← Back to context Comment by direwolf20 16 days ago How does it do that? 4 comments direwolf20 Reply charcircuit 16 days ago There are many ways from passkeys to SAML. Though for complex methods we may want a dedicated services outside the kernel. direwolf20 15 days ago How does that service get launched with the privilege to switch to any user? charcircuit 15 days ago The kernel can start a process with any user it wants. The user doesn't have to switch during the process's life. 1 reply →
charcircuit 16 days ago There are many ways from passkeys to SAML. Though for complex methods we may want a dedicated services outside the kernel. direwolf20 15 days ago How does that service get launched with the privilege to switch to any user? charcircuit 15 days ago The kernel can start a process with any user it wants. The user doesn't have to switch during the process's life. 1 reply →
direwolf20 15 days ago How does that service get launched with the privilege to switch to any user? charcircuit 15 days ago The kernel can start a process with any user it wants. The user doesn't have to switch during the process's life. 1 reply →
charcircuit 15 days ago The kernel can start a process with any user it wants. The user doesn't have to switch during the process's life. 1 reply →
There are many ways from passkeys to SAML. Though for complex methods we may want a dedicated services outside the kernel.
How does that service get launched with the privilege to switch to any user?
The kernel can start a process with any user it wants. The user doesn't have to switch during the process's life.
1 reply →