Hi,
I'm wondering if somebody else get that error:
Since we upgrade to CentOS 7.5 (or with a fresh 7.5 installation) we're getting the following message when we try to sudo (in fact, anything requiring our uid):
myuser@myhost testdir]$ sudo ls
sudo: unknown uid 10180: who are you?
If I type id <my uname>, CentOS will know me again. After about 5 minutes, I'll get the the error again. To trigger the problem, I just have to restart sssd
[myuser@myhost testdir]$ sudo systemctl restart sssd
[myuser@myhost testdir]$ sudo ls
sudo: unknown uid 10180: who are you?
[myuser@myhost testdir]$ id aharnois
uid=10180(myuser) gid=513 groups=513,10(wheel),1000(docker),511(vboxusers),1006(L-RND),1021(hg-gen),1013,10184,10206,10181,1019
[myuser@myhost testdir]$ sudo ls
afile
And I also loose the LDAP groups(513,1013,10184,10206,10181,1019).
We're authenticating to LDAP using Kerberos.
Any help will be appreciated.
Thanks,
Alain
CentOS 7.5 cause: sudo: unknown uid 10180: who are you?
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- Posts: 2
- Joined: 2018/05/14 14:30:48
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- Posts: 2
- Joined: 2018/05/14 14:30:48
Re: CentOS 7.5 cause: sudo: unknown uid 10180: who are you?
I found the solution: re-run authconfig again.
To authenticate with Kerberos at install time we use authconfig to set this up.
It looks like updating to CentOS 7.5 change, invalidate, corrupt or I don't know what but by re-running the exact authconfig with the same parameters fix the problem.
Regards,
Alain
To authenticate with Kerberos at install time we use authconfig to set this up.
It looks like updating to CentOS 7.5 change, invalidate, corrupt or I don't know what but by re-running the exact authconfig with the same parameters fix the problem.
Regards,
Alain