mirror of
https://salsa.debian.org/freeipa-team/freeipa.git
synced 2025-02-25 18:55:28 -06:00
The --*_pkcs12 options of ipa-server-install and ipa-replica-prepare have been replaced by --*-cert-file options which accept multiple files. ipa-server-certinstall now accepts multiple files as well. The files are accepted in PEM and DER certificate, PKCS#7 certificate chain, PKCS#8 and raw private key and PKCS#12 formats. The --root-ca-file option of ipa-server-install has been replaced by --ca-cert-file option which accepts multiple files. The files are accepted in PEM and DER certificate and PKCS#7 certificate chain formats. The --*_pin options of ipa-server-install and ipa-replica-prepare have been renamed to --*-pin. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/4489 Reviewed-By: Petr Viktorin <pviktori@redhat.com> |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
certmonger | ||
conf | ||
ffextension | ||
html | ||
migration | ||
po | ||
restart_scripts | ||
share | ||
tools | ||
ui | ||
updates | ||
wsgi | ||
configure.ac | ||
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.