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📄 rfc2307.txt

📁 著名的RFC文档,其中有一些文档是已经翻译成中文的的.
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Network Working Group                                          L. HowardRequest for Comments: 2307                        Independent ConsultantCategory: Experimental                                        March 1998      An Approach for Using LDAP as a Network Information ServiceStatus of this Memo   This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.   Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document describes an experimental mechanism for mapping   entities related to TCP/IP and the UNIX system into X.500 [X500]   entries so that they may be resolved with the Lightweight Directory   Access Protocol [RFC2251]. A set of attribute types and object   classes are proposed, along with specific guidelines for interpreting   them.   The intention is to assist the deployment of LDAP as an   organizational nameservice. No proposed solutions are intended as   standards for the Internet. Rather, it is hoped that a general   consensus will emerge as to the appropriate solution to such   problems, leading eventually to the adoption of standards. The   proposed mechanism has already been implemented with some success.1. Background and Motivation   The UNIX (R) operating system, and its derivatives (specifically,   those which support TCP/IP and conform to the X/Open Single UNIX   specification [XOPEN]) require a means of looking up entities, by   matching them against search criteria or by enumeration. (Other   operating systems that support TCP/IP may provide some means of   resolving some of these entities. This schema is applicable to those   environments also.)   These entities include users, groups, IP services (which map names to   IP ports and protocols, and vice versa), IP protocols (which map   names to IP protocol numbers and vice versa), RPCs (which map names   to ONC Remote Procedure Call [RFC1057] numbers and vice versa), NISHoward                        Experimental                      [Page 1]RFC 2307      Using LDAP as a Network Information Service     March 1998   netgroups, booting information (boot parameters and MAC address   mappings), filesystem mounts, IP hosts and networks, and RFC822 mail   aliases.   Resolution requests are made through a set of C functions, provided   in the UNIX system's C library. For example, the UNIX system utility   "ls", which enumerates the contents of a filesystem directory, uses   the C library function getpwuid() in order to map user IDs to login   names. Once the request is made, it is resolved using a "nameservice"   which is supported by the client library. The nameservice may be, at   its simplest, a collection of files in the local filesystem which are   opened and searched by the C library. Other common nameservices   include the Network Information Service (NIS) and the Domain Name   System (DNS). (The latter is typically used for resolving hosts,   services and networks.) Both these nameservices have the advantage of   being distributed and thus permitting a common set of entities to be   shared amongst many clients.   LDAP is a distributed, hierarchical directory service access protocol   which is used to access repositories of users and other network-   related entities. Because LDAP is often not tightly integrated with   the host operating system, information such as users may need to be   kept both in LDAP and in an operating system supported nameservice   such as NIS. By using LDAP as the the primary means of resolving   these entities, these redundancy issues are minimized and the   scalability of LDAP can be exploited. (By comparison, NIS services   based on flat files do not have the scalability or extensibility of   LDAP or X.500.)   The object classes and attributes defined below are suitable for   representing the aforementioned entities in a form compatible with   LDAP and X.500 directory services.2. General Issues2.1. Terminology   The key words "MUST", "SHOULD", and "MAY" used in this document are   to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].   For the purposes of this document, the term "nameservice" refers to a   service, such as NIS or flat files, that is used by the operating   system to resolve entities within a single, local naming context.   Contrast this with a "directory service" such as LDAP, which supports   extensible schema and multiple naming contexts.Howard                        Experimental                      [Page 2]RFC 2307      Using LDAP as a Network Information Service     March 1998   The term "NIS-related entities" broadly refers to entities which are   typically resolved using the Network Information Service. (NIS was   previously known as YP.) Deploying LDAP for resolving these entities   does not imply that NIS be used, as a gateway or otherwise. In   particular, the host and network classes are generically applicable,   and may be implemented on any system that wishes to use LDAP or X.500   for host and network resolution.   The "DUA" (directory user agent) refers to the LDAP client querying   these entities, such as an LDAP to NIS gateway or the C library.  The   "client" refers to the application which ultimately makes use of the   information returned by the resolution. It is irrelevant whether the   DUA and the client reside within the same address space. The act of   the DUA making this information to the client is termed   "republishing".   To avoid confusion, the term "login name" refers to the user's login   name (being the value of the uid attribute) and the term "user ID"   refers to he user's integer identification number (being the value of   the uidNumber attribute).   The phrases "resolving an entity" and "resolution of entities" refer   respectively to enumerating NIS-related entities of a given type, and   matching them against a given search criterion. One or more entities   are returned as a result of successful "resolutions" (a "match"   operation will only return one entity).   The use of the term UNIX does not confer upon this schema the   endorsement of owners of the UNIX trademark. Where necessary, the   term "TCP/IP entity" is used to refer to protocols, services, hosts,   and networks, and the term "UNIX entity" to its complement. (The   former category does not mandate the host operating system supporting   the interfaces required for resolving UNIX entities.)   