|
Network Working Group Request for Comments: 2116 FYI: 11 Obsoletes: 1632 Category: Informational |
C. Apple AT&T Laboratories K. Rossen MCI Systemhouse April 1997 |
This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
This document is a revision to [RFC 1632]: A Revised Catalog of Available X.500 Implementations and is based on the results of data collection via a WWW home page that enabled implementors to submit new or updated descriptions of currently available implementations of X.500, including commercial products and openly available offerings. [RFC 1632] is a revision of [RFC 1292]. We contacted each contributor to [RFC 1632] to request an update and published the URL of the WWW home page survey template in several mailing lists to encourage the submission of new product descriptions.
This document contains detailed description of 31 X.500
implementations - DSAs, DUAs, and DUA interfaces.
1. Introduction
1.1 Purpose
1.2 Scope
1.3 Disclaimer
1.4 Overview
1.5 Acknowledgements
2. Keywords
2.1 Keyword Definitions
2.1.1 Availability
2.1.2 Conformance with International Standards
2.1.3 Conformance with Proposed Internet Standards
2.1.4 Consistence with Other Relevant Standards and Profiles
2.1.5 Consistence with Informational and Experimental RFCs
2.1.6 Support for Popular Schema Elements
2.1.7 Miscellaneous Functionality
2.1.8 Implementation Type
2.1.9 Internetworking Environment
2.1.10 Pilot Connectivity
2.1.11 Miscellaneous Information
2.1.12 Operating Environment
2.2 Implementations Indexed by Keyword
3. Implementation Descriptions
(for individual description page numbers see Table 2-1, p. 15)
4. References
5. Security Considerations
6. Editors' Addresses
This document catalogs currently available implementations of X.500, including commercial products and openly available offerings. For the purposes of this survey, we classify X.500 products as,
DSA
A DSA is an OSI application process that provides the Directory functionality,
DUA
A DUA is an OSI application process that represents a user in accessing the Directory and uses the DAP to communicate with a DSA, and
DUA Interface
A DUA Interface is an application process that represents a user in accessing the Directory using either DAP but supporting only a subset of the DAP functionality or a protocol different from DAP to communicate with a DSA or DUA.
Section 2 of this document contains a listing of implementations cross referenced by keyword. This list should aid in identifying implementations that meet your criteria.
To compile this catalog, the IDS Working Group solicited input from the X.500 community by publishing a URL for a set of on-line description forms deployed on the WWW as a home page on an InterNIC server. This URL
(http://www.internic.net/projects/x500catalog/catalogtop.html) was
advertised on the following directory-related mailing lists:
iso@nic.ddn.mil, isode@nic.ddn.mil, osi-ds@cs.ucl.ac.uk,
ids@merit.edu, ietf-asid@umich.edu, mhs-ds@mercury.udev.cdc.com,
nadf-l@ema.org, and dssig@nist.gov.
Readers are encouraged to submit comments regarding both the forms and content of this memo. New submissions are welcome. Please direct input to the Integrated Directory Services (IDS) Working Group (ietf-ids@umich.edu) or to the authors. IDS will produce new versions of this document when a significant number of substantive comments have been received or when significant updates and/or modifications to X.500-related standards documents have been ratified. This will be determined by the IDS chairpersons.
The Internet has experienced a steady growth in X.500 piloting activities. This document hopes to provide an easily accessible source of information on X.500 implementations for those who wish to consider X.500 technology for deploying a Directory service.
This document contains descriptions of both free and commercial X.500 implementations. It does not provide instructions on how to install, run, or manage these implementations. The descriptions and indices are provided to make the readers aware of available options and thus enable more informed choices.
Implementation descriptions were written by implementors and vendors, and not by the editors. We worked with the description authors to ensure uniformity and readability, but cannot guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the descriptions, nor the stability of the implementations.
Section 1 contains introductory information.
Section 2 contains a list of keywords, their definitions, a cross reference of the X.500 implementations by these keywords and a table containing implementor name, implementor abreviation, and the page of this document on which the description begins for a particular implementor.
Section 3 contains the X.500 implementation descriptions.
Section 4 has a list of references.
Section 6 lists the editors' addresses.
The creation of this catalog would not have been possible without the efforts of the description authors and the members of the IDS Working Group. Our special thanks to the editors of [RFC 1632], Linda Millington and Sri Sataluri who graciously contributed the nroff source file used to structure their version of the catalog.
Keywords are abbreviated attributes of the X.500 implementations.
The list of keywords defined below was derived from the
implementation descriptions themselves. Implementations were indexed
by a keyword either as a result of: (1) explicit, not implied,
reference to a particular capability in the implementation
description text, or (2) input from the implementation description
author(s).
This section contains keyword definitions. They have been organized and grouped by functional category. The definitions are ordered first alphabetically by keyword category, and second alphabetically by implementation name within keyword category.
Available via FTP
Implementation is available using FTP.
Commercially Available
This implementation can be purchased.
Free
Available at no charge, although other restrictions may apply.
Limited Availability
Need to contact provider for terms and conditions of distribution.
PICS-AVAIL
Completed PICS per X.581/X.582
DAP
Support for the DAP protocol
DSP
Support for the DSP protocol
DISP
Support for the DISP protocol
DOP
Support for the DOP protocol
BAC
Support for Basic Access Control
SAC
Support for Simplified Access Control
These RFCs specify standards track protocols for the Internet community. Implementations which conform to these evolving proposed standards have a higher probability of interoperating with other implementations deployed on the Internet.
Implementation supports [RFC 1274]: Barker, P., and S. Kille, The COSINE and Internet X.500 Schema, University College, London, England, November 1991.
Implementation supports [RFC 1276]: Kille, S., Replication and Distributed Operations extensions to provide an Internet Directory using X.500, University College, London, England, November 1991.
Implementation supports [RFC 1277]: Kille, S., Encoding Network Addresses to support operation over non-OSI lower layers, University College, London, England, November 1991.
Implementation supports [RFC 1567]: Mansfield, G., and Kille, S., X.500 Directory Monitoring MIB, AIC Systems Laboratory, ISODE Consortium, January 1994.
Implementation supports [RFC 1777]: Yeong, W., Howes, T., and Kille, S., Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, March 1995.
Implementation supports [RFC 1778]: Howes, T., Kille, S., Yeong, W., and Robbins, The String Representation of Standard Attribute Syntaxes, March 1995.
Implementation supports [RFC 1779]: Kille, S., A String Representation of Distinguished Names, March 1995.
Implementation supports [RFC 1798]: Young, A., Connection-less Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, June 1995.
These RFCs provide information to the Internet community and are not Internet standards. Compliance with these RFCs is not necessary for interoperability but may enhance functionality.
Implementation supports [RFC 1202]: Rose, M. T., Directory Assistance Service. February 1991.
Implementation supports [RFC 1249]: Howes, T., M. Smith, and B. Beecher, DIXIE Protocol Specification, University of Michigan, August 1991.
Implementation supports [RFC 1275]: Kille, S., Replication Requirements to provide an Internet Directory using X.500, University College, London, England, November 1991.
Implementation supports [RFC 1278]: Kille, S., A string encoding of Presentation Address, University College, London, England, November 1991.
Implementation supports [RFC 1279]: Kille, S., X.500 and Domains, University College, London, England, November 1991.
Implementation supports [RFC 1558]: Howes, T., A String Representation of LDAP Search Filters, December 1993.
Implementation supports [RFC 1562]: Michaelson, G. and Prior, M., Naming Guidelines for the AARNet X.500 Directory Service, December 1993.
Implementation supports [RFC 1608]: Johannsen, T., Mansfield, G., Kosters, M., and Sataluri, S., Representing IP Information in the X.500 Directory, March 1994.
Implementation supports [RFC 1609]: Mansfield, G., Johannsen, T., and Knopper, M., Charting Networks in the X.500 Directory, March 1994.
Implementation supports [RFC 1617]: Barker, P., Kille, S., and Lenggenhager, T., Naming and Structuring Guidelines for X.500 Directory Pilots, May 1994.
Implementation supports [RFC 1781]: Kille, S., Using OSI Directory to Achieve User Friendly Naming, March 1995.
Implementation supports [RFC 1801]: Kille, S., MHS Use of the X.500 Directory to support MHS Routing, June 1995.
Implementation supports [RFC 1803]: Wright, R., Getchell,
Howes, T., Sataluri, S., Yee, P., and Yeong, W.,
Recommendations for an X.500 Production Directory Service, June
1995.
Implementation supports [RFC 1804]: Mansfield, G., Rajeev, P., Raghavan, S., and Howes, T., Schema Publishing in X.500 Directory, June 1995.
