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During a replica CA installation, the initial replication step may fail if there is too much time skew between the server and replica. The replica installer already takes care of this for the replication of the domain suffix but the replica CA installer does not set nssldapd-ignore-time-skew to on for o=ipaca suffix. During a replica CA installation, read the initial value of nssldapd-ignore-time-skew, force it to on, start replication and revert to the initial value. Apply the same logic to dsinstance and ipa-replica-manage force-sync. Fixes: https://pagure.io/freeipa/issue/9635 Signed-off-by: Florence Blanc-Renaud <flo@redhat.com> Reviewed-By: Rob Crittenden <rcritten@redhat.com> |
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certmonger | ||
custodia | ||
html | ||
migration | ||
oddjob | ||
restart_scripts | ||
share | ||
tools | ||
ui | ||
updates | ||
wsgi | ||
Makefile.am | ||
README.schema |
Ground rules on adding new schema Brand new schema, particularly when written specifically for IPA, should be added in share/*.ldif. Any new files need to be explicitly loaded in ipaserver/install/dsinstance.py. These simply get copied directly into the new instance schema directory. Existing schema (e.g. in an LDAP draft) may either be added as a separate ldif in share or as an update in the updates directory. The advantage of adding the schema as an update is if 389-ds ever adds the schema then the installation won't fail due to existing schema failing to load during bootstrap. If the new schema requires a new container then this should be added to install/bootstrap-template.ldif.