D.1 Requests for Comments
RFC documents are available online at
http://www.rfc-editor.org/. The
list here includes LDAPv3-related RFCs in numerical order.
RFC 1274
"The COSINE and Internet
X.500 Schema". P. Barker and S. Kille. November
1991. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2079
"Definition
of an X.500 Attribute Type and an Object Class to Hold Uniform
Resource Identifiers (URIs)". M. Smith. January
1997. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2247
"Using Domains in LDAP/X.500 Distinguished
Names". S. Kille et al. January 1998. Status:
Proposed Standard.RFC 2251
"Lightweight
Directory Access Protocol (v3)". M. Wahl, T. Howes,
and S. Kille. December 1997. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2252
"Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3):
Attribute Syntax Definitions". M. Wahl et al.
December 1997. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2253
"Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3): UTF-8
String Representation of Distinguished Names". M.
Wahl, S. Kille, and T. Howes. December 1997. Status: Proposed
Standard.RFC 2254
"The String
Representation of LDAP Search Filters". T. Howes.
December 1997. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2255
"The
LDAP URL
Format". T. Howes and M. Smith. December 1997.
Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2256
"A Summary of the X.500(96) User Schema for use with
LDAPv3". M. Wahl. December
1997. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2293
"Representing Tables and Subtrees in the X.500
Directory". S. Kille. March 1998. Status: Proposed
Standard.RFC 2294
"Representing the O/R Address Hierarchy in the X.500
Directory Information Tree". S. Kille. March 1998.
Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2307
"An Approach for Using LDAP
as a Network Information Service". L. Howard. March
1998. Status: Experimental.RFC 2377
"Naming Plan for Internet Directory-Enabled
Applications". A. Grimstad et al. September 1998.
Status: Informational.RFC 2589
"Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3):
Extensions for Dynamic Directory
Services". Y. Yaacovi, M. Wahl, and T. Genovese. May
1999. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2596
"Use of Language Codes in LDAP". M.
Wahl and T. Howes. May 1999. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2649
"An LDAP Control and Schema for Holding Operation
Signatures". B. Greenblatt and P. Richard. August
1999. Status: Experimental.RFC 2696
"LDAP Control Extension for Simple Paged Results
Manipulation". C. Weider et al. September 1999.
Status: Informational.RFC 2713
"Schema for
Representing Java™ Objects in an LDAP
Directory". V. Ryan, S. Seligman, and R. Lee.
October 1999. Status: Informational.RFC 2714
"Schema for Representing CORBA Object References
in an LDAP Directory". V. Ryan, R. Lee, and S.
Seligman. October 1999. Status: Informational.RFC 2798
"Definition of the inetOrgPerson LDAP Object
Class". M. Smith. April 2000. Status: Informational.RFC 2829
"Authentication Methods
for LDAP". M. Wahl et al. May 2000. Status: Proposed
Standard.RFC 2830
"Lightweight
Directory Access Protocol (v3): Extension for Transport Layer
Security". J. Hodges, R. Morgan, and M. Wahl. May
2000. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2849
"The LDAP Data Interchange
Format (LDIF)Technical Specification". G.
Good. June 2000. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 2891
"LDAP Control Extension for Server Side Sorting
of Search Results". T. Howes, M. Wahl, and A.
Anantha. August 2000. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 3045
"Storing
Vendor Information in the LDAP root DSE". M.
Meredith. January 2001. Status: Informational.RFC 3062
"LDAP Password
Modify Extended Operation". K. Zeilenga. February
2001. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 3088
"OpenLDAP Root Service: An experimental LDAP
referral service". K. Zeilenga. April 2001. Status:
Experimental.RFC 3112
"LDAP
Authentication Password Schema". K. Zeilenga. May
2001. Status: Experimental.RFC 3296
"Named
Subordinate References in Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
(LDAP) Directories". K. Zeilenga. July 2002. Status:
Proposed Standard.RFC 3377
"Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3):
Technical Specification". J.
Hodges and R. Morgan. September 2002. Status: Proposed Standard.RFC 3383
"Internet Assigned
Numbers Authority (IANA) Considerations for the Lightweight Directory
Access Protocol (LDAP)". K. Zeilenga. September
2002. Status: Best Common Practices.Internet-Drafts (I-Ds) are temporary by
nature, although this often does not stop vendors from implementing
parts or all of the functionality that a draft outlines. The I-Ds
listed here are included for their relevance to topics covered in one
or more chapters in this book. The absence of an I-D from this list
should not be interpreted to mean it may or may not be relevant in
future LDAP deployments.Nonexpired
I-Ds can be found at http://rfc-editor.org/. Expired drafts can be
found online at various archive sites, such as http://www.watersprings.org/. Search engines
such as Google.com are normally able to locate several such archives.draft-lachman-laser-ldap-mail-routing-xx.txt
"LDAP Schema for Intranet Mail
Routing". H. Lachman and G. Shapiro. Expires: July
2001.draft-ietf-ldapext-ldap-c-api-xx.txt
"The C LDAP Application Program
Interface". M. Smith (ed.) et al. Expires: May 2001.draft-weltman-ldapv3-proxy-xx.txt
"LDAP Proxied Authorization
Control". R. Weltman. Expires: November 2002.draft-fleming-ldap-printer-schema-xx.txt
"Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP):
Schema for Printer Services". Pat Fleming and I.
McDonald. Expires: December 2002.draft-howard-rfc2307bis-xx.txt
"An Approach for Using LDAP as a Network Information
Service". L. Howard and M. Ansari. Expires: April
2003.draft-ietf-ldapext-ldapv3-vlv-xx.txt
"LDAP Extensions for Scrolling View Browsing of
Search Results". D. Boreham, J. Sermersheim, and A.
Kashi. Expires: November 2002.draft-ietf-ldapext-acl-model-xx.txt
"Access Control Model for LDAPv3".
E. Stokes et al. Expires: January 2001.
•
Table of Contents
•
Index
•
Reviews
•
Reader Reviews
•
Errata
LDAP System Administration
By
Gerald Carter
Publisher
: O''''Reilly
Pub Date
: March 2003
ISBN
: 1-56592-491-6
Pages
: 308
If you want to be a master of your domain, LDAP
System Administration will help you get up and
running quickly regardless of which LDAP version you use.
After reading this book, even with no previous LDAP
experience, you''''ll be able to integrate a directory server
into essential network services such as mail, DNS, HTTP, and
SMB/CIFS.