ADI12
Implementation support ISO/IEC pdISP 10615-2: DSA Support of Directory Access.
ADI21
Implementation supports ISO/IEC ISP 10615-3: Directory System: DSA Responder Role.
ADI22
Implementation supports ISO/IEC ISP 10615-4: Directory System: DSA Initiator Role.
ADI31
Implementation supports ISO/IEC pdISP 10615-X: DUA Support of Distributed Operations.
ADI32
Implementation supports ISO/IEC pdISP 10615-X: DSA Support of Distributed Operations.
FDI11
Implementation supports ISO/IEC pdISP 10616: Common Directory Use.
FDI3
Implementation supports ISO/IEC pdISP 11190: FTAM Use of The Directory.
XDS
Implementation supports the XDS API defined in IEEE 1224.2
NADF
Implementation supports the directory schema defined in NADF SD-4.
Other Popular Schemas
Implementation supports other popular schema elements.
DYN-OBJ
Implementation allows the object class of an entry to be changed dynamically (not allowed in X.500[1988], allowed in 1993)
ALIAS-CONSISTENCY
Implementation incorporates facilities for maintenance of alias integrity in the face of modification or deletion of the aliased object.
API
Implementation comes with an application programmer's interface (i.e., a set of libraries and include files).
DSA Only
Implementation consists of a DSA only. No DUA is included.
DSA/DUA
Both a DSA and DUA are included in this implementation.
DUA Interface
Implementation is a DUA-like program that uses either DAP, but supporting only a subset of the DAP functionality, or uses a protocol different from DAP to communicate with a DSA or DUA.
DUA Only
Implementation consists of a DUA only. No DSA is included.
LDAP
DUA interface program uses the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP).
CLNS
Implementation operates over the OSI ConnectionLess Network Service (CLNS).
OSI Transport
Implementation operates over one or more OSI transport protocols.
Implementation operates over [RFC 1006] with TCP/IP transport service. [RFC 1006] is an Internet Standard.
X.25
Implementation operates over OSI X.25.
DUA Connectivity
The DUA can be connected to the pilot, and information on any pilot entry looked up. The DUA is able to display standard attributes and object classes and those defined in the COSINE and Internet Schema.
DSA Connectivity
The DSA is connected to the DIT, and information in this DSA is accessible from any pilot DUA.
Included in ISODE
DUAs that are part of ISODE.
Limited Functionality
Survey states that the implementation has some shortcomings or intended lack of functionality, e.g., omissions were part of the design to provide an easy-to-use user interface.
Motif
Implementation provides a Motif-style X Window user interface.
OpenView
Implementation provides an OpenView-style X Window user interface.
X Window System
Implementation uses the X Window System to provide its user interface.
Language Support
Implementation supports single or multiple languages.
Documentation Language Support
Documentation for implementation is available in single or multiple languages.
Number of Implementations
Implementor gave an estimate of the number of instantiations of their implementation are deployed in live directory services.
Existing Database Support
Implementation includes support for a non-X.500 DIT repository, synchronization with non-X.500 DBMS, or non-X.500 DBMS to X.500 DIT repository format conversion tools.
MS Windows
Implementation runs under Microsoft Windows.
MS Windows NT
Implementation runs under Microsoft Windows NT.
MS Windows95
Implementation runs under Microsoft Windows95.
386
Implementation runs on a 386-based platform.
486
Implementation runs on a 486-based platform.
Pentium
Implementation runs on a Pentium-based platform.
Bull
Implementation runs on a Bull platform.
CDC
Implementation runs on a CDC MIPS platform.
DEC ULTRIX
Implementation runs under DEC ULTRIX.
DEC UNIX
Implementation runs under DEC UNIX.
DEC OpenVMS AXP
Implementation runs on a DEC AXP platform running OpenVMS.
DEC OpenVMS VAX
Implementation runs on a DEC VAX platform running OpenVMS.
HP
Implementation runs on an HP platform.
IBM PC
Implementation runs on a PC.
IBM RISC
Implementation runs on IBM's RISC UNIX workstation.
ICL
Implementation runs on an ICL platform.
Macintosh
Implementation runs on a Macintosh.
Multiple Vendor Platforms
Implementation runs on more than one hardware platform.
Sequent
Implementation runs on a Sequent platform.
SNI
Implementation runs on a Siemens Nixdorf platform.
Solbourne
Implementation runs on a Solbourne platform.
Sun
Implementation runs on a Sun platform.
Tandem
Implementation runs on a Tandem platform.
UNIX
Implementation runs on a generic UNIX platform.
This section contains an index of implementations by keyword. You can use this list to identify particular implementations that meet your chosen criteria.
Table 2-1 shows the implementations about which information can be found in this document as well as the abreviation used to represent this implementation and the page number on which each implementation description begins.
Implementation Name |Abbreviation | Page ======================================|================|====== A-Window-To-Directory |AWTD | 33 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ Critical Angle X.500 Enabler |CAXE | 35 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ cxdua |cxdua | 39 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ Cycle (tm) LiveData (tm) |Cycle | 41 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ DC X500 |DCX500 | 43 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ Directory Enquiries |DE | 52 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ Digital X.500 Directory Server |DXDS | 55 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ DIR.D(tm) V2.6 |DIR.D | 61 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ DIR.X(tm) V3.1 |DIR.X-3.1 | 64 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ DIR.X(tm) V4.0 |DIR.X-4.0 | 70 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ DIR.X-SYNC(tm) V2.0 |DIR.X-SYNC | 76 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ DX500 OpenDirectory(tm) |DX500 | 80 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ FORUM LOOK'UP(tm) |FORUM | 82 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ FX*500(tm) |FX*500 | 87 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ Global Directory Server |GDS | 95 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ i500 Enterprise Directory Server |i500 | 101 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ ISODE Rel. 3.0 X.500(1993) Directory |ISODE.r3 | 105 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ ISOPLEX DS (tm) DSA |ISOPLEX | 109 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ LDAP Implementation |LDAP | 113 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ maX.500 Macintosh DUA Interface |maX.500 | 117 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ Messageware DSA |MDSA | 120 --------------------------------------|----------------|------
Table 2-1: Table of Implementation Identifiers (cont.)
Implementation Name |Abbreviation | Page ======================================|================|====== Messageware PC-DUA |MDUA | 124 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ NonStop Directory Services |NSDS | 127 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ ORG.D(tm) V2.0/V2.1 |ORG.D | 132 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ OSIAM X.500-88 |OSIAM-88 | 136 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ OSIAM X.500-93 |OSIAM-93 | 139 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ PMDF-X500 |PMDF | 145 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ TransIT500 |T500 | 149 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ waX.500 :: Windows Access to X.500 |waX.500 | 163 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ X500-DS |X500-DS | 165 --------------------------------------|----------------|------ X500-DUA |X500-DUA | 165 --------------------------------------|----------------|------
Table 2-1: Table of Implementation Identifiers (cont.)
The index is organized as follows: keywords appear in alphabetical order; implementations characterized by that keyword are listed alphabetically as well.
For formatting purposes, we have used the abbreviations for implementation names as defined above in Table 2-1.
