On 02/07/2012 08:56 AM, Dieter Klünter wrote:
Am Tue, 07 Feb 2012 13:10:36 +1100
schrieb Alfie Johnalf...@opera.com:
Hi guys,
When searching for Chinese names in the to: field under
Thunderbird, I get an assertion failing in slapd. I see that this is
because the mail attribute in the default
On 02/07/2012 12:57 PM, Alfie John wrote:
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012, at 09:14 AM, Pierangelo Masarati wrote:
In addition, I suggest you check whether the problem persists with the
latest release; in case, please file an ITS following instructions here
http://www.openldap.org/faq/data/cache/56.html.
Am Tue, 07 Feb 2012 22:57:31 +1100
schrieb Alfie John alf...@opera.com:
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012, at 09:14 AM, Pierangelo Masarati wrote:
In addition, I suggest you check whether the problem persists with
the latest release; in case, please file an ITS following
instructions here
Alfie John wrote:
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012, at 11:34 AM, Charles T. Brooks wrote:
Non-english character sets are going to become part of hostnames and
DNS. That's inevitable.
Mail addresses are based on DNS hostnames.
Ergo, mail attributes will one day need to support all possible
characters.
Hi guys,
When searching for Chinese names in the to: field under Thunderbird, I get an
assertion failing in slapd. I see that this is because the mail attribute in
the default schema is of type IA5 String but the Chinese name that I'm
searching for falls outside the character set.
The work
Am Tue, 07 Feb 2012 13:10:36 +1100
schrieb Alfie John alf...@opera.com:
Hi guys,
When searching for Chinese names in the to: field under
Thunderbird, I get an assertion failing in slapd. I see that this is
because the mail attribute in the default schema is of type IA5
String but the