Entries tagged as Enterprise Directory
Tuesday, October 12. 2010
Hi all,
Everyone involved in the directory sector and OpenLDAP has been seeing lots more enquiries to migrate from Sun Directory to OpenLDAP as the future of Sun Directory, now Oracle owns Sun is becoming a concern, as is their new pricing model. We obviously have experience doing this and migration from any other directory server.
If you want to convert your enterprise directory from a proprietary and expensive closed-source supplier to OpenLDAP, a modern, more efficient, and less expensive Open Source software solution please do contact us.
Our partners Symas also have a Directory Services Upgrade Program that we can do for you in the UK:
Convert your Enterprise Directory from a proprietary and expensive closed-source supplier to OpenLDAP, a modern, more efficient, and less expensive Open Source software solution. Typically, enterprises dramatically reduce their annual cost converting to OpenLDAP from Sun, Oracle, Netscape, or iPlanet Directory Services products. The workload requires half or less the power and capacity for substantially improved performance. This is a relatively easy transition to make because LDAPv3 is highly standardized and OpenLDAP conforms to the most demanding requirements of the Internet Standards (RFC[?] 4511 and related RFCs)..
Symas Corporation will be glad to consult with your team and offer you a fixed-price, fixed schedule offer for conversion of your Enterprise Directory technology. This service includes:
- A complete evaluation of your present Directory Services servers
- A Detailed plan for implementation of the new technology
- A roadmap for conversion of existing LDAP[?] applications and data feeds
- Conversion of schema definitions
- Access Control conversions/implementation
- Database transfer and clean-up
- OpenLDAP deployment, tuning and configuration
- SSL Certificate Conversion
- Database reload
- Assistance with application testing
- Operational team training (LDAP University)
- One year of standard Gold
- level Symas OpenLDAP technical support
Please do contact us.
Thanks,
Gavin.
Monday, August 17. 2009
As OpenLDAP sets the standard for being the most standards based LDAP [?] directory, you'll be pleased to know that our partners Symas are keeping everyone updated about the wonderful world of collaboration in the LDAP world and in the process updating some much needed draft RFCs.
So, when you've got a second have a read of:
Password Policy for LDAP Directories - draft-behera-ldap[?]-password-policy-10.txt
and
An Approach for Using LDAP as a Network Information Service - draft-howard-rfc2307bis-02.txt
Gavin.
Wednesday, June 10. 2009
The International Conference on LDAP [?] is a technical forum for IT professionals interested in LDAP and related topics like directory servers, directory management applications, directory integration, identity and access management, and meta directories.
It focuses on implementation and integration of LDAP servers and LDAP-enabled client applications. The event will bring together vendors, developers, active and prospective LDAP practitioners to share their experiences about deployment strategies, service operations, interoperability, discuss LDAP usage in new projects and learn about upcoming trends and developments.
Topics
You are involved with LDAP in interesting projects?
- You do LDAP client development?
- You have used LDAP like no-one before?
- You have innovative concepts in LDAP Integration?
Why not share your experiences, good and bad, with others?
We look for speakers who ae willing to talk about:
Continue reading "LDAPCon 2009 Call For Papers"
Wednesday, December 17. 2008
Hi All,
Here's the 22nd tip in the "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series:
"You are not sure what type of OpenLDAP replication to use, but you know you need to".
This tip won't actually go into the technical setup (and isn't very quick  ) of the different replication types, we'll leave that for another set of tips. You can always read up on them yourself in the Replication section of the OpenLDAP 2.4 Administrator's Guide. Or if you're coming to the UKUUG's annual Large Installation Systems Administration (LISA) you'll be able to hear Howard Chu and myself give our talks:
- OpenLDAP Replication Strategies - Gavin Henry ( Suretec Systems & OpenLDAP project)
- OpenLDAP and MySQL: Bridging the Data Model Divide - Howard Chu ( Symas Corp. & OpenLDAP project).
Andrew Findlay ( Skills 1st), another respected authority on LDAP [?] will also be giving a talk on Writing Access Control Policies for LDAP.
Anyway, on to the strategies.
Continue reading "OpenLDAP Quick Tips: Replication Strategies"
Friday, December 12. 2008
Hi All,
Here's the 21st tip in the "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series kindly contributed by Vincent van Gelder.
"You need to carry out LDAP [?] operations using shell scripts".