ADI12 ADI21
AWTD AWTD
DIR.X-3.1 DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-4.0 DIR.X-4.0
DXDS DXDS
GDS GDS
i500 i500
OSIAM-88 OSIAM-88
X500-DS X500-DS
X500-DUA X500-DUA
ADI22
AWTD FORUM
DIR.X-3.1 FX*500
DIR.X-4.0 GDS
DXDS i500
GDS ISODE.r3
i500 LDAP
OSIAM-88 MDSA
X500-DS NSDS
X500-DUA OSIAM-88
OSIAM-93
ADI31 PMDF
X500-DS
AWTD X500-DUA
DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-4.0 Available via FTP
GDS
OSIAM-88 CAXE
X500-DS cxdua
X500-DUA LDAP
maX.500
ADI32 MDSA
waX.500
DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-4.0 BAC
GDS
i500 DCX500
OSIAM-88 DIR.X-4.0
X500-DS DXDS
X500-DUA FX*500
GDS
ALIAS-CONSISTENCY i500
ISODE.r3
AWTD MDSA
FORUM PMDF
GDS
i500 Bull
NSDS
X500-DS AWTD
X500-DUA OSIAM-88
OSIAM-93
API X500-DS
X500-DUA
AWTD
Cycle Commercially Available
DCX500
DIR.X-3.1 AWTD
DIR.X-4.0 CAXE
DXDS cxdua
Cycle DEC UNIX
DCX500
DIR.D DXDS
DIR.X-3.1 ISODE.r3
DIR.X-4.0 LDAP
DIR.X-SYNC MDSA
DXDS PMDF
FORUM
FX*500 DEC OpenVMS AXP
GDS
i500 DXDS
ISODE.r3 PMDF
MDSA
NSDS DEC OpenVMS VAX
ORG.D
OSIAM-88 DXDS
OSIAM-93 LDAP
PMDF PMDF
X500-DS
X500-DUA DISP
DAP DCX500
DIR.X-4.0
AWTD DXDS
CAXE FORUM
Cycle FX*500
DCX500 GDS
DIR.X-3.1 i500
DIR.X-4.0 ISODE.r3
DXDS MDSA
FORUM OSIAM-93
FX*500
GDS Documentation Language Support
i500
ISODE.r3 AWTD
MDSA Cycle
NSDS DCX500
OSIAM-88 DIR.D
OSIAM-93 DIR.X-3.1
PMDF DIR.X-4.0
X500-DS DIR.X-SYNC
X500-DUA FORUM
FX*500
DEC ULTRIX GDS
LDAP
ISODE.r3 maX.500
LDAP MDSA
MDSA ORG.D
OSIAM-88 OSIAM-93
OSIAM-93 PMDF
waX.500 X500-DS
X500-DUA
DOP
DSP
DIR.X-4.0
DXDS AWTD
CAXE
DSA Connectivity DCX500
DIR.X-3.1
CAXE DIR.X-4.0
DCX500 DXDS
DIR.X-3.1 FORUM
DIR.X-4.0 FX*500
DXDS GDS
FORUM i500
FX*500 ISODE.r3
GDS MDSA
i500 NSDS
ISODE.r3 OSIAM-88
MDSA OSIAM-93
OSIAM-88 PMDF
OSIAM-93 X500-DS
PMDF
DUA Connectivity
DSA Only
AWTD
CAXE CAXE
DCX500 DIR.D
FX*500 DIR.X-3.1
MDSA DIR.X-4.0
DXDS
DSA/DUA FORUM
GDS
AWTD i500
Cycle ISODE.r3
DIR.X-3.1 LDAP
DIR.X-4.0 maX.500
DXDS MDSA
FORUM ORG.D
GDS OSIAM-88
i500 OSIAM-93
ISODE.r3 PMDF
LDAP
MDSA DUA Interface
NSDS
OSIAM-88 Cycle
DCX500 FORUM
DIR.D FX*500
DIR.X-SYNC GDS
DXDS i500
FORUM ISODE.r3
FX*500 LDAP
GDS MDSA
LDAP OSIAM-88
maX.500 OSIAM-93
NSDS
ORG.D FDI11
OSIAM-88
OSIAM-93 AWTD
PMDF DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-4.0
DUA Only DXDS
GDS
AWTD i500
cxdua OSIAM-88
maX.500 X500-DS
MDSA X500-DUA
waX.500
X500-DUA FDI3
DYN-OBJ AWTD
DIR.X-3.1
AWTD DIR.X-4.0
CAXE DXDS
DCX500 GDS
DXDS i500
FORUM OSIAM-88
FX*500 X500-DS
GDS X500-DUA
i500
ISODE.r3 Free
LDAP
MDSA CAXE
NSDS cxdua
PMDF ISODE.r3
X500-DS LDAP
X500-DUA maX.500
waX.500
Existing Database Support
HP
CAXE
Cycle DCX500
DCX500 DIR.X-3.1
DXDS DIR.X-4.0
DIR.X-SYNC Included in ISODE
FORUM
GDS PMDF
i500
ISODE.r3 Language Support
LDAP
MDSA AWTD
OSIAM-88 Cycle
OSIAM-93 DCX500
DIR.D
IBM PC DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-4.0
CAXE DIR.X-SYNC
Cycle DXDS
DCX500 FORUM
DIR.D FX*500
DIR.X-3.1 GDS
DIR.X-4.0 LDAP
DXDS MDSA
FORUM NSDS
FX*500 ORG.D
i500 OSIAM-88
ISODE.r3 OSIAM-93
LDAP PMDF
MDSA X500-DS
ORG.D X500-DUA
OSIAM-88
OSIAM-93 LDAP
IBM RISC CAXE
cxdua
DCX500 DIR.D
DIR.X-3.1 DXDS
DIR.X-4.0 FX*500
FORUM GDS
GDS i500
ISODE.r3 ISODE.r3
LDAP LDAP
MDSA maX.500
OSIAM-88 NSDS
OSIAM-93 ORG.D
X500-DS waX.500
X500-DUA
Limited Availability
ICL
CAXE
i500 ISODE.r3
MDSA MDSA
NSDS MDSA
PMDF ORG.D
OSIAM-88
Limited Functionality OSIAM-93
waX.500
Cycle
DIR.D MS Windows95
Motif Cycle
DIR.D
DXDS DXDS
GDS LDAP
ISODE.r3 MDSA
MDSA ORG.D
PMDF OSIAM-93
waX.500
Macintosh
Multiple Vendor Platforms
FORUM
LDAP CAXE
maX.500 Cycle
DCX500
MS Windows DIR.D
DIR.X-3.1
cxdua DIR.X-4.0
Cycle DIR.X-SYNC
DIR.D FORUM
DXDS FX*500
FORUM GDS
LDAP ISODE.r3
MDSA LDAP
ORG.D MDSA
OSIAM-88 ORG.D
OSIAM-93 OSIAM-88
waX.500 OSIAM-93
PMDF
MS Windows NT
NADF
CAXE
Cycle DIR.D
DCX500 DIR.X-3.1
DIR.D DIR.X-4.0
DIR.X-3.1 FORUM
DIR.X-4.0 GDS
DXDS ISODE.r3
GDS LDAP
i500 maX.500
LDAP MDSA
NSDS AWTD
ORG.D DCX500
OSIAM-88 DIR.X-3.1
OSIAM-93 DIR.X-4.0
PMDF DXDS
X500-DS FORUM
X500-DUA FX*500
GDS
Number of Implementations ISODE.r3
MDSA
Cycle NSDS
DIR.D OSIAM-88
DIR.X-3.1 PMDF
DIR.X-SYNC X500-DS
FORUM X500-DUA
GDS
LDAP OSI Transport
waX.500
AWTD
OpenView CAXE
Cycle
MDSA DCX500
DIR.X-3.1
OSF-DCE DIR.X-4.0
DXDS
AWTD FORUM
FX*500
OSI CLNS GDS
i500
AWTD ISODE.r3
Cycle MDSA
DIR.X-3.1 NSDS
DIR.X-4.0 OSIAM-88
DXDS OSIAM-93
FX*500 PMDF
GDS X500-DS
i500 X500-DUA
ISODE.r3
MDSA Other Popular Schemas
NSDS
OSIAM-88 CAXE
OSIAM-93 i500
PMDF ISODE.r3
X500-DS maX.500
X500-DUA PMDF
OSI CONS Pentium-class
CAXE GDS
Cycle i500
DCX500 ISODE.r3
DIR.D LDAP
DIR.X-3.1 MDSA
DIR.X-4.0 NSDS
DIR.X-SYNC OSIAM-88
DXDS OSIAM-93
FORUM PMDF
FX*500 X500-DS
GDS X500-DUA
ISODE.r3
LDAP RFC-1202
MDSA
ORG.D GDS
OSIAM-88 MDSA
OSIAM-93 PMDF
waX.500
RFC-1249
PICS-AVAIL
GDS
CAXE
Cycle RFC-1274
DCX500
DIR.X-3.1 CAXE
DIR.X-4.0 DCX500
DXDS DIR.X-3.1
FX*500 DIR.X-4.0
i500 DXDS
ISODE.r3 FORUM
MDSA FX*500
NSDS GDS
OSIAM-88 i500
OSIAM-93 ISODE.r3
X500-DS LDAP
X500-DUA maX.500
MDSA
RFC-1006 NSDS
OSIAM-88
AWTD OSIAM-93
CAXE PMDF
Cycle waX.500
DCX500
DIR.X-3.1 RFC-1275
DIR.X-4.0
DXDS GDS
FORUM ISODE.r3
FX*500 PMDF
RFC-1276 RFC-1558
GDS CAXE
MDSA DIR.D
PMDF DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-4.0
RFC-1277 DXDS
GDS
AWTD i500
CAXE ISODE.r3
DIR.X-3.1 LDAP
DIR.X-4.0 maX.500
DXDS MDSA
FORUM ORG.D
GDS PMDF
ISODE.r3
MDSA RFC-1562
NSDS
OSIAM-88 GDS
OSIAM-93 ISODE.r3
PMDF MDSA
X500-DS PMDF
X500-DUA
RFC-1567
RFC-1278
DCX500
CAXE DIR.X-3.1
DIR.D DIR.X-4.0
DIR.X-4.0 FX*500
DXDS GDS
FORUM i500
GDS ISODE.r3
i500
ISODE.r3 RFC-1608
LDAP
MDSA MDSA
ORG.D PMDF
PMDF
RFC-1609
RFC-1279
MDSA
CAXE
DIR.X-3.1 RFC-1617
GDS
ISODE.r3 CAXE
MDSA DXDS
NSDS FORUM
PMDF GDS
ISODE.r3 RFC-1779
MDSA
PMDF CAXE
DCX500
RFC-1777 DIR.D
DIR.X-3.1
CAXE DIR.X-4.0
cxdua DXDS
DCX500 FORUM
DIR.D FX*500
DIR.X-3.1 GDS
DIR.X-4.0 ISODE.r3
DXDS LDAP
FX*500 maX.500
GDS MDSA
i500 NSDS
ISODE.r3 ORG.D
LDAP OSIAM-88
maX.500 OSIAM-93
MDSA PMDF
NSDS waX.500
ORG.D
OSIAM-88 RFC-1781
OSIAM-93
PMDF FORUM
waX.500 GDS
ISODE.r3
RFC-1778 LDAP
maX.500
CAXE MDSA
DCX500 PMDF
DIR.D
DIR.X-3.1 RFC-1798
DIR.X-4.0
DXDS LDAP
FORUM PMDF
FX*500
GDS RFC-1801
ISODE.r3
LDAP CAXE
maX.500 DIR.X-3.1
MDSA DIR.X-4.0
NSDS DXDS
ORG.D GDS
OSIAM-88 ISODE.r3
OSIAM-93 MDSA
PMDF PMDF
waX.500
RFC-1803 ISODE.r3
LDAP
CAXE MDSA
DXDS OSIAM-88
GDS OSIAM-93
ISODE.r3
MDSA Tandem
PMDF
NSDS
RFC-1804
UNIX
MDSA
AWTD
SAC DCX500
DIR.X-3.1
DCX500 DIR.X-4.0
DIR.X-4.0 FORUM
DXDS FX*500
FX*500 ISODE.r3
GDS LDAP
i500 MDSA
ISODE.r3 OSIAM-88
MDSA OSIAM-93
NSDS X500-DS
PMDF X500-DUA
SNI XDS
DIR.D AWTD
DIR.X-3.1 DCX500
DIR.X-4.0 DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-SYNC DIR.X-4.0
