squid/README.kerberos

62 lines
2.4 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

This is the README.kerberos file
to have squid negotiate/authenticate via kerberos
any addons are very welcome
comments could be posted to <chris(at)computersalat.de>
1) you need to add a "USER" inside your "Domain-Computers" Container
called "squid". Yes a "USER" and not a Computer.
You may use another name, but why ?
2) After having successfully created the user, you need to create a
keytab file on your WIN box.
Example: !! This is all in one line !!
ktpass -princ HTTP/squid@DOMAIN.REALM -pType KRB5_NT_PRINCIPAL \
-mapuser squid -pass * -out HTTP.keytab
3) copy over HTTP.keytab to /etc/squid/ on your linux box
4) you have to tell your browsers to negotiate via kerberos
Have a look at:
a) Internet Explorer does not support Kerberos authentication with proxy servers
http://support.microsoft.com/?scid=kb%3Ben-us%3B321728&x=19&y=14
This limitation was removed in Windows Internet Explorer 7.
If Integrated Windows Authentication is turned on in Internet Explorer
for Windows 2000 and Windows XP, you can complete Kerberos authentication
with Web servers either directly or through a proxy server. However,
Internet Explorer cannot use Kerberos to authenticate with the proxy
server itself.
b) Unable to negotiate Kerberos authentication after upgrading to Internet Explorer 6
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/299838/EN-US/
To resolve this issue, enable Internet Explorer 6 to respond to
a negotiate challenge and perform Kerberos authentication:
1. In Internet Explorer, click Internet Options on the Tools menu.
2. Click the Advanced tab, click to select the Enable
Integrated Windows Authentication (requires restart) check box
in the Security section, and then click OK.
3. Restart Internet Explorer.
Administrators can enable Integrated Windows Authentication by
setting the EnableNegotiate DWORD value to 1 in the following registry key:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Internet Settings
Note Internet Explorer 6, when used with Microsoft Windows 98,
Microsoft Windows 98 Second Edition, Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition,
and Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 does not respond to a negotiate challenge and
default to NTLM (or Windows NT Challenge/Response) authentication even if
the Enable Integrated Windows Authentication (requires restart) check
box is selected because Kerberos authentication is not available on
these operating systems.