Chapter 16. Administering Directory Server Plug-ins

Chapter 16. Administering Directory Server Plug-ins

16.1. Server Plug-in Functionality Reference
16.1.1. 7-Bit Check Plug-in
16.1.2. ACL Plug-in
16.1.3. ACL Preoperation Plug-in
16.1.4. Binary Syntax Plug-in
16.1.5. Boolean Syntax Plug-in
16.1.6. Case Exact String Syntax Plug-in
16.1.7. Case Ignore String Syntax Plug-in
16.1.8. Chaining Database Plug-in
16.1.9. Class of Service Plug-in
16.1.10. Country String Syntax Plug-in
16.1.11. Distinguished Name Syntax Plug-in
16.1.12. Generalized Time Syntax Plug-in
16.1.13. Integer Syntax Plug-in
16.1.14. Internationalization Plug-in
16.1.15. ldbm Database Plug-in
16.1.16. Legacy Replication Plug-in
16.1.17. Multi-Master Replication Plug-in
16.1.18. Octet String Syntax Plug-in
16.1.19. CLEAR Password Storage Plug-in
16.1.20. CRYPT Password Storage Plug-in
16.1.21. NS-MTA-MD5 Password Storage Plug-in
16.1.22. SHA Password Storage Plug-in
16.1.23. SSHA Password Storage Plug-in
16.1.24. Postal Address String Syntax Plug-in
16.1.25. PTA Plug-in
16.1.26. Referential Integrity Postoperation Plug-in
16.1.27. Retro Changelog Plug-in
16.1.28. Roles Plug-in
16.1.29. Space Insensitive String Syntax Plug-in
16.1.30. State Change Plug-in
16.1.31. Telephone Syntax Plug-in
16.1.32. UID Uniqueness Plug-in
16.1.33. URI Plug-in
16.2. Enabling and Disabling Plug-ins

Plug-ins extend the functionality of the server. Red Hat Directory Server ships with several plug-ins to help manage the directory. This chapter contains general information on the types of plug-ins available and how to enable or disable them.



[19] The command to restart the Directory Server on platforms other than Red Hat Enterprise Linux is described in Section 1.3, “Starting and Stopping Servers”.

[20] The LDAP tools referenced in this guide are Mozilla LDAP, installed with Directory Server in the /usr/lib/mozldap directory on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 i386; directories for other platforms are listed in Section 1.2, “LDAP Tool Locations”. However, Red Hat Enterprise Linux systems also include LDAP tools from OpenLDAP. It is possible to use the OpenLDAP commands as shown in the examples, but you must use the -x argument to disable SASL and allow simple authentication.


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