The following is an example sent in by Vincent van Gelder (you can e-mail your tip to us too):
------------------------
The following script I use when interacting with ldap [?] from shell scripts:
http://members.tripod.com/vgoenka/unixscripts/unldif.sed.txt
Sample script:
CODE: ######################################
#!/bin/bash
PHOTO=/tmp/tux.jpg
IFS=$'\n'
for dn in $(ldapsearch -ZZ -LLL -A -b
'ou=Users,ou=Intranet,o=Company,c=NL' -s one
'(&(!(jpegPhoto=*))(objectClass=inetOrgPerson))' jpegPhoto \
| unldif | grep '^dn' )
do
echo $dn
echo "changetype: modify"
echo "add: jpegPhoto"
echo "jpegPhoto::$(openssl base64 -in $PHOTO | sed 's/^/ /')"
echo
done
######################################
The sample script fetches users from ldap whithout a photo and adds a
default photo. Output is a ldif.
It also demonstrates how to add binary attributes from shell using
openssl tool.
The unldif script makes sure the dn is always just one line.
--
Met vriendelijke groet,
Vincent van Gelder
------------------------
Thanks,
Gavin.
If you have an entry for our "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series, why not e-mail your tip to us.
P.S. For direct access to this section, you can click OpenLDAP Quick Tips.
Thursday, December 11. 2008
We've just published two comparisons of OpenLDAP source management versus Symas OpenLDAP Packages:
Nothing special, just a quick comparison.
Suretec ®
Hi All,
Here's the 20th tip in the "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series:
"You need to obtain information regarding the current state of your slapd instance":
slapd(8) supports an optional LDAP[?] monitoring interface you can use to obtain information regarding the current state of your slapd instance. For instance, the interface allows you to determine how many clients are connected to the server currently. The monitoring information is provided by a specialized backend, the monitor backend. A manual page, slapd-monitor(5) is available.
At the end of your slapd.conf file add:
CODE: database monitor
and restart.
You'll now be able to query information like the following and use it in your monitoring tools:
CODE: dn: cn=Total,cn=Connections,cn=Monitor
structuralObjectClass: monitorCounterObject
monitorCounter: 4
entryDN: cn=Total,cn=Connections,cn=Monitor
subschemaSubentry: cn=Subschema
hasSubordinates: FALSE
Thanks,
Gavin.
If you have an entry for our "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series, why not e-mail your tip to us.
P.S. For direct access to this section, you can click OpenLDAP Quick Tips.
Tuesday, December 9. 2008
Thursday, December 4. 2008
Hi All,
Here's the 17th tip in the "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series:
"You've successfully built your own instance of OpenLDAP but want to make sure you've done it right":
So, you've grabbed the latest version, compiled it and want to get started straight way, but stop! Hours and hours have been spent writing test scripts for OpenLDAP, so please, please, please run:
CODE: make test
before
CODE: su -c "make install"
and save the OpenLDAP Issue Tracking System from getting full with silly reports!
Also, see our installation section of the FAQ.
If this is too much, why not get supported, prepackaged versions of OpenLDAP: Symas™ OpenLDAP™ Directory Services™
Thanks,
Gavin.
If you have an entry for our "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series, why not e-mail your tip to us.
P.S. For direct access to this section, you can click OpenLDAP Quick Tips.
Wednesday, December 3. 2008
Hi All,
Here's the 16th tip in the "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series (as requested by Bronius Motekaitis):
"You want to audit OpenLDAP for changes: who modified what at what times?":
Apart from normal logging via syslog there are two options for this; file based audit logging or LDAP [?] based logging (in directory).
For file based see Audit Logging and related man page slapo-auditlog:
The Audit Logging overlay can be used to record all changes on a given
backend database to a specified log file. Changes are logged as stan-
dard LDIF, with an additional comment header giving the timestamp of
the change and the identity of the user making the change.
For in directory logging see Access Logging and related man page slapo-accesslog:
The Access Logging overlay can be used to record all accesses to a
given backend database on another database. This allows all of the
activity on a given database to be reviewed using arbitrary LDAP
queries, instead of just logging to local flat text files.
Thanks,
Gavin.
If you have an entry for our "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series, why not e-mail your tip to us.
P.S. For direct access to this section, you can click OpenLDAP Quick Tips.
Tuesday, December 2. 2008
Hi All,
Here's the 15th tip in the "OpenLDAP Quick Tips" series:
"You want to change your OpenLDAP loglevel to get more information, but can't take your directory server offline":
If you've been following the OpenLDAP Quick Tips series, you would have already read Switch to the dynamic config backend (cn=config) and will now have a live slapd dynamic backend configured. If not, go back and read it over
Continue reading "OpenLDAP Quick Tips: Change loglevels on the fly!"
|
Comments