This section describes items you should consider when using UNAB.
After fully migrating user accounts to Active Directory, you can disable the local UNIX account by adding an asterisk (*) at the beginning of the account entry in the etc/passwd file.
To avoid performance issues in UNAB, do not set the value of the unab_refresh_interval token value to a short interval.
Valid for SSO mode
We recommend that unless required, do not set the Kerberos dns_lookup_realm value to true. When set to true, Kerberos initiates unnecessary DNS searches that can result in a substantial slowdown of UNAB login processing.
If UNAB users cannot change their account passwords, verify that the Domain Controller security policy you use does not prohibit users from changing their account passwords.
The sepass utility is integrated with UNAB. The integration lets users change their Active Directory passwords on endpoints on which both CA Access Control and UNAB are installed.
To integrate sepass with UNAB:
Note: For more information about seos.ini initialization file tokens, see the Reference Guide.
If you want to log in to UNAB with an Active Directory account that did not previously exist on the local host, follow these steps:
uxconsole -register
uxconsole -activate
You cannot log in to a CA Access Control endpoint for UNIX with the 'Administrator' Active Directory user account if UNAB is installed on the endpoint. To work around this problem, you can create userPrincipleName for this account.
When CA Access Control is installed or uninstalled from an endpoint that UNAB is running on, the UNAB agent, uxauthd, is stopped and started.
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