Daniel Liston | 24 Jun 2004 18:26

LDAP

Is majordomo II LDAP aware?  Has anyone done any work to current
or past majordomo versions to use LDAP based list configuration or
membership?

Dan Liston

Roger B.A. Klorese | 24 Jun 2004 19:45

Re: [majordomo-workers] LDAP

Daniel Liston wrote:
> Is majordomo II LDAP aware?  

No, but it's open to having LDAP drivers written for it, in that it 
supports multiple types of back-end stores.

Roger B.A. Klorese | 24 Jun 2004 19:30

Re: LDAP

Daniel Liston wrote:
> Is majordomo II LDAP aware?  

No, but it's open to having LDAP drivers written for it, in that it 
supports multiple types of back-end stores.

Roger B.A. Klorese | 24 Jun 2004 19:15

Re: LDAP

Daniel Liston wrote:
> Is majordomo II LDAP aware?  

No, but it's open to having LDAP drivers written for it, in that it 
supports multiple types of back-end stores.

Roger B.A. Klorese | 24 Jun 2004 19:00

Re: LDAP

Daniel Liston wrote:
> Is majordomo II LDAP aware?  

No, but it's open to having LDAP drivers written for it, in that it 
supports multiple types of back-end stores.

Roger B.A. Klorese | 24 Jun 2004 18:46

Re: LDAP

Daniel Liston wrote:
> Is majordomo II LDAP aware?  

No, but it's open to having LDAP drivers written for it, in that it 
supports multiple types of back-end stores.

Roger B.A. Klorese | 24 Jun 2004 18:38

Re: LDAP

Daniel Liston wrote:
> Is majordomo II LDAP aware?  

No, but it's open to having LDAP drivers written for it, in that it 
supports multiple types of back-end stores.

Daniel Liston | 26 Jun 2004 01:04

Re: LDAP


Roger B.A. Klorese wrote:

> Daniel Liston wrote:
> 
>> Is majordomo II LDAP aware?  
> 
> 
> No, but it's open to having LDAP drivers written for it, in that it 
> supports multiple types of back-end stores.

I would not have viewed this as being a driver, but that does put
my question in a different perspective.  Since LDAP maintains each
object as a set of attribute:value pairs that follow a specific
schema, I will probably work on defining schema first, then the
methods of access for reads and writes.  This will probably include
user object dependencies, and their associated access controls.

Dan Liston


Gmane