On Fri, 24 Oct 2025 16:56:30 +0200
Denis CARDON <dcardon at tranquil.it> wrote:
> Hi Rowland,
>
> > Tranquil It have released the arm64 binary and I have downloaded it
> > and installed it to /usr/local/sbin/ on a Unix domain member.
> You can put the binary in /usr/local/bin as it doesn't need local
> admin right to start.
That is weird, I had it in /usr/local/sbin and unless I started it with
sudo, user properties were greyed out. I have now moved it to
/usr/local/bin and now when I start it without sudo, they aren't.
> > From the quick test I have given it so far, it works very well. One
> > thing I have found, you have to run it with sudo, or somethings are
> > greyed out,
> it shouldn't require sudo to start. What DE are you using?
I never said it required sudo to start, but it seemed to require sudo
to get properties to work.
I am running it on the MATE desktop on top of Raspberry pi OS lite.
> > I also ran it with a member of Domain Admins, not sure if
> > that is relevant, I will have to do further testing. Just about the
> > only thing missing (and I presume they are matching present day
> > RSAT) is the UNIX Attributes tab. This isn't relevant to myself,
> > but others may miss it.
>
> It shouldn't need a privileged to connect and to browse an AD.
I take it is using something like the machine ticket, so what about when
you want to add or change something ? Lets add a user, hmm that worked.
This means that anyone who can access Openrsat can add a user, is this
secure enough ??
>
> Cheers,
>
> Denis
>
>
> >
> > I suggest that you give it a try, it is easy to install and use.
> >
> > Rowland
> >
> >