[Date Prev][Date Next]
[Chronological]
[Thread]
[Top]
RE: Syntax OIDs, RFC2252
OIDs have the taxonomy of the authorities that issued the OID so one can
find that 'elsewhere' i.e. it contains the prefix to the organisation that
issued the attribute and defined its syntax.
LDAP converts these OID's to North American string representations e.g.
2.5.4.4 has the
label Surname issued by joint ISO-CCITT.DirectoryStandard.Attribute.4, but
if one worked
with the OID's alone, in the client you could label recevied attribute as
Senior i.e. multilingual.
Andrew Probert
Rotek Consulting http://www.rotek.com.au
a Division of Secure Network Solutions http://SecureNet.com.au
Tel +61 3 9690 8877
Mobile +61 409 413 028
Fax +61 3 9690 8171
-----Original Message-----
From: Hallvard B Furuseth [mailto:h.b.furuseth@usit.uio.no]
Sent: Wednesday, August 25, 1999 6:48 AM
To: Howard Chu
Cc: Mark Wahl; ietf-ldapext
Subject: RE: Syntax OIDs, RFC2252
Howard Chu writes:
>
> The whole motivation for publishing schema in the directory is so that
> nobody has to look "elsewhere" before they can do useful work with a piece
> of information. I am utterly amazed at your statement.
For syntaxes (and matching rules), one has to look "elsewhere" anyway.
--
Hallvard