The OIDs defined below are derived from iso(1) org(3) dod(6)   internet(1) directory(1) nisSchema(1).2.2. Attributes   The attributes and classes defined in this document are summarized   below.   The following attributes are defined in this document:           uidNumber           gidNumber           gecos           homeDirectoryHoward                        Experimental                      [Page 3]RFC 2307      Using LDAP as a Network Information Service     March 1998           loginShell           shadowLastChange           shadowMin           shadowMax           shadowWarning           shadowInactive           shadowExpire           shadowFlag           memberUid           memberNisNetgroup           nisNetgroupTriple           ipServicePort           ipServiceProtocol           ipProtocolNumber           oncRpcNumber           ipHostNumber           ipNetworkNumber           ipNetmaskNumber           macAddress           bootParameter           bootFile           nisMapName           nisMapEntry   Additionally, some of the attributes defined in [RFC2256] are   required.2.3. Object classes   The following object classes are defined in this document:           posixAccount           shadowAccount           posixGroup           ipService           ipProtocol           oncRpc           ipHost           ipNetwork           nisNetgroup           nisMap           nisObject           ieee802Device           bootableDevice   Additionally, some of the classes defined in [RFC2256] are required.Howard                        Experimental                      [Page 4]RFC 2307      Using LDAP as a Network Information Service     March 19982.4. Syntax definitions   The following syntax definitions [RFC2252] are used by this schema.   The nisNetgroupTripleSyntax represents NIS netgroup triples:           ( nisSchema.0.0 NAME 'nisNetgroupTripleSyntax'             DESC 'NIS netgroup triple' )   Values in this syntax are represented by the following:        nisnetgrouptriple = "(" hostname "," username "," domainname ")"        hostname          = "" / "-" / keystring        username          = "" / "-" / keystring        domainname        = "" / "-" / keystring   X.500 servers may use the following representation of the above   syntax:        nisNetgroupTripleSyntax ::= SEQUENCE {         hostname  [0] IA5String OPTIONAL,         username  [1] IA5String OPTIONAL,         domainname  [2] IA5String OPTIONAL        }   The bootParameterSyntax syntax represents boot parameters:           ( nisSchema.0.1 NAME 'bootParameterSyntax'             DESC 'Boot parameter' )   where:        bootparameter     = key "=" server ":" path        key               = keystring        server            = keystring        path              = keystring   X.500 servers may use the following representation of the above   syntax:        bootParameterSyntax ::= SEQUENCE {         key     IA5String,         server  IA5String,         path    IA5String        }   Values adhering to these syntaxes are encoded as strings by LDAP   servers.Howard                        Experimental                      [Page 5]RFC 2307      Using LDAP as a Network Information Service     March 19983. Attribute definitions   This section contains attribute definitions to be implemented by DUAs   supporting this schema.        ( nisSchema.1.0 NAME 'uidNumber'          DESC 'An integer uniquely identifying a user in an                administrative domain'          EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.1 NAME 'gidNumber'          DESC 'An integer uniquely identifying a group in an                administrative domain'          EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.2 NAME 'gecos'          DESC 'The GECOS field; the common name'          EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match          SUBSTRINGS caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch          SYNTAX 'IA5String' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.3 NAME 'homeDirectory'          DESC 'The absolute path to the home directory'          EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match          SYNTAX 'IA5String' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.4 NAME 'loginShell'          DESC 'The path to the login shell'          EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match          SYNTAX 'IA5String' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.5 NAME 'shadowLastChange'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.6 NAME 'shadowMin'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.7 NAME 'shadowMax'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.8 NAME 'shadowWarning'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.9 NAME 'shadowInactive'Howard                        Experimental                      [Page 6]RFC 2307      Using LDAP as a Network Information Service     March 1998          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.10 NAME 'shadowExpire'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.11 NAME 'shadowFlag'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.12 NAME 'memberUid'          EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match          SUBSTRINGS caseExactIA5SubstringsMatch          SYNTAX 'IA5String' )        ( nisSchema.1.13 NAME 'memberNisNetgroup'          EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match          SUBSTRINGS caseExactIA5SubstringsMatch          SYNTAX 'IA5String' )        ( nisSchema.1.14 NAME 'nisNetgroupTriple'          DESC 'Netgroup triple'          SYNTAX 'nisNetgroupTripleSyntax' )        ( nisSchema.1.15 NAME 'ipServicePort'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.16 NAME 'ipServiceProtocol'          SUP name )        ( nisSchema.1.17 NAME 'ipProtocolNumber'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.18 NAME 'oncRpcNumber'          EQUALITY integerMatch          SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )        ( nisSchema.1.19 NAME 'ipHostNumber'          DESC 'IP address as a dotted decimal, eg. 192.168.1.1,                omitting leading zeros'          EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match          SYNTAX 'IA5String{128}' )        ( nisSchema.1.20 NAME 'ipNetworkNumber'          DESC 'IP network as a dotted decimal, eg. 192.168,Howard                        Experimental                      [Page 7]

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