yeah this is the main ldif file which I initilly imported. oh ok.... you
want me to change the password of nsadmin by making an ldif file loike
above, Yes the paswords were not in the hashed form in the modify operation.
Ok I will try doing this, as soon as I get my database up.

Regards

On 10/30/07, Piotr Wadas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > The passowrd is hashed in the ldif file which I am importing from the
> > production system, as below:
> >
> > # id=00000003
> > dn: uid=nsadmin,o=trac
> > objectClass: top
> > objectClass: person
> > objectClass: organizationalPerson
> > objectClass: inetOrgPerson
> > cn: SuiteSpot Administrator
> > sn: Administrator
> > givenName: SuiteSpot
> > uid: nsadmin
> > creatorsName: cn=nsadmin
> > createTimestamp: 19980218204619Z
> > userPassword:: e1NIQX12bm4rOFpBNFNzdzJJMnlQOVZ2clBJVFlGRzg9
> > modifiersName: uid=nsadmin,o=trac
> > modifyTimestamp: 19980722182149Z
> > structuralObjectClass: inetOrgPerson
> > entryUUID: 8179b9a2-74d7-102a-9988-90f8caf384a9
> > entryCSN: 20060511011623Z#000003#00#000000
> >
>
> This is not modify operation ldap file.
> Modify operation ldif file should look like this:
> (in example two values of userPassword will be added
> to "cn=admin,dc=foo" object, and all old values of
> userPassword attribute will be removed.
>
> dn: cn=admin,dc=foo
> changetype: modify
> replace: userPassword
> userPassword: {CRYPT}hashpasswordvaluehere
> userPassword: {MD5}passwordhashedinotherway
>
> Regards,
> Piotr
>

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