6.1 HP IBRIX X9000 Network Storage System File System User Guide (TA768-96061, June 2012)
The wizard displays the configuration pages corresponding to the option you selected.
• Active Directory. See “Active Directory” (page 57).
• LDAP. See “LDAP” (page 59).
• LDAP ID Mapping. See “LDAP ID mapping” (page 58).
• Local Groups. See “Local Groups” (page 61).
• Local Users. See “Local Users” (page 62).
• Share Administrators. See “Windows Share Administrators” (page 64).
• Summary. See “Summary” (page 64).
Active Directory
Enter your domain name, the Auth Proxy username (an AD domain user with privileges to join the
specified domain; typically a Domain Administrator), and the password for that user. These
credentials are used only to join the domain and do not persist on the cluster nodes. Optionally,
you can enable Linux static user mapping; for more information see “Linux static user mapping
with Active Directory” (page 83).
NOTE: When you successfully configure Active Directory authentication, the machine is part of
the domain until you remove it from the domain, either with the ibrix_auth -n command or
with Windows tools. Because Active Directory authentication is a one-time event, it is not necessary
to update authentication if you change the proxy user information.
Configuring authentication from the GUI 57