turn, is launched upon startup by the Gentoo rc-update scripts.  No manual intervention is necessary (normally :-) ).<br>
We currently (2007) have 200 key-client licenses, which covers our current user-quantity, with some room for growth remaining.<br>
We currently (2007) have 200 key-client licenses, which covers our current user-quantity, with some room for future growth.<br>


=== Administration ===
=== Administration ===

Revision as of 17:07, 2 April 2007

Adding Users

  • As root on yamato:
# DEBUG=1 /usr/local/sbin/diradm.superadduser '$username' '$email' '$fullname'
  • Note that a file named '$username' is created in your current directory with the template filled out for mailing (the same file is displayed onscreen).
  • The password you are prompted for at the end is for hood.
  • Add the newly-created user to our Research Mailing List.

Deleting Users

Make sure there are no sym-links pointing to important stuff!!

# find -P /home/users/$username -noleaf  -type l
  • As root on yamato:
# DEBUG=1 diradm userdel -r $username
  • As root on hood:
# DEBUG=1 diradm userdel $username
  • Keeping the user on our Research Mailing List is probably a good idea.
  • If you delete a user, you MUST disallow diradm from ever using that UIDNumber again. To do so, go to each machine with diradm and edit the diradm.conf file so that UIDNUMBERMIN to equal the same number as the highest UIDNumber currently being used. (At least one higher than the user you deleted) This is important!

Changing a Users Password

This method does not require the old password.

  • As root on hood:
# ldappass $username

Adding Users to a Group

Adding or removing from a group. Uses the same syntax as gpasswd(8).

  • As root on hood:
# diradm gpasswd (-a|-d) $username $group
# diradm gpasswd -a mdeepwel pond

Adding Groups

Adding groups takes the same syntax as groupadd(8).

  • As root on hood:
# diradm groupadd $groupname

To change the GID of any group:

  • As root on hood:
# diradm groupmod -g GID $groupname

Adding Projects

  • As root on hood:
# diradm amadd -O $mapbase $key $src
# diradm amadd -O home.projects meditation 209.87.56.240:/export/projects/0/m/meditation
  • '-O' means the default mount options for automount.
  • As root on yamato:
    • Make the $src directory. mkdir -p $src
    • Set ownership. chgrp -R $group $src
    • Set permissions. chmod 2771 $src
    • If web content is being served: mkdir -p $src/htdocs ; chmod 2775 $src/htdocs

Adding CVS Repositories

Replace $foobar with the name of the repository.

  • As root on hood:
# diradm amadd -O auto.cvs $foobar 209.87.56.240:/export/cvs/$foobar
  • As root on yamato:
# cvs -d /export/cvs/$foobar init
# chmod -R 2770 /export/cvs/$foobar
If this repository is for a group, (assuming there's a previously created group called $foobar_group):
# chgrp -R $foobar_group /export/cvs/$foobar
If this repository is for a single user:
# chown -R $user /export/cvs/$foobar
  • Group name and cvs repository name don't have to match.
  • To access CVS repo, use CVS_RSH="ssh" with URL being :ext:$user@cvs.iat.sfu.ca:/var/cvsroot/$foobar
  • Users must be in group cvs in addition to $foobar to access the repository!

Adding SVN Repositories

Replace $foobar with the name of the repository.

  • As root on hood:
# diradm amadd -O auto.svn $foobar 209.87.56.240:/export/svn/$foobar
  • As root on yamato, run (assuming there's a previously created group called $foobar:
# mkdir /export/svn/$foobar
  • As root on nelson:
# svnadmin create /var/svnroot/$foobar --fs-type fsfs
  • As root on yamato:
# chmod -R 2770 /export/svn/$foobar
# chgrp -R foobar /export/svn/$foobar

Adding Computers to the Domain

  • As root on hood:
# diradm smbhostadd sr-#####

General User Management

  • diradm offers almost all regular POSIX commands, sometimes with a few extra frills. The only commands NOT completely implemented are gpasswd and passwd.
  • Welcoming new users; email template
    • This is in the diradm.superadduser script, as it fills out the template.
To: $fullname <$email>
Subject: Research account created - $newuser

Hello $fullname

Your research account has been created.
Username: $newuser
Password: $newpass

Please visit http://research.iat.sfu.ca/network/changepassword.php to change
your password when you receive this email.

For support with the research network, please email:
help@research.iat.sfu.ca

And include a good description of the entire problem and a suitable subject
line.

Please note that this username/password pair is only valid for the SFU Surrey
Research Network, and is NOT tied into the main SFU authentication systems.

Sassafras K2 Keyserver Administration

Background

We use the Sassafras K2 Keyserver product for most license-compliance, primarily to extend the usefulness of a small number of licensed applications within the School of Interactive Arts & Technology (SIAT) Researcher community. Most users are sporadic, and don't require full-time access to our specialized applications; rather, they need to accomplish a defined task which may be one component of their research or publication.
The Sassafras keyserver runs on bismarck.iat.sfu.ca, with install-root under /usr/local/k2.
In a process-listing, it shows up as:

/usr/local/k2/ks -d -e /usr/local/k2/startup.txt

It's started from an init-script under

/etc/init.d/KeyServer

which, in turn, is launched upon startup by the Gentoo rc-update scripts. No manual intervention is necessary (normally :-) ).
We currently (2007) have 200 key-client licenses, which covers our current user-quantity, with some room for future growth.

Administration

Viewing Key-served Applications

Adding Key-served Applications

Removing Key-served Applications

Flexlm License Server Administration