On Tue, 2007-07-03 at 15:05 +0100, Timothy Murphy wrote: > I asked a couple of weeks ago for advice on a LAN-wide address-book, > and several people suggested I look at LDAP. > > I did this, and it does indeed look like the best solution, > as kmail and other mail clients seem to accept addresses from LDAP servers. > > Unfortunately, the openLDAP documentation seems horrendously bad. > I found a few useful web-sites, particularly > "Build an LDAP-based address book", > at <http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/edu/os-dw-linuxldap-i.html>, > "Building an Address Book with OpenLDAP" > at <http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2003/03/27/ldap_ab.html>, > and also <http://www.zytrax.com/books/ldap/ch5>. > > But I'm left with a few small queries, > and am wondering if many Fedora users have gone down this path? > Also, I wonder if there is a mailing list or newsgroup > devoted to this topic, for newbies? ---- It's not that the openldap documentation is horribly bad - it's that the openldap documentation doesn't even remotely cover what it is that you are trying to accomplish. In fact, it doesn't cover any specific application at all but only generalized usage. That of course, is always the issue of LDAP - that it is a general product whose application is entirely up to the user and thus, there is no single application, no one specific guide for everyone. I use it for authentication and for shared address books and the learning curve is quite steep - sorry - I wish it weren't the case. The issue is that it does not lend itself to an easy walk through and attempts to use ldap without achieving a reasonable comprehension of how it works inevitably lead to a great deal of frustration. Note that even mail applications vary widely in the specific attributes and make it virtually impossible for any ldap address book backend to satisfy more than a handful of attributes. My recommendation...stick with Brennan's home guide and you should at least get basic functionality. You should have noticed by now that each different web walkthrough varies greatly and what is applicable to one approach doesn't work in another. Feel free to post specific questions to the list because there are some people on this list that do understand openldap/fedora-ds and can help but recognize that it's not a technology that is easily adopted without the requisite education. -- Craig White <craig@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>