From 5eb354b338bb8d8fcd35b6ac3fb33f8103e757c3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Stephen D. Huston" Date: Thu, 20 Oct 2011 18:42:46 +0000 Subject: Merge trunk to QPID-2519 branch git-svn-id: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/qpid/branches/QPID-2519@1186990 13f79535-47bb-0310-9956-ffa450edef68 --- cpp/etc/Makefile.am | 23 ----------------------- 1 file changed, 23 deletions(-) (limited to 'cpp/etc/Makefile.am') diff --git a/cpp/etc/Makefile.am b/cpp/etc/Makefile.am index c91dbcbbad..1e4db561a7 100644 --- a/cpp/etc/Makefile.am +++ b/cpp/etc/Makefile.am @@ -30,30 +30,7 @@ nobase_sysconf_DATA = \ qpidd.conf if HAVE_SASL -SASL_DB = qpidd.sasldb - nobase_sysconf_DATA += \ $(SASL_CONF) -sasldbdir = $(localstatedir)/lib/qpidd -sasldb_DATA = $(SASL_DB) - -# Setup the default sasldb file with a single user, guest, with an -# obvious password. This user and password are the default for many -# clients. -# -# The realm specified by -u is very important, and QPID is the default -# for the broker so we use it here. The realm is important because it -# defaults to the local hostname of the machine running the -# broker. This may not seem to bad at first glance, but it means that -# the sasldb has to be tailored to each machine that would be running -# a broker, and if the machine ever changed its name the -# authentication would stop working until the sasldb was updated. For -# these reasons we always want the broker to specify a realm where its -# users live, and we want the users to exist in that realm as well. -$(SASL_DB): - echo guest | $(SASL_PASSWD) -c -p -f $(SASL_DB) -u QPID guest - -CLEANFILES=$(SASL_DB) - endif -- cgit v1.2.1