Hi list, It's been a few days and I just wanted to check back to see if anyone had any troubleshooting tips that might help to solve this situation that I'm dealing with as I'm still a relatively new LDAP admin. I really appreciated your advice in the past and have overcome some very significant technical hurdles with your assistance on a number of occasions.
Thanks in advance!and I would like to wish you a belated happy new year! Tim On Sun, Jan 2, 2011 at 12:58 AM, bluethundr <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello list!! > > I would greatly appreciate your help with an issue I am having here. > It seems that when you log into hosts on the network via ldap > authentication, said authentication is extremely sloooowww... on the > order of up to 30 seconds to log in! I could use some assistance in > correlating the information in the logs with the way that slapd.conf > is configured. > > What I did to capture the event in the logs was to (after backing > them up) empty them with cat /dev/null > /var/log/openldap.log and > then log into a host on the network via an ldap account. Right after > login was finished I copied the log file to another location on the > nas and enclosed it here. Therefore it reflects only what happened > during the login. I've also enclosed my slapd.conf and ldap schema as > attachments for your perusal. > > I've attempted adding some indexes to the configuration to alleviate > the situation but unfortunately this had no effect. The ones I added > were uid and uidNumber which I've read can help address this sort of > situation. > > > [r...@lbsd2:~]#grep -i index /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.conf > index objectClass,uid,uidNumber eq > index sudoUser eq > > thanks in advice with any assistance you can provide. > > best regards > > -- > GPG me!! > > gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys F186197B > -- GPG me!! gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys F186197B