ISODE.r3 DXDS
ORG.D FORUM
FX*500
Solbourne i500
ISODE.r3
LDAP MDSA
NSDS
Sun OSIAM-88
OSIAM-93
CAXE X500-DS
DCX500 X500-DUA
DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-4.0
FORUM
GDS
i500
X Window System x486
DXDS CAXE
GDS Cycle
ISODE.r3 DCX500
MDSA DIR.D
PMDF DIR.X-3.1
DIR.X-4.0
X.25 DIR.X-SYNC
DXDS
AWTD FORUM
DCX500 FX*500
DIR.X-3.1 GDS
DIR.X-4.0 ISODE.r3
DXDS LDAP
FORUM MDSA
FX*500 ORG.D
GDS OSIAM-88
i500 OSIAM-93
ISODE.r3 waX.500
MDSA
NSDS
OSIAM-88
OSIAM-93
PMDF
X500-DS
X500-DUA
x386
CAXE
Cycle
DCX500
DIR.D
DXDS
FORUM
FX*500
GDS
ISODE.r3
LDAP
MDSA
ORG.D
OSIAM-88
OSIAM-93
waX.500
In the following pages you will find descriptions of X.500 implementations listed in alphabetical order. In the case of name collisions, the name of the responsible organization, in square brackets, has been used to distinguish the implementations. Note that throughout this section, the page header reflects the name of the implementation, not the date of the document. The descriptions follow a common format, as described below:
The name of the X.500 implementation and the name of the responsible organization. Implementations with a registered trademark indicate this by appending "(tm)", e.g., GeeWhiz(tm).
A brief description of the application. This section may optionally contain a list of the pilot projects in which the application is being used.
A statement of compliance with respect to the 1988 CCITT
Recommendations X.500-X.521 [CCITT-88], specifically Section 9 of
X.519, or the 1988 NIST OIW Stable Implementation Agreements [NIST-
88].
A statement of compliance with respect to the 1993 ITU-T
Recommendations X.500-X.521 [ITU-T-93], specifically Section 9 of
X.519, or the 1994 NIST OIW Stable Implementation Agreements [NIST-
94].
A statement of compliance with respect to the several proposed Internet Standards.
A statement of compliance with respect to the several informational and experimental Internet RFCs.
A list of other DUAs and DSAs with which this implementation can
interoperate.
Describes the level of connectivity it can offer to the pilot directory service operational on the Internet in North America, and to pilots co-ordinated by the PARADISE project in Europe. Levels of connectivity are: Not Tested, None, DUA Connectivity, and DSA Connectivity.
A warning on known problems and/or instructions on how to report bugs.
A warning about possible side effects or shortcomings, e.g., a feature that works on one platform but not another.
A list of environments in which this implementation can be used, e.g., [RFC 1006] with TCP/IP, TP0 or TP4 with X.25.
A list of hardware platforms on which this application runs, any additional boards or processors required, and any special suggested or required configuration options.
A list of operating systems, window systems, databases, or unbundled software packages required to run this application.
A statement regarding the number of implementations deployed in the field.
A statement regarding the availability of the software (free or commercially available), a description of how to obtain the software, and (optionally) a statement regarding distribution conditions and restrictions.
The month and year within which this implementation description was last modified.
A-Window-To-Directory (AWTD)
A-Window-To-Directory is a simple-to-use DUA interface available on PC that provides access to the X.500 Directory Services. The available operations are: bind (authenticated or anonymous), read, list, compare, modify, modifyRDN, search, add, remove and unbind. It is designed to be used with the Bull X500-DUA product and for that reason is able to handle any of the defined schema. The new acronyms, objects and attributes are automatically loaded without any customisation. The interface of the application may be personalized in several ways, through Local Preferences stored on the PC and through User Settings stored on the UNIX machine that runs the Bull X500-DUA product.
A-Window-To-Directory offers all the services described in the 88 CCITT X.500 standard.
No
No
No
Is designed to interoperate with Bull X500-DUA and X500-DS products
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Bull S.A. provides complete software maintenance with the products.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Proprietary protocol to access the Bull X500-DUA through TCP/IP sockets. The product may be used on LAN (Ethernet) or WAN (X.25).
386SX/DX, 486SX/DX PC Ethernet board/connection 4 MBytes RAM 3 Mbytes on disk
MS-DOS 5.0 Microsoft Windows 3.1 Microsoft TCP/IP stack installed, version 1.0
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The product is commercially available since February 1995.
November 1995
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Critical Angle X.500 Enabler
(CAIx500e)
The X.500 Enabler product allows an LDAP-only directory server to be integrated into X.500 environments, by transparently converting X.500 DAP and DSP requests into LDAP requests.
The initial release scheduled for 4Q96 will allow for connections from X.500-capable clients and servers to an LDAP-capable server, and will support the following features:
* LDAP version 2, as defined in RFC 1777,
* all attributes defined for LDAPv2, with the exception of
certificates and revocation lists,
* X.500(1988) DAP and DSP protocols over TCP/IP (using RFC
1006),
* the following operations: Bind (with none or simple
credentials), Read, Compare, List, Search, Abandon, AddEntry,
ModifyEntry, RemoveEntry and ModifyRDN,
* the X.500(1993) critical extensions field, to aid in
deployments incorporating 1993 DSAs.
This release will be available for Solaris 2.5 (SPARC and Intel) and Windows NT 4.0 Server (Intel).
The product is expected to enter a public beta test period in September 1996. Beta test evaluation copies will be free (limited to two copies per site) but will be set to expire in December 1996.
Released versions of X.500 Enabler will be licensed per server, and will be distributed over the Internet.
The X.500 enabler accepts DAP and DSP connections.
It supports Bind (with none or simple credentials), Read, Compare, List, Search, Abandon, AddEntry, ModifyEntry, RemoveEntry and ModifyRDN.
It supports the attributes and object classes defined in X.520 and X.521.
The X.500 Enabler will accept connections from X.500(1993) DUAs and DSAs.
It supports the X.511(1993) critical extension mechanism.
Non-critical protocol fields which do not map onto LDAPv2 are ignored.
