"William (Bill) E. T." <wtriest at chemistry.ohio-state.edu> wrote: > One of our strategic goals for this year is to switch from > NIS to LDAP (which hasn't happened so far due to some ancient > Unix boxes). Which should I investigate first OpenLDAP or FDS? > Can some one point me to pro's and cons? (links very much > appreciated) FDS is NsDS, which has been a _long_time_ and is well trusted. It's synchronization with ADS is much, much better, and removes the need to deal with a set of "glue together" services just to get such. The included certificate server is a nice touch, although being truly open, you can still use Kerberos and other authentication systems as well. But probably the biggest boost to why NsDS is more viable for most enterprises than OpenLDAP is Red Hat's license of it. Red Hat really tried to make OpenLDAP work in its enterprise services model, but in the end, it was well worth their bother to pay $20M to open source NsDS. Red Hat is behind it 100%, and that includes charging $15,000/server for what is free in the same FDS you can download. -- Bryan J. Smith | Sent from Yahoo Mail mailto:b.j.smith at ieee.org | (please excuse any http://thebs413.blogspot.com/ | missing headers)