1 Kerberos Version 5, Release 1.10
6 Copyright and Other Notices
7 ---------------------------
9 Copyright (C) 1985-2010 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
10 and its contributors. All rights reserved.
12 Please see the file named NOTICE for additional notices.
14 Building and Installing Kerberos 5
15 ----------------------------------
17 The first file you should look at is doc/install-guide.ps; it contains
18 the notes for building and installing Kerberos 5. The info file
19 krb5-install.info has the same information in info file format. You
20 can view this using the GNU emacs info-mode, or by using the
21 standalone info file viewer from the Free Software Foundation. This
22 is also available as an HTML file, install.html.
24 Other good files to look at are admin-guide.ps and user-guide.ps,
25 which contain the system administrator's guide, and the user's guide,
26 respectively. They are also available as info files
27 kerberos-admin.info and krb5-user.info, respectively. These files are
28 also available as HTML files.
30 If you are attempting to build under Windows, please see the
31 src/windows/README file.
36 Please report any problems/bugs/comments using the krb5-send-pr
37 program. The krb5-send-pr program will be installed in the sbin
38 directory once you have successfully compiled and installed Kerberos
39 V5 (or if you have installed one of our binary distributions).
41 If you are not able to use krb5-send-pr because you haven't been able
42 compile and install Kerberos V5 on any platform, you may send mail to
45 You may view bug reports by visiting
47 http://krbdev.mit.edu/rt/
49 and logging in as "guest" with password "guest".
54 The Data Encryption Standard (DES) is widely recognized as weak. The
55 krb5-1.7 release contains measures to encourage sites to migrate away
56 from using single-DES cryptosystems. Among these is a configuration
57 variable that enables "weak" enctypes, which defaults to "false"
58 beginning with krb5-1.8.
63 krb5-1.10 changes by ticket ID
64 ------------------------------
69 Past and present Sponsors of the MIT Kerberos Consortium:
72 Carnegie Mellon University
76 The Department of Defense of the United States of America (DoD)
80 Michigan State University
82 The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
83 of the United States of America (NASA)
84 Network Appliance (NetApp)
85 Nippon Telephone and Telegraph (NTT)
87 Pennsylvania State University
91 The University of Alaska
92 The University of Michigan
93 The University of Pennsylvania
95 Past and present members of the Kerberos Team at MIT:
148 The following external contributors have provided code, patches, bug
149 reports, suggestions, and valuable resources:
168 Christopher D. Clausen
192 Love Hörnquist Åstrand
205 Jan iankko Lieskovsky
239 The above is not an exhaustive list; many others have contributed in
240 various ways to the MIT Kerberos development effort over the years.
241 Other acknowledgments (for bug reports and patches) are in the