Subj : Re: Idiots intro to LDAP - Where? To : comp.os.linux,comp.os.linux.misc From : ptb Date : Fri Sep 10 2004 06:46 pm William Park wrote: > I know thin-client. I read and understood BOOTP, DHCP, TFTP, all in one > sitting. But, for the life of me, I can't understand LDAP or why it's > being adopted all over. One of the major reasons is that there are ldap clients and servers for windows and they can be reasonably expected to be built into windows o/s's or integrated easily, thus allowing windows and unix clients to use the same authentication mechanisms (i.e. password file). It also puts more power in the hands of a central organisation (and thus is likely to be promoted by an organsiation) because hierarches are integrated from the get-go, so central office can keep the paswords for the florida and the singapore offices, and distribute them all at once, and the florida and miami people will be looking only at their little bit of the networked database. While you could do that with nis+, nobody really used nis+ as it was a pain in compatrison with nis. Nis didn't really have hierarchies unless you made a real effort with the naming conventions. Also there is a bit more security involved, though the present linux implementations are a joke - as far as I can see authentication against ldap involves you sending your password in the clear to the server, which authenticates you against its coded password. Hic. Peter .