Dean Wells wrote: > > > 1. It means to associate. My terminology is influenced by the > common-place AD interfaces used to manipulate the AD schema – > [..screenshot snipped..]
So that means adding a DIT content rule in LDAPv3 terminology. But in LDAPv3 you can solely define DIT content rules for structural object classes. It might be that AD allows DIT content rules also for auxiliary classes but there's nothing like this defined in LDAPv3 (see RFC 4512, section 4.1.6.). One can query the DIT content rules defined in AD by querying the subschema subentry (e.g. by using web2ldap). > Structural classes are derived from the attributes Nitpicking (without offense): Structural object classes are derived from other structural object classes and inherit the attributes in MUST and MAY of the superior object class declaration(s). But I guess we're basically meaning the same. Ciao, Michael. -- Michael Ströder E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.stroeder.com --- You are currently subscribed to [email protected] as: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word UNSUBSCRIBE as the SUBJECT of the message.
