@Monmon
Exactly what error do your users get in ALM 11 when they authenticate?
Do you have the exact same Authentication settings in ALM 11 as you did in QC 10? In Site Admin check the Directory Provider URL. Test the connection.
Is your ALM 11 system in the same domain as your QC 10 system was?
If the users were created in ALM 11 Site Admin automatically through the import/restoration of projects, that would not have brought across their Domain Authentication information. Without that, they won't be able to authenticate against LDAP.
As I mentioned in a previous reply in this thread there is a way to set up ALM LDAP authentication to automatically update a user's Domain Authentication information when they logon. To do that, in Site Admin in the LDAP Import Settings you have to leave a valid set of credentials entered in the Authentication Principal and Authentication Credentials fields. If this is done, then when a user attempts to authenticate and initially fails (because the Domain Authentication information doesn't lead to their record in LDAP), then ALM will search LDAP for the user based on the username and other information it has. If the user is found, then ALM will automatically update the Domain Authentication information for the user.
Exactly what error do your users get in ALM 11 when they authenticate?
Do you have the exact same Authentication settings in ALM 11 as you did in QC 10? In Site Admin check the Directory Provider URL. Test the connection.
Is your ALM 11 system in the same domain as your QC 10 system was?
If the users were created in ALM 11 Site Admin automatically through the import/restoration of projects, that would not have brought across their Domain Authentication information. Without that, they won't be able to authenticate against LDAP.
As I mentioned in a previous reply in this thread there is a way to set up ALM LDAP authentication to automatically update a user's Domain Authentication information when they logon. To do that, in Site Admin in the LDAP Import Settings you have to leave a valid set of credentials entered in the Authentication Principal and Authentication Credentials fields. If this is done, then when a user attempts to authenticate and initially fails (because the Domain Authentication information doesn't lead to their record in LDAP), then ALM will search LDAP for the user based on the username and other information it has. If the user is found, then ALM will automatically update the Domain Authentication information for the user.