Attribute and object classes from X.520(1993) and X.521(1993) are supported, including collective. Operational attributes from X.501 are supported, with the exception of subschema.
As LDAPv3-based servers become available, it is expected that the X.500 Enabler will be upgraded to map more of the X.500(1993) protocol onto LDAPv3.
[RFC 1006] is the supported transport service.
The product supports the object classes and attributes defined in RFC 1274.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The X.500 Enabler is being tested with public-domain X.500 and LDAP clients and servers, and with the various X.500 clients and servers connected to the PARADISE project, such as from the ISODE Consortium.
Critical Angle intends to do interoperability testing with commercial LDAP-only servers as they become available.
This product will be used to connect LDAP-only servers, such as University of Michigan's slapd, and many vendor's forthcoming commercial LDAP server products, into the PARADISE project directory, so that they can be accessed by LDAP and X.500 DUAs throughout the project.
Bugs reports may be sent to <bug-x500e@critical-angle.com>.
Under Windows NT there are limitations on the number of simultaneous incoming connections.
This product supports RFC 1006 for DAP and DSP, and LDAP over TCP.
This product will initially be available for Sun Solaris 2.5 SPARC and Intel, and Windows NT Server 4.0 Intel.
Subsequent versions may be available on additional platforms.
An LDAP-based server, such as the freely-available slapd, is required. It does not need to run on the same host as the X.500 Enabler.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
This product is licensed per-host server, and is distributed over the Internet.
In addition to discounts for large deployment orders, subscription programs permit customers to obtain subsequent update releases at a substantial discount.
Beta test evaluations are free (limited to two copies per site), and will expire 90 days after the start of the beta period.
September 1996
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
cxdua
Chromatix, Inc. 10451 Twin Rivers Rd, Suite 265 Columbia, MD 21044
The CXDUA is a Windows 3.1 DUA that has been derrived from a highly portable and flexible Unix based Administrative Directory User Agent. The goal of the original design was to support features to assist a directory administrator in managing the directory. These features include a highly portable GUI, Entry Templates, Entry Lists, Batch Operations and Directory Control Functions.
Both the Windows and the Unix versions support strong authentication.
The Unix DUA has been used in various DMS and NSA pilot projects.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Windows 3.1
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The software is freely available via anonymous ftp from
ftp.chromatix.com or can be obtained via the WEB at
http://www.chromatix.com. Commercial versions will be available in
the near future.
0496
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Cycle (tm) LiveData (tm) (Cycle)
Cycle Software,Inc.
A component of the Cycle Virtual Data Highway.
Network software product used to break down barriers between isolated systems. Available separatly as Cycle LiveNet (DUA) and Cycle LiveNet Directory (DUA & DSA)
Cycle LiveData is compliant with the 1988 NIST OIW Stable Agreements to the extent that implementations based on the more recent stable agreements are compliant.
Cycle LiveData is compliant with the 1993 NIST OIW Stable Agreements.
Unknown
Unknown
Not tested
Not tested
No known bugs
Current release supports objects of the Application Entity Object Class only. This limitation is being relaxed in the next release.
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP,TP4, [RFC-1070] with IP,IPX, and NetBEUI.
Runs on Microsoft Windows hardware platforms.
Windows 95, Windows NT, Windows for Workgroups
> 1,000
Commercially Available.
Contact:
Cycle Software,Inc.
1212 Hancock St.
Quincy, MA 02169
Voice- 617-770-9594
Fax- 617-770-9903
E-mail cycle@livedata.com.
1/96
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
DC X500
Data Connection Ltd
100 Church Street
Enfield
Middlesex
EN2 6BQ
UK
DC X500 provides a truly scalable X.500 based enterprise directory server with the necessary architectural flexibility to enable integration with existing database and directory technologies.
From a pure X.500 standpoint, DC X500 provides a full function state-of-the-art DSA implementation.
* Architected from scratch according to the 1993 X.500
standards (i.e. not a 1988 DSA with 1993 features grafted on)
* Support for all the key X.500 OSI protocols:
* Directory Access Protocol (DAP) for user access
* Directory System Protocol (DSP) for distributed DSA
comunications
* Directory Information Shadowing Protocol (DISP) to support
replication between servers to give improved performance
in a distributed network
* Support of the 1993 Basic Access Control and Simplified
Access Control models
* Support for the key Internet X.500 related standards:
* integrated Lightweight DAP (LDAP)for DUA access
* Madman MIBs for easy integration with SNMP
The DC X500 architecture is based on Data Connection's underlying product architecture which has evolved since 1987 and includes:
* genuine multi-threaded implementation
* true portability (the product is available on a range of
operating systems e.g Windows NT, AIX, HP-UX. OS/2 etc and it
is possible to port the core technology to any
hardware/software platform)
* secure service recording for operation tracking and billing
* support for system monitoring (both alarms and statistics)
Key product features include:
* Name resolution and integrated use of Search Indices based on
2-3 trees leads to high performance operation evaluation
(subsecond response times on million entry DSAs)
* Generic schema support based on 1993 concepts that allows
customers to tailor the schema to meet their precise data
structuing requirements
* System recycle time is minimised (e.g. DC X500 can be backed
up while running and search indices are dynamically updated),
helping achieve the goal of continuous (24x7) availability
and high reliability.
* No artificial software constraints are imposed resulting in a
truly scalable product - assuming the availability of the
necessary hardware DC X500 can be configured to support
millions of entries in a single DSA.
DC X500 is certified for used within the Paradise Pilot project. The product has also undergone interoperability testing at the EuroSInet interoperability workshops in Europe.
From 1988 X.519
a) directoryAccessAC and directorySystemAC are both supported
b) the DSA can act as a first level DSA
c) the chained mode of ooperation is supported.
d) security levels none and simple as supported with the delivered product. However, the product is architectured to interface to an external security module to support strong authentication.
e) DC X500 supports the selected attribute types defined in X.520.
f) DC X500 supports the selected object classes defined in X.521.
DC X500 supports the static requirements implied by the above statement.
DC X500 supports the dynamic requirements implied by the above statement.
From 1993 X.519
a) directoryAccessAC and directorySystemAC are both supported
b) n/a
c) the DSA can act as a first level DSA
d) the chained mode of ooperation is supported.
e) security levels none and simple as supported with the delivered product. However, the product is architectured to interface to an external security module to support strong authentication.
f) DC X500 supports the selected attribute types defined in X.520. Attributes based on the syntax DirectoryString using the UNIVERSAL STRING choice can be stored however the UNIVERSAL STRING choice cannot be used for matching rules.
g) DC X500 supports the selected object classes defined in X.521.
h) DC X500 supports the following extensions
subentries Y
copyShallDo Y
attributeSizeLimit Y
extraAttributes Y
modifyRightsRequest N
pagedResultsRequest N
matchedValuesOnly N
extendedFilter N
targetSystem N
useAliasOnUpdate Y
newSuperior Y
i) DC X500 does not support collective attributes
j) DC X500 does not support hierarchical attributes
k) DC X500 supports the following operational attributes
Directory Operational Attributes:
structural object class
governing structural rule
create timestamp
modify timestamp
creators name
modifiers name
prescriptive ACI
entry ACI
subentry ACI
DSA Operational Attributes:
myAccessPoint
superiorKnowledge
supplierKnowledge (*)
consumerKnowledge(*)
secondaryShadows (*)
* - supported using local proprietary extension
Distributed Operation Attributes (dsa-shared):
specificKnowledge
nonSpecificKnowledge
l) DC X500 supports return of alias names
m) DC X500 supports indicating that returned entry information is complete
n) DC X500 supports modifying the object class attribute to add and/or remove values identifying auxiliary object classes
o) DC X500 supports Basic Access Control
p) DC X500 supports Simplified Access Control
q) DC X500 does not support subschema administration as defined in X.501.
r) DC X500 supports the name binding defined in X.521
s) DC X500 cannot administer collective attributes.
DC X500 supports the static requirements implied by the above statement.
