Build instructions
==================
-The most simplest way to build sudo with LDAP support is to include the
+The simplest way to build sudo with LDAP support is to include the
'--with-ldap' option.
$ ./configure --with-ldap
Sudo is developed using OpenLDAP but Netscape-based LDAP libraries
(such as those present in Solaris) are also known to work.
-Your Mileage may vary. Please let the sudo workers mailing list
+Your mileage may vary. Please let the sudo workers mailing list
<sudo-workers@sudo.ws> know if special configuration was required
to build an LDAP-enabled sudo so we can improve sudo.
and since it is Schema aware, I don't need to create a sudoRole template.
http://biot.com/gq/
+ * phpQLAdmin - Open Source - phpQLAdmin is an administration tool,
+ originally for QmailLDAP, that supports editing sudoRole objects
+ in version 2.3.2 and higher.
+ http://phpqladmin.com/
+
* LDAP Browser/Editor - by Jarek Gawor - I use this a lot on Windows
and Solaris. It runs anywhere in a Java Virtual Machine including
web pages. You have to make a template from an existing sudoRole entry.
====================================================
The /etc/ldap.conf file is meant to be shared between sudo, pam_ldap, nss_ldap
and other ldap applications and modules. IBM Secureway unfortunately uses
-the same filename but has a different syntax. If you need to rename where
-this file is stored, re-run configure with the --with-ldap-conf-file=filename
+the same file name but has a different syntax. If you need to change where
+this file is stored, re-run configure with the --with-ldap-conf-file=PATH
option.
See the "Configuring ldap.conf" section in the sudoers.ldap manual