Thanks to those that responded: 3 recommended the use of Sun's directory server for reasons such as product support, ease of management, and to avoid implementation problems. In addition, it was recommended that Sun's implementation of Kerberos (SEAM) be used in favor of MIT's, for the similar reasons. 1 recommended the use of OpenLDAP. Migration from NIS to LDAP was painless and is much faster in comparison. They supported Linux clients as well as Solaris, and using a Sun directory server for this setup appeared to be much more painful than the vice-versa. I did fail to mention that we too will support Linux, which are currently using NIS+ as well, so I'll investigate it before deciding. Thanks again, Dennis -------- Original Message -------- Subject: directory server Date: Wed, 05 May 2004 13:01:40 -0400 From: dpk <dpk@egr.msu.edu> To: sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org We are looking to replace NIS+ with LDAP or LDAP+Kerberos. When comparing looking for Sun Java|ONE Directory Server and OpenLDAP, I'm only finding "Sun is proprietary, but extremely fast" and "OpenLDAP is open source, but slow and resource intensive". Anyone have real-world installs and comparisons to share? For instance, will performance be that much of a consideration for ~ 6000 user and 1000 group entries? What about ease of migration between releases? Administration quirks? Thanks in advance for your input. Dennis _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Thu May 6 08:39:08 2004
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