DC X500 supports the dynamic requirements implied by the above statement.
a) shadowSupplierInitiatedAC and shadowConsumerInitiatedAC are supported.
b) security levels none and simple as supported with the delivered product. However, the product is architectured to interface to an external security module to support strong authentication.
c) DC X500 supports the following UnitOfReplication:
* Entry filtering on object class is supported
* Selection/Exclusion of attributes via a AttributeSelection
is not supported
* Inclusion of subordinate knowledge in the replicated area is
supported
* Inclusion of extended knowledge in addition to subordinate
knowledge is supported
a) DC X500 supports the shadowSupplierInitiatedAC and
shadowConsumerInitiatedAC
b) DC X500 provides support for modifyTimestamp and createTimestamp operational attributes
a) DC X500 conforms to the mapping onto used services defined in clause 8
b) DC X500 conforms to the procedures of X.525 as they relate to DISP.
a) shadowSupplierInitiatedAC and shadowConsumerInitiatedAC are supported.
b) security levels none and simple as supported with the delivered product. However, the product is architectured to interface to an external security module to support strong authentication.
c) DC X500 can act as a secondary supplier.
d) DC X500 does not support shadowing o overlapping units
of replication. (Overlapping Administration Points
are supported though).
a) DC X500 supports both shadowSupplierInitiatedAC and
shadowConsumerInitiatedAC.
b) DC X500 supports the modifyTimestamp and createTimestamp operational attributes.
c) DC X500 supports the copyShallDo service element
a) DC X500 conforms to the mapping onto used services defined in clause 8
b) DC X500 conforms to the procedures of X.525 as they relate to DISP.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
DC X500 has interoperated with the following implementations:
DUAs:
ICL
SNI
Net-tel
Bull
AT&T
CDC
Digital
ICL
Nexor
DSAs:
SNI
ICL
AT&T
CDC
Digital
ICL
Net-tel
Nexor
DC X500 has been tested and approved for connectivity to the PARADISE pilot project.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
DC X500 supports the following network connectivity:
* [RFC 1006] with TCP/IP
* TP0 with X.25
DC X500 is a portable product
DC X500 is a portable product. It is available on the following plaforms:
* UNIX, including
* IBM AIX
* HP UX
* Sun Solaris
* Windows NT
* OS/2.
Porting to further UNIX platforms is very straightforward, in particular where existing transport services are available. Other proprietary systems (such as Novell's Netware, Digital's VMS or fault tolerant or mainframe environments) can also be supported if required.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
DC X500 is commercially available.
For further details, please contact:
Nigel Ratcliffe Data Connection Ltd 100 Church Street Enfield Middlesex EN2 6BQ UK
Tel: +44 181 366 1177
E-mail: nr@datcon.co.uk
February 1996
Data Connection provides a whole series of directory applications, including a corporate telephone directory, e-mail synchronisation, security services, groupware directory integration and a directory publishing application. These can be accessed by Windows applications or standard web browsers.
Further information can be found at http://www.datcon.co.uk.
DE
DE (Directory Enquiries) is intended to be a simple-to-use DUA interface, suitable for the naive user, and suitable for running as a public access dua. it will work on any terminal. The user is presented with a series of (verbose) prompts asking for person's name department organization country. There is extensive on-line help. The matching algorithms are such that near matches are presented to the user before less good matches.
There have been a few minor enhancements since the description in [RFC 1632]. The power searching feature still sets DE apart from most other DUAs - this allows a user to search for an entry even when they do not know the name of the organisation in which the person works - you still have to specify the country. DE also allows UFN style searching. DE uses slightly different search algorithms depending on whether it is accessing part of the Directory mastered by a Quipu DSA - Quipu DSAs tend to use lots of replication and so encourage searching. DE incorporates a QOS feature where it maintains a database of past information availability and DSA responsiveness. Translations exist into at least 4 different languages.
DE runs over ISODE DAP and University of Michigan LDAP. There is a version of DE, called DOS-DE, which has been ported to DOS, and this uses LDAP.
DE was funded by the COSINE PARADISE project, and DE is used as the PARADISE public access dua. You can test the software by telnet to directory.ja.net and logging in as dua -- no password required.
N/A
[No information provided -- Ed.]
[RFC 1274] and [RFC 1487] Yes and yes
[RFC 1484]. yes
N/A
The interface is widely used in the publicly accessible PARADISE directory.
Doesn't handle aliases well when power searching.
Send bug reports to:
p.barker@cs.ucl.ac.uk
DE tries to cater well for the general case, at the expense of not dealing with the less typical. The main manifestation of this is that the current version does not handle searching under localities very well.
It can handle photographs and reproduce sound attributes if these are dealt with by ancillary programs.
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP, TP0 or TP4 with X.25, and LDAP.
UNIX + DOS platforms
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
UNIX + DOS
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The software is freely available from
ftp://cs.ucl.ac.uk/dirpilot/de-7.0.tar.Z
The DOS version is freely available. Look in the following directory:
ftp://ftp.bath.ac.uk/pub/x500/dosde7/
March 96
[No Information Provided -- Ed.]
Digital X.500 Directory Server Digital Equipment Corporation
This single entry covers a number of different products
The Digital X.500 Directory Services product set includes a directory server product and a variety directory user agents, as well as a directory synchronizer utility.
The Digital X.500 Directory Server product provides a high performance DSA implemented according to the 1993 edition of the standard. The InfoBroker Server product extends this to provide the server component for LDAP and WWW user agents. Features of these servers include:
* Integrated multi-protocol support allowing concurrent DAP,
DSP, DISP and DOP access over OSI and TCP/IP (using [RFC
1006]) protocols.
* Indexed database (DIB) to support high-performance searching
and sophisticated matching including approximate match.
* A DIB based on the 1993 edition Extended Information Models.
* Support for chaining and referrals in support of a
distributed DIB
* Support for the 1993 edition Basic Access Control scheme.
* Configurable schema based on the 1993 edition (including
attributes, object classes, structure rules, name forms).
* Support for 1993 edition Shadowing using the DISP and DOP
protocol, including both incremental and on-change features
for high performance.
* Remote management to control DSAs and log significant events.
* Support for the LDAP protocols using the InfoBroker Server
product across either TCP/IP or DECnet transport protocols.
* A Look-up Daemon that accepts requests from Web Browsers,
allowing access to the directory from any web browser.
* Both X/OPEN XDS/XOM and LDAP APIs.
* An award winning documentation set.
The Digital X.500 Administration Facility, X.500 Information Manager and InfoBroker Client products provide MS-Windows, Motif and command line interfaces to access and manage the information stored in the X.500 directory, including:
* Support for different ways of accessing the directory, either
by browsing or searching based on an extensible set of
filters.
* Support for bulk load, unload and reload of entries.
* Driven off the same configurable schema information as the
DSA allowing extensibility of window layouts and text to
support customer-defined object classes and attributes.
The Synchronizer-500 is an X.500 DUA which:
* Enables bi-directional synchronization between X.500 and
virtually ANY other non-X.500 directory facilitating common
management.
* Maps incoming data into X.500 using flexible configuration
files
* Facilitates creation of a multivendor electronic mail
database, creating addresses in the appropriate syntax for
any mail system.
* Provides uniqueness checking on mnemonic O/R addresses,
preventing address duplication
The Digital X.500 Directory Services products are based on the 1993 edition standard. They are compatible with, and interwork with, 1988 edition DUAs and DSAs, and are implemented to conform to relevant NIST OIW and EWOS agreements and the X.500 Implementors Guide.
OSTC conformance testing (1988 DUA/DAP, DSA/DAP) has been completed and registered successfully.
The X.500 Directory Server is registered as conformant to US-GOSIP.
Conformance with respect to clause 9.2 of ISO/IEC 9594-5:1993:
* Supports the directoryAccessAC (DAP) and directorySystemAC
(DSP) application contexts.
* The DSA is capable of acting as a first-level DSA.
* Chaining is supported.
* Bind security levels of simple (unprotected password) and
none are supported.
* Supports the shadowSupplierInitiatedAC and
shadowConsumerInitiatedAC in both synchronous and
asynchronous variants (DISP protocol) and the
directoryOperationalBindingManagementAC (DOP protocol) for
shadowing
* All attribute types defined in ISO/IEC 9594-6:1993 are
supported except for 1993 edition supertypes and collective
attributes and EnhancedSearchGuide. Customers can define new
attribute types. UNIVERSAL STRING is not supported for
attributes based on DirectoryString.
* All object classes defined in ISO/IEC 9594-7:1993 are
supported. Customers can define new object classes.
* The following operational attributes are supported:
governingStructureRule myAccessPoint
modifyTimestamp supplierKnowledge
superiorKnowledge specificKnowledge
consumerKnowledge prescriptiveACI
dseType entryACI
createTimestamp
* Dynamic modification of object class is permitted
* Basic Access Control is supported with some restrictions.
* All name forms defined in ISO/IEC 9594-7:1993 are supported.
Customers can defined new name forms and structure rules.
The InfoBroker products support the V1 and V2 LDAP protocols for easy integration into LDAP-compliant client and server environments.
Standards supported include [RFC 1006], [RFC 1274], [RFC 1277], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1779].
