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Working With Naming and Directory Services in Oracle Solaris 11.1 Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
Part I About Naming and Directory Services
1. Naming and Directory Services (Overview)
2. Name Service Switch (Overview)
4. Setting Up Oracle Solaris Active Directory Clients (Tasks)
Part II NIS Setup and Administration
5. Network Information Service (Overview)
6. Setting Up and Configuring NIS (Tasks)
9. Introduction to LDAP Naming Services (Overview)
10. Planning Requirements for LDAP Naming Services (Tasks)
11. Setting Up Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition With LDAP Clients (Tasks)
12. Setting Up LDAP Clients (Tasks)
Prerequisites to LDAP Client Setup
LDAP and the Service Management Facility
How to Initialize an LDAP Client by Using Profiles
How to Initialize an LDAP Client by Using Per-User Credentials
How to Initialize an LDAP Client by Using Proxy Credentials
How to Initialize an LDAP Client to Enable the Updating of Shadow Data
How to Initialize an LDAP Client Manually
How to Modify a Manual LDAP Client Configuration
How to Uninitialize an LDAP Client
Configuring PAM to Use UNIX policy
Configuring PAM to Use LDAP server_policy
Retrieving LDAP Naming Services Information
Listing All User Entry Attributes
13. LDAP Troubleshooting (Reference)
14. LDAP Naming Service (Reference)
The following sections describe how you can customize the LDAP client environment.
You can change any of the services, but be careful, because if the data is not populated on the server for the service specified, things will stop working. Also, in some cases files may not be set up by default.
You can modify the name service switch to customize where each naming service accesses its information. See Managing the Name Service Switch.
If you want to enable DNS, see How to Enable a DNS Client. If per-user authentication is used, the sasl/GSSAPI and Kerberos mechanisms expect the DNS naming service to be configured and enabled.