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LDAP System Administration - Gerald Carter
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II. Application Integration

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2022-02-24 01:30:18
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  • A Note Regarding Supplemental Files
  • Preface
    • How This Book Is Organized
      • Part I : LDAP Basics
      • Part II : Application Integration
      • Part III: Appendixes
    • Conventions Used in This Book
    • Comments and Questions
    • Acknowledgments
  • I. LDAP Basics
    • 1. "Now where did I put that...?", or "What is a directory?"
      • 1.1. The Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
      • 1.2. What Is LDAP?
        • 1.2.1. Lightweight
        • 1.2.2. Directory
        • 1.2.3. Access Protocol
      • 1.3. LDAP Models
    • 2. LDAPv3 Overview
      • 2.1. LDIF
        • 2.1.1. Distinguished Names and Relative Distinguished Names
        • 2.1.2. Back to Our Regularly Scheduled Program . . .
      • 2.2. What Is an Attribute?
        • 2.2.1. Attribute Syntax
        • 2.2.2. What Does the Value of the objectClass Attribute Mean?
      • 2.3. What Is the dc Attribute?
        • 2.3.1. Where Is dc=org?
      • 2.4. Schema References
      • 2.5. Authentication
        • 2.5.1. Anonymous Authentication
        • 2.5.2. Simple Authentication
        • 2.5.3. Simple Authentication Over SSL/TLS
        • 2.5.4. Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL)
      • 2.6. Distributed Directories
      • 2.7. Continuing Standardization
    • 3. OpenLDAP
      • 3.1. Obtaining the OpenLDAP Distribution
      • 3.2. Software Requirements
        • 3.2.1. Threads
        • 3.2.2. SSL/TLS Libraries
        • 3.2.3. Database Backend Modules
        • 3.2.4. SASL Libraries
      • 3.3. Compiling OpenLDAP 2
      • 3.4. OpenLDAP Clients and Servers
      • 3.5. The slapd.conf Configuration File
        • 3.5.1. Schema Files
        • 3.5.2. Logging
        • 3.5.3. SASL Options
        • 3.5.4. SSL/TLS Options
        • 3.5.5. More Security-Related Parameters
        • 3.5.6. Serving Up Data
      • 3.6. Access Control Lists (ACLs)
    • 4. OpenLDAP: Building a Company White Pages
      • 4.1. A Starting Point
      • 4.2. Defining the Schema
      • 4.3. Updating slapd.conf
      • 4.4. Starting slapd
      • 4.5. Adding the Initial Directory Entries
        • 4.5.1. Verifying the Directory's Contents
        • 4.5.2. Updating What Is Already There
      • 4.6. Graphical Editors
    • 5. Replication, Referrals, Searching, and SASL Explained
      • 5.1. More Than One Copy Is "a Good Thing"
        • 5.1.1. Building slurpd
        • 5.1.2. Replication in a Nutshell
        • 5.1.3. Configuring the Master Server
        • 5.1.4. Configuring the Replica Server
        • 5.1.5. slurpd's replogfile
      • 5.2. Distributing the Directory
      • 5.3. Advanced Searching Options
        • 5.3.1. Following Referrals with ldapsearch
        • 5.3.2. Limiting Your Searches
      • 5.4. Determining a Server's Capabilities
      • 5.5. Creating Custom Schema Files for slapd
      • 5.6. SASL and OpenLDAP
  • II. Application Integration
    • 6. Replacing NIS
      • 6.1. More About NIS
      • 6.2. Schemas for Information Services
      • 6.3. Information Migration
      • 6.4. The pam_ldap Module
        • 6.4.1. Configuring /etc/ldap.conf
      • 6.5. The nss_ldap Module
      • 6.6. OpenSSH, PAM, and NSS
      • 6.7. Authorization Through PAM
        • 6.7.1. One Host and a Group of Users
        • 6.7.2. One User and a Group of Hosts
      • 6.8. Netgroups
      • 6.9. Security
      • 6.10. Automount Maps
      • 6.11. PADL's NIS/LDAP Gateway
    • 7. Email and LDAP
      • 7.1. Representing Users
      • 7.2. Email Clients and LDAP
        • 7.2.1. Mozilla Mail
        • 7.2.2. Pine 4
        • 7.2.3. Eudora
        • 7.2.4. Microsoft Outlook Express
      • 7.3. Mail Transfer Agents (MTAs)
        • 7.3.1. Sendmail
        • 7.3.2. Postfix
        • 7.3.3. Exim
    • 8. Standard Unix Services and LDAP
      • 8.1. The Directory Namespace
      • 8.2. An FTP/HTTP Combination
        • 8.2.1. ProFTPD
        • 8.2.2. Apache
      • 8.3. User Authentication with Samba
        • 8.3.1. Configuring Samba
        • 8.3.2. Adding and Using a sambaAccount
      • 8.4. FreeRadius
        • 8.4.1. FreeRadius and OpenLDAP
      • 8.5. Resolving Hosts
      • 8.6. Central Printer Management
    • 9. LDAP Interoperability
      • 9.1. Interoperability or Integration?
      • 9.2. Directory Gateways
      • 9.3. Cross-Platform Authentication Services
        • 9.3.1. A Short Discussion About Kerberos
      • 9.4. Distributed, Multivendor Directories
      • 9.5. Metadirectories
      • 9.6. Push/Pull Agents for Directory Synchronization
        • 9.6.1. The Directory Services Markup Language
    • 10. Net::LDAP and Perl
      • 10.1. The Net::LDAP Module
      • 10.2. Connecting, Binding, and Searching
      • 10.3. Working with Net::LDAP::LDIF
      • 10.4. Updating the Directory
        • 10.4.1. Adding New Entries
        • 10.4.2. Deleting Entries
        • 10.4.3. Modifying Entries
      • 10.5. Advanced Net::LDAP Scripting
        • 10.5.1. References and Referrals
        • 10.5.2. Scripting Authentication with SASL
        • 10.5.3. Extensions and Controls
  • III. Appendixes
    • A. PAM and NSS
      • A.1. Pluggable Authentication Modules
        • A.1.1. Configuring PAM
      • A.2. Name Service Switch (NSS)
    • B. OpenLDAP Command-Line Tools
      • B.1. Debugging Options
      • B.2. Slap Tools
        • B.2.1. slapadd(8c)
        • B.2.2. slapcat(8c)
        • B.2.3. slapindex(8c)
        • B.2.4. slappasswd(8c)
      • B.3. LDAP Tools
        • B.3.1. ldapadd(1), ldapmodify(1)
        • B.3.2. ldapcompare(1)
        • B.3.3. ldapdelete(1)
        • B.3.4. ldapmodrdn(1)
        • B.3.5. ldappasswd(1)
        • B.3.6. ldapsearch(1)
    • C. Common Attributes and Objects
      • C.1. Schema Files
      • C.2. Attributes
      • C.3. Object Classes
    • D. LDAP RFCs, Internet-Drafts, and Mailing Lists
      • D.1. Requests for Comments
      • D.2. Mailing Lists
    • E. slapd.conf ACLs
      • E.1. What?
      • E.2. Who?
      • E.3. How Much?
      • E.4. Examples
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