RFCs supported include [RFC 1278], [RFC 1558]
Digital has performed X.500 interoperability testing at various Eurosinet and OSInet events, during the COS Pilot activity and in- house. In addition, Digital's products were part of the EEMA Interoperability Demonstration in Amsterdam 1995.
Digital has achieved successful DAP and DSP interworking with a number of vendors. In the a recent Eurosinet Interoperability event, tests were performed against:
AT&T ISOCOR
Control Data Systems NET-TEL Computer Systems Ltd
DCL (Data Connection Ltd) NEXOR
ICL SNI (Siemens Nixdorf)
In addition, previous interoperability tests have been performed against:
Hewlett Packard Telstra
ISODE Consortium UNISYS
QUIPU
Digital has performed limited successful 1993 DISP (Replication) interworking with two vendors at a Eurosinet Interoperability event. These were:
ICL NEXOR
All interoperability test results will be available on request from Digital.
Digital is actively involved in both public and private pilots of X.500.
Digital provides complete software maintenance services with products on a worldwide basis.
None
The Digital X.500 Services products operate over:
* [RFC 1006] over TCP/IP
* OSI TP0, TP2 and TP4 over CLNS and CONS as appropriate
* TCP/IP or DECnet transport protocols to communicate with an
LDAP server.
The Digital X.500 Directory Service products run on:
* Alpha processors supported by Digital UNIX
* Alpha and VAX processors supported by OpenVMS
The Digital X.500 Directory Service products currently run on:
* Digital UNIX running DECnet/OSI
* OpenVMS/AXP running DECnet/OSI
* OpenVMS/VAX running DECnet/OSI
For the latest availability on these and other other hardware and software platforms please contact Digital.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The Digital X.500 Directory Service products are commercially available from Digital Equipment Corporation. For further information please contact your local Digital office and quote SPD numbers 40.77.XX, 53.32.XX, 53.33.XX and 60.43.XX, or contact one of:
Ian Gunn, Product Manager: Nick Tatham, Engineering
Manager:
Tel: +1 603 881 0762 Tel: +44 1734 203635
Email: ian.gunn@zko.mts.dec.com Email:
nick.tatham@reo.mts.dec.com
Digital Equipment Corporation Digital Equipment Co. Ltd
Corporate Software Engineering Corporate Software
Engineering
110 Spit Brook Road PO Box 121
Nashua, NH. 03062-2698 Reading, RG2 0TU
USA UK
13th November 1995
None
DIR.D(tm) V2.6
Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG
DIR.D V2.6 is Siemens Nixdorf's directory browser product. Through its file manager like user interface only retrieval operations are supported. The DDE interface also allows for modification operations. DIR.D is an MS-Windows application acting as an LDAP client.
Among others, DIR.D has the following features:
* Graphical representation of the DIT
* Tree browsing
* Simple and complex searches, including approximate search
* Adaptable to any directory schema
* Configurable user interface
* Automatic unbind after idle time
* Anonymous and simple unprotected bind
* Tight integration with SNI's X.400 user agent MAIL.D and
CIT
product ComfoPhone
* Data transfer to Windows applications via clipboard, file,
Drag&Drop, and DDE
DIR.D V2.6 is an LDAP client.
DIR.D V2.6 is an LDAP client.
DIR.D V2.6 is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1777], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1779].
DIR.D V2.6 is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1278], [RFC 1558].
DIR.D V2.6 is based on University of Michigan's LDAP implementation V3.0. It can interoperate with any LDAP server.
DIR.D V2.6 is used to browse in the European NameFLOW-PARADISE pilot network.
To report bugs and/or to retrieve additional information on SNI's
directory products please send mail to infoline-
com@s41.mch1.x400scn.sni.de.
DIR.D V2.6 was designed for information retrieval.
LDAP with TCP/IP
PC (Intel)
Windows 3.1 + Winsockets Windows for Workgroups 3.11 +
Winsockets
Windows 95
Windows NT 3.5
OS/2 3.0 + Windows for OS/2 +
Winsockets
> 10,000
DIR.D V2.6 can be delivered as a binary product. It is commercially available from:
Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG
ASW BA COM 1
D-81730 Munich
Germany
Please contact
Giovanni Rabaioli
Voice: +49/89-636-41095
Fax: +49/89-636-42552
Mail: Giovanni.Rabaioli@mch.sni.de
April 1996
The following X.500 products are also part of SNI's X.500 product family:
DIR.X V4.0 1993 X.500 Directory Service
DIR.X V3.1 1988 X.500 Directory Service
ORG.D V2.1 Full administrative LDAP browser
DIR.X-SYNC V2.0 Directory synchronization
DIR.X (tm) V3.1 Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG
DIR.X V3.1 is Siemens Nixdorf's Directory Service product compliant with the 1988 ITU-T X.500 recommendations. Siemens Nixdorf has supplied its Directory Service product as the GDS (Global Directory Service) component to OSF DCE. However, DIR.X V3.1 has a number of features and enhancements which are not available in the GDS component of OSF DCE.
DIR.X V3.1 is a distributed, replicated Directory Service. It consists of DSA, DUA and a tools package including comfortable administration and management utilities. DIR.X implements the protocol stack ranging from LDAP, DAP, DSP over ACSE, ROSE, Presentation, Session down to [RFC 1006]. On transport layer it supports TCP/IP and OSI LAN/WAN protocols.
Data stored by DIR.X can be accessed via
* the MS-Windows user interfaces DIR.D/ORG.D which are
available as separate products from Siemens Nixdorf
* any third-party LDAP or DAP browser
* directory applications using the standardized X/Open XDS/XOM
APIs (Directory Service / OSI Abstract Data Manipulation).
The Siemens Nixdorf implementation was the first to gain
XPG4-certification.
* a command-line administration program
* a menu-driven administration program
* WWW
* a shell interface
* the Query-by-mail interface of SNI's directory
synchronization product DIR.X-SYNC
DIR.X enables
* The storage of globally-unique, tree-like name structures
which can be mapped onto organizations.
* The use of several alternative names (aliases) for one and
the same directory entry.
* Search queries that allow the user to select objects on the
basis of specific attributes and their values, as with a
"Yellow Pages" telephone directory
* Treemanagement functions which can cover entire subtrees.
* The creation and automatic updating of copies ("shadows")
from remote computers.
* Access protection at attribute level, which regulates access
on an object-specific basis.
* The storage of unstructured attributes (graphics, pixels).
The tools package of DIR.X V3.1 includes:
* gdssetup: A simple-to-use tool for the generation and
initialization of a directory configuration.
* gdshdsch: Enables the directory administrator to modify the
directory schema off-line.
* X.500 MIB access via SNMP
* gdscp: A TCL based administration tool for UNIX clients with
full XDS functionality
* gdshd: A powerful import/export tool
Additional features include:
* support for ISO 8859-1 characters
* dynamic schema modifications
* caching.
DIR.X V3.1 fully complies with the following ITU-T recommendations and ISO/IEC standards:
ITU-T ISO/IEC Title
X.500 9594-1 Overview of Concepts, Models, and Services
X.501 9594-2 Models
X.511 9594-3 Abstract Service Definition
X.518 9594-4 Procedures for Distributed Operations
X.519 9594-5 Protocol Specifications
X.520 9594-6 Selected Attribute Types
X.521 9594-7 Selected Object Classes
X.509 9594-8 Authentication Framework
DIR.X V3.1 was successfully conformance tested by the OSI Test Laboratory of Siemens Nixdorf. The OSI Test Laboratory is accredited by BAPT/DEKITZ (registration number TTI-P-G055/92-40). Test reports, PICS per X.581/X.582 and PIXITs are available for all tested protocols: DSA/DAP, DUA/DAP, Presentation, ACSE, and Session embedded in X.500.
DIR.X V3.1 is not compliant with the 1993 ITU-T recommendations. Please refer to the DIR.X V4.0 implementation description.
DIR.X V3.1 is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1274], [RFC 1277], [RFC 1565], [RFC 1567], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1779].
DIR.X V3.1 is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1278], [RFC 1558], [RFC 1801].
DIR.X V3.1 can interoperate with:
* OSF DCE Global Directory Service (GDS)
* ISODE Consortium Quipu V8.0
* ISODE Consortium 93 DSA R3.0
* AT&T OpenDirectory 2.0.1
* Bull X.500-DS and X.500-DUA
* Control Data MailHub 2.4
* Data Connection DC X500 V1
* Digital DEC X.500 Directory Services V2.0
* ICL I500 DSA V5.2
* ISOCOR ISOPLEX DS V1.00
* NET-TEL RouteFinder 500 DSA 1.0
* NEXOR Messageware Directory Server V0.9
* Olivetti UX_X500 V1.1
* Unisys TransIT X.500 V7.1
Several DIR.X V3.1 DSAs and DUAs are connected to the European NameFLOW- PARADISE pilot network.
