nanog mailing list archives

Re: Tools


From: Andrew Newton <anewton () ecotroph net>
Date: Mon, 03 Mar 2003 11:32:56 -0500


I'd like to stop this argument now by saying you are both right.

*) LDAP is a protocol, not an implementation. The back-end can be anything... even monkeys with pencil and paper.

*) Michael's point about doing things differently and hopefully in a better way does not hinge on technology... it is a matter of will. The technology exists.

*) In order to run an efficient public-facing LDAP server that scales to the order needed by many but not all, off-the-shelf vendor software will not suffice.

*) LDAP in its current form does not contain the operations or data types needed by this community. However, it is an extensible protocol and anyone with a source-available or pluggable implementation will not be starting from scratch.

*) Having to extend the protocol means that generic clients are of limited use but not unuseable.

*) As Stephane said, there are a number of people looking at this in the IETF CRISP working group. And LDAP is one of the proposed solutions.

-andy

bmanning () karoshi com wrote:

Too many features layered on a single tool. Haq the tool
and the dependencies will cripple your service offering.

LDAP is not a tool, it is a protocol that can be used by many tools to communicate in the same way that many servers (BIND, NSD, DJBDNS, MS-DNS, QuickDNS) can use the DNS protocol to communicate with countless clients (Netscape, sendmail, ...).


tool in the generic sense. too many things that depend on LDAP for proper functioning -will- make LDAP a tempting
        target.


--
Andrew Newton


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