Defines a number of naming and structuring guidelines focused on White Pages usage. Intended for data managers using X.500 Directory Services. Concentrates on DIT structure, naming and the usage of attributes for organizations, organizational units, and personal entries. Contains figures.
* Focuses on open standards rather than proprietary systems, which are expensive and incompatible with other systems. * Can be used by someone who already knows advanced programming and implementation but doesn’t understand how everything fits together. * Scripting for network administrators who want to perform tasks but aren’t necessarily programmers.
Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) is the standard for directory information access and is the underlying protocol for a variety of email systems, Web systems, and enterprise applications. LDAP enables central management of users, groups, devices, and other data, thereby simplifying directory management and reducing the total cost of ownership. Understanding and Deploying LDAP Directory Services, written by the creators of the protocol, is known as the LDAP bible and is the classic text for learning about LDAP and how to utilize it effectively. The Second Edition builds on this success by acting as an exhaustive resource for designing, deploying, and maintaining LDAP directory services. Topics such as implementation pitfalls, establishing and maintaining user access to information, troubleshooting, and real-world scenarios will be thoroughly explored.
This book explores the use of Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) as an efficient protocol. It combines all of the relevant information available on the Internet along with a number of arguments treated in the various books that are available, and provides many examples of LDAP code.
* People who are interested in accessing directory services (and particularly Active Directory) from .NET code: 1. System administrators who need to write code to automate Active Directory and/or Exchange related tasks. 2. Developers who need to access objects in a directory service programmatically. * The only book dedicated to Directory Service programming on the .NET platform. * Goes beyond theory to show real uses of Directory Service programming, such as automated administration of users and groups, network resources such as computers and printers, and Exchange mailboxes. * Contains many real applications that can be used to perform directory service administration tasks.
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP), standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), has emulated the simplicity of the protocol architecture of hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) and is being popularized for VoIP over the Internet because of the ease with which it can be meshed with web services. However, it is difficult to know exactly how many requests for comments (RFCs) have been published over the last two decades in regards to SIP or how those RFCs are interrelated. Handbook on Session Initiation Protocol: Networked Multimedia Communications for IP Telephony solves that problem. It is the first book to put together all SIP-related RFCs, with their mandatory and optional texts, in a chronological and systematic way so that it can be used as a single super-SIP RFC with an almost one-to-one integrity from beginning to end, allowing you to see the big picture of SIP for the basic SIP functionalities. It is a book that network designers, software developers, product manufacturers, implementers, interoperability testers, professionals, professors, and researchers will find to be very useful. The text of each RFC from the IETF has been reviewed by all members of a given working group made up of world-renowned experts, and a rough consensus made on which parts of the drafts need to be mandatory and optional, including whether an RFC needs to be Standards Track, Informational, or Experimental. Texts, ABNF syntaxes, figures, tables, and references are included in their original form. All RFCs, along with their authors, are provided as references. The book is organized into twenty chapters based on the major functionalities, features, and capabilities of SIP.
Annotation This work provides system architects a methodology for the implementation of x.500 and LDAP based metadirectory provisioning systems. In addition this work assists in the business process analysis that accompanies any deployment. DOC Safe Harbor.
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Practice and Theory in Public Key Cryptography, PKC'99, held in Kamakura, Japan in March 1999. The 25 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from a total of 61 submissions. The volume reports most recent research results on all relevant aspects in public key cryptography. Among the topics covered are digital signatures, anonymous finger printing, message authentication, digital payment, key escrow, RSA systems, hash functions, decision oracles, random numbers, finite field computations, pay-per-view-systems, and electronic commerce.
Documents the results of a task force on X.400(1988) deployment of the RARE Mails and Messaging Work Group during the period from November 1992 until October 1993. Study funded by CEC under VALUE Subprogram II and has been carried out by a task force on the RARE Mail Working Group. Targeted at technical decision makers as well as those who would fund activity in this area.
NEW EDITION COMING SOON. The best introduction to computer networking with TCP/IP for intermediate and advanced level computer networking courses, or as a superb professional reference.