https://bugzilla.suse.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1218158 https://bugzilla.suse.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1218158#c16 --- Comment #16 from Stefan Hundhammer <shundhammer@suse.com> --- We discussed in the team if we can continue supporting yast-nfs-server and yast-nfs-client, and how useful those modules still are in this day and age. There were arguments in favor and against it, but so far, we'd like to keep it. But a full usr-merge migration just because of that idmapd.conf will not be possible anytime soon; our focus is Agama, and there are hard milestones and pending features for it. So, a compromise could be to just drop support for the whole imapd thing. In all the years that I have been working with Linux (since the late 1990s) and Unix (HP-UX, SunOS, Solaris) from the late 1980s I have never seen any environment where that ID mapping was actually used; in every instance user accounts and their IDs were centrally managed (NIS / YP or IMAP or even manually copied config files). Using idmapd IMHO is a fringe case within an obsolescent (not completely obsolete) technology like NFS; it's a crude workaround to a problem that shouldn't even exist in the first place in a sane IT environment. So, I propose to drop the part about imapd and its config file(s) from both of those yast-nfs-{server,client} modules to extend their useful lifetime for another few years; that should consume considerably less development resources on the YaST side. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are on the CC list for the bug.