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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)
Configuring Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition by Using the idsconfig Command
Creating a Checklist Based on Your Server Installation
Using Service Search Descriptors to Modify Client Access to Various Services
Setting Up SSDs by Using the idsconfig Command
How to Configure Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition by Using the idsconfig Command
Populating the Directory Server by Using the ldapaddent Command
Specifying Group Memberships by Using the Member Attribute
Populating the Directory Server With Additional Profiles
How to Populate the Directory Server With Additional Profiles by Using the ldapclient Command
Configuring the Directory Server to Enable Account Management
For Clients That Use the pam_ldap Module
For Clients That Use the pam_unix_* Modules
12. Setting Up LDAP Clients (Tasks)
13. LDAP Troubleshooting (Reference)
14. LDAP Naming Service (Reference)
This chapter describes how to configure Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition to support a network of LDAP naming services clients. The information is specific to the Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition. For information about installing and configuring the directory server, see the Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition documentation.
Note - You must have already performed all the procedures described in the installation and configuration documentation that shipped with your Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition before you can configure Oracle Directory Server Enterprise Edition to work with LDAP clients.
Note - A directory server (an LDAP server) cannot be its own client.
This chapter covers the following topics.