5/23/2019 0 Comments How To Get Authenticator For OsxEnabling the Kerberos Login Authenticator on Mac OS X 10.1 Macintosh Development [] [] [] [] [] [] [] Enabling the Kerberos Login Authenticator on Mac OS X 10.1 This document contains information about how to enable and use the Kerberos login authenticator on Mac OS X 10.1.x and Kerberos for Macintosh 4.0.x ONLY. It does not cover the rewritten authenticator in Mac OS X 10.2. For information about the 10.2 authenticator, see Apple's documentation:. MIT does not provide documentation or support for the new Mac OS X 10.2 authenticator - please contact Apple if you have questions. Enabling Before you begin: • You must have an administrator account, • You must have installed a correct working Kerberos configuration file for your site. (For more information see the.) 1) Set up a Mac OS X user with the same 'short name' as your Kerberos username. The password for this user should be something secure and that you can remember, since this password will be used if your machine is disconnected from the network and cannot communicate with the Kerberos server. You could make it the same as your Kerberos password, although this reduces the security of Kerberos because your password will be stored on the local disk. 2) Open System Preferences. 3) Select the 'Login' pane. 4) Select the 'Login Window' tab. 5) Uncheck 'Automatically log in'. 6) From Terminal.app type (all as one line): sudo defaults write com.apple.loginwindow AuthenticatorBundle /System/Library/Authenticators/Kerberos.loginAuthenticator This will ask for your administrator password and then enable the Kerberos login authenticator. Usage To use the login authenticator, log out and type your Kerberos username and password into the two editable text fields or click on your user icon and type your password into the editable text field. If you selected 'Show 'Other User' in list for network users', you will need to select 'Other User' to see the two editable text fields. If for some reason the authenticator cannot contact the Kerberos server, or find a network connection, it will fall back and use the local password. FAQ's Q: Do I have to have a local account for each user? ![]() A: Not necessarily, although if you only want to set up Kerberos login for you or a few users, it's the simplest approach. Some sites have succeeded in setting up the Kerberos authenticator to work with NetInfo, LDAP, and Active Directory. Further information can be found on the Login Authenticators page. Q: Can I mount a user's remote directory using the authenticator? Q: Will future versions of the authenticator support these options? Dec 7, 2018 - Two-factor authentication is an extra layer of security for your Apple ID. Can only be accessed on devices you trust, like your iPhone, iPad, or Mac. You can also get a verification code from Settings on your trusted device. Aug 7, 2012 - But it also might save your data from nefarious folks out to steal. Yet support two-factor authentication—like, say, Mail on the Mac or iOS. A:The goal for the 10.1 Kerberos authenticator was to get the authenticator that Apple already had in 10.0 working with KfM; the features were determined by what existed beforehand (which was, Kerberos authentication for local accounts only). Apple redesigned the entire authenticator interface in Mac OS X 10.2, and it should provide site-specific hooks for external directory lookups, mounting remote directories, and so forth, in the authentication with Kerberos process. Please consult Apple's Security documentation and Apple for more information. Questions or comments? Send mail to Last updated on $Date: 2003/11/19 20:41:51 $ Last modified by $Author: smcguire $. So I had git running on my computer just fine. My password was saved with the osxkeychain thingy and everything ran smoothly. Today I decided I should be safe and enable google authenticator 2-step authentication on all the sites that support it. Interestingly github supports it so I set it up. It works fine through the website interface. I proceed to branch a project I'm working on and do a bit of work and then I try to push the new branch up. Not surprised at all when I find out my authentication doesn't work. What is surprising to me is that I can't seem to find anything at all on google to solve my problem. My initial error was this: git push --set-upstream origin binary-dev remote: Invalid username or password. Data modeling software for mac. Fatal: Authentication failed for 'I then purged my old password stuff to get the interactive prompt with: git credential-osxkeychain erase host=github.com protocol=https And that worked at getting rid of my old settings but now I get: git push --set-upstream origin binary-dev Username for '*** Password for 'remote: Invalid username or password. Fatal: Authentication failed for 'So git itself doesn't seem to know about the google authenticator. I literally can't seem to find any information on this. About half the pages are about how to set it up on the website and the other half are how to fork the actual google authenticator source code. I may not be creative enough with my keywords though. There may also be no solution but then I have to wonder why github offers 2-factor auth at all? Is there anyone out there who's been stuck here like me and has found a way out? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
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