I have a customer that I''m developing a solution for on RoR. They have IIS today and use Sharepoint for their intranet. Is it possible to have some kind of single sign-on between these systems? So when a user is logged in to ther Sharepoint she will also be logged in to my rails-app? We haven''t decided yet on what to deploy rails on so I''m open to suggestions... If we would use Ruby under IIS (wich I''m a bit hesitant to do after reading all the horror stories), would that make it simpler? Can IIS and Rails share the same authentication? -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://wrath.rubyonrails.org/pipermail/rails/attachments/20060214/26a41f14/attachment.html
i believe there''s a mod_ntlm module for apache.... You might be able to use this... Mikkel Bruun www.strongside.dk - Football Portal(DK) nflfeed.helenius.org - Football News(DK) ting.minline.dk - Buy Old Stuff!(DK) -- Posted with http://DevLists.com. Sign up and save your time!
Hi Jens> I have a customer that I''m developing a solution for on RoR. They have IIStoday and use Sharepoint for their intranet. Is it possible to have> some kind of single sign-on between these systems? So when a user islogged in to ther Sharepoint she will also be logged in to my> rails-app? We haven''t decided yet on what to deploy rails on so I''m opento suggestions... If we would use Ruby under IIS (wich I''m a bit> hesitant to do after reading all the horror stories), would that make itsimpler? Can IIS and Rails share the same authentication? not strictly what you talking about, but may help you depending on your context: you could interact with SharePoint based on his web services ( see http://www.codeguru.com/csharp/csharp/cs_webservices/tutorials/article.php/c8805/for an example ), or through a COM API in share point... just rough ideas HTH Thibaut -- [blog] http://www.dotnetguru2.org/tbarrere -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://wrath.rubyonrails.org/pipermail/rails/attachments/20060214/9a3c8c09/attachment.html
Thibaut Barr?re wrote:> Hi Jens > > > I have a customer that I''m developing a solution for on RoR. They > have IIS today and use Sharepoint for their intranet. Is it possible > to have > > some kind of single sign-on between these systems? So when a user is > logged in to ther Sharepoint she will also be logged in to my > > rails-app? We haven''t decided yet on what to deploy rails on so I''m > open to suggestions... If we would use Ruby under IIS (wich I''m a bit > > hesitant to do after reading all the horror stories), would that > make it simpler? Can IIS and Rails share the same authentication? > > not strictly what you talking about, but may help you depending on > your context: you could interact with SharePoint based on his web > services ( see > http://www.codeguru.com/csharp/csharp/cs_webservices/tutorials/article.php/c8805/ > for an example ), or through a COM API in share point... > > just rough ideas > > HTH > > Thibaut > -- > [blog] http://www.dotnetguru2.org/tbarrere > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails >Hi, I''ve created a .NET httpmodule to interact with RoR via SCGI. It would be quite doable to implement a SSO solution using this strategy based on some form of session sharing between rails and .NET (.NET/Sharepoint keeping RoR sessions alive and pass authentication information to RoR). Thing in I still have a major issue with uploading binaries which holds me back from publishing scgi.net publicly. I would be happy to share sources to solve my and your problem ;-) /Boris
Thanks for all the suggestions. I''ll look into it some more and see what I can come up with. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://wrath.rubyonrails.org/pipermail/rails/attachments/20060215/20a306be/attachment.html