Understanding your enterprise can help you plan for realms in your environment.
According to the conventions of the Kerberos protocol, realm names are typically comprised of an uppercase version of the domain name, such as MYCO.COM. In networks with multiple realms, you can create a realm name that includes an uppercase descriptive name and domain name. For example, you might have two realms, one called HR.MYCO.COM and the other named SHIPPING.MYCO.COM, each representing a particular department in your organization.
It is not necessary to use uppercase, however, some implementations of Kerberos enforce this convention. For example, realm names are strictly uppercase in a Microsoft® Windows® Active Directory. If you are configuring network authentication service on the iSeries™ to participate in a Kerberos realm configured in Microsoft Windows Active Directory, you must enter the realm name in uppercase.
For a Kerberos server that is configured in i5/OS™ PASE, you can create either upper or lowercase realm names. However, if you plan to create trust relationships between a Kerberos server configured with Microsoft Window Active Directory and a Kerberos server configured in i5/OS PASE, the realm names should be uppercase.
Questions | Answers |
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How many realms do you need? | Two |
How do you plan to organize realms? | Currently our company has a Windows 2000 server that authenticates users in our Order Receiving Department. Our Shipping Department use a Kerberos server in i5/OS PASE. Each of these departments will have its own realm. |
What will be the naming convention used for realms? | We will use an uppercase shortened name that indicates the department followed by an uppercase version of the Windows 2000 domain name. For example, ORDEPT.MYCO.COM will represent the Order Receiving Department and SHIPDEPT.MYCO.COM will represent the Shipping Department. |