To report bugs and/or to retrieve additional information on SNI's
directory products please send mail to infoline-
com@s41.mch1.x400scn.sni.de.
DIR.X V3.1 is highly portable and without any general limitation. SNMP support is available for SNI platforms only.
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP
OSI TP0, TP2 with X.25
OSI TP4 with CLNP
OSI TP4 with CONS (LAN)
SNI platforms (RM200/300/400/600, Pyramid Nile
100/150, MX300i/500i) for X.25: X.25 board needed
IBM RS/6000
for X.25: X.25 board needed
HP 9000
for X.25: X.25 board needed
Sun Sparc
no X.25 board needed (X.25 can use the serial line)
PC (Intel)
for X.25: X.25 board needed
SINIX 5.42 + CMX + XTI
for X.25: WAN-CCP needed
Pyramid Nile 100/150 DC/OSx1.1
Unixware
AIX 3.2
for X.25: OSI/6000 needed
HP-UX 9.01
for X.25: OTS 9000 needed
Solaris 2.3
for X.25: SunLink X.25 and SunLink OSI needed
100 and growing
DIR.X V3.1 can be delivered as a binary product or as source to OEM customers. It is commercially available from:
Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG ASW BA COM 1 D- 81730 Munich Germany
Please contact
Giovanni Rabaioli
Voice: +49/89-636-41095
Fax: +49/89-636-42552
Mail: Giovanni.Rabaioli@mch.sni.de
April 1996
The following X.500 products are also part of SNI's X.500 product family:
DIR.X V4.0 1993X.500 Directory Service
DIR.D V2.6 LDAP browser for information retrieval
ORG.D V2.1 Full administrative LDAP browser
DIR.X-SYNC V2.0 Directory synchronization
DIR.X (tm) V4.0 Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG
DIR.X V4.0 is Siemens Nixdorf's Directory Service product compliant with the 1993 ITU-T X.500 recommendations. The implementation incorporates SNI's experience of 10 years development, support and maintenance of the DIR.X products conformant to the 1988 Directory Standards, and has the following main features:
* It conforms to the 1993 Directory standards, with particular
emphasis on the requirements for interoperability with other
X.500 implementations
* The implementation is scaleable: it handles small-scale
workgroup directories as well as very large directories for
backbone solutions in large organisations
* The implementation is extensible: new functionality can
easily be incorporated
* Existing databases and proprietary directory services can be
accessed or integrated with the implementation.
* Particular emphasis is placed on ease of administration of
the Directory Service a service based on DIR.X V4.0 can be
administered effectively from a central site, including the
management of configuration and monitoring options
* The implementation has a high throughput performing well not
only on small systems, but also on high-performance backend
servers, handling hundreds of requests in parallel on a
multiprocessor machine.
DIR.X V4.0 is a distributed, replicated Directory Service. It consists of:
* DSA
* DUA
* Command-line DUA using a TCL (Tool Control Language) shell
interface (dirxcp)
* Management centre (dirxadm)
* Toolkit for application development
Data stored by DIR.X can be accessed via
* the MS-Windows user interfaces DIR.D/ORG.D which are
available as separate products from Siemens Nixdorf
* any third-party LDAP or DAP browser
* directory applications using the standardized X/Open XDS/XOM
APIs (Directory Service / OSI Abstract Data Manipulation).
The Siemens Nixdorf implementation was the first to gain
XPG4-certification.
* a command-line administration program
* a menu-driven administration program
* WWW
* a shell interface
* the Query-by-mail interface of SNI's directory
synchronization product DIR.X-SYNC
DIR.X V4.0 is fully backwards compatible with 1988 DSAs and DUAs.
DIR.X V4.0 is fully backwards compatible with the following ITU-T recommendations and ISO/IEC standards:
ITU-T ISO/IEC Title
X.500 9594-1 Overview of Concepts, Models, and Services
X.501 9594-2 Models
X.511 9594-3 Abstract Service Definition
X.518 9594-4 Procedures for Distributed Operations
X.519 9594-5 Protocol Specifications
X.520 9594-6 Selected Attribute Types
X.521 9594-7 Selected Object Classes
X.509 9594-8 Authentication Framework
DIR.X V4.0 fully complies with the following ITU-T recommendations and ISO/IEC standards:
ITU-T ISO/IEC Title
X.500 9594-1 Overview of Concepts, Models, and Services
X.501 9594-2 Models
X.511 9594-3 Abstract Service Definition
X.518 9594-4 Procedures for Distributed Operations
X.519 9594-5 Protocol Specifications
X.520 9594-6 Selected Attribute Types
X.521 9594-7 Selected Object Classes
X.509 9594-8 Authentication Framework
X.525 9594-9 Replication
DIR.X V4.0 is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1274], [RFC 1277], [RFC 1565], [RFC 1567], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1779].
DIR.X V4.0 is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1278], [RFC 1558], [RFC 1801].
Interoperability tests have not been completed yet.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
To report bugs and/or to retrieve additional information on SNI's
directory products please send mail to infoline-
com@s41.mch1.x400scn.sni.de.
DIR.X V4.0 is highly portable and without any general limitation.
[RFC-1006] with TCP/IP
OSI TP0, TP2 with X.25
OSI TP4 with CLNP
OSI TP4 with CONS (LAN)
SNI platforms (RM200/300/400/600, Pyramid Nile 100/150) for X.25: X.25 board needed
IBM RS/6000
for X.25: X.25 board needed
HP 9000
for X.25: X.25 board needed
Sun Sparc
no X.25 board needed (X.25 can use the serial line)
PC (Intel)
for X.25: X.25 board needed
SINIX 5.42 + CMX + XTI
for X.25: WAN-CCP needed
Pyramid Nile 100/150 DC/OSx1.1
Windows NT 3.51
AIX 4.1
for X.25: OSI/6000 needed
HP-UX 10.0
for X.25: OTS 9000 needed
Solaris 2.5
for X.25: SunLink X.25 and SunLink OSI needed
Field testing to be started in Summer 1996.
DIR.X V4.0 can be delivered as a binary product or as source to OEM customers. It is commercially available from:
Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG
ASW BA COM 1
D-81730 Munich
Germany
Please contact
Giovanni Rabaioli
Voice: +49/89-636-41095
Fax: +49/89-636-42552
Mail: Giovanni.Rabaioli@mch.sni.de
April 1996
The following X.500 products are also part of SNI's X.500 product family:
DIR.X V3.1 1988 X.500 Directory Service
DIR.D V2.6 LDAP browser for information retrieval
ORG.D V2.1 Full administrative LDAP browser
DIR.X-SYNC V2.0 Directory synchronization
DIR.X-SYNC V2.0 enables the synchronization of existing e-mail address directories in the X.500-based DIR.X directory service. The standard DIR.X, DIR.X-SYNC and DIR.D (all available from Siemens Nixdorf) products are the foundations on which the corporate directory solutions can be tailored to meet the customer's needs. The corporate directory then becomes the universal information system within the company.
The user can access corporate directory information in different ways:
* Using DIR.D, SNI's Windows client for the X.500 service, PC
users can gain easy access to the DIR.X server containing the
corporate directory data. The data found can be transferred
to other applications by means of DDE, drag and drop or cut
and paste. (See DIR.D V2.6 for further information).
* Query by mail: Authorized users can access data stored in the
central or distributed directory system over their own mail
system. DIR.X-SYNC retrieves the inquiry transmitted by mail
and directs it on to the X.500 service. The search results
are then delivered back to the user by mail. Using a WWW
interface based on TCL scripts
Query by mail does not require additional software on the end system. Each mail system connected to the X.400 backbone (e.g. MS-Mail, cc:Mail etc.) can use this function. DIR.X-SYNC currently supports the address formats of the following e-mail systems:
* MAIL.X-OD V2.3
* MAIL.2000 V1.2, AKOM
* MS-Mail
* cc:Mail
* Intelligent Messaging Mail (Banyan)
The standardized ISO-10021 interface for X.400 addresses is supported, enabling need for extension. This means that any type of system capable of generating this format (e.g. WordPerfect, Lotus Notes) can be connected. Address acknowledgment is carried out in ISO format.
Functions for the administrator:
* Export: Addresses can be exported from local directories.
They are delivered as mail messages in ASCII format to the
DIR.X-SYNC server.
* Upload: The upload server stores the exported local addresses
in DIR.X as globally valid X.400 addresses.
* Query by Mail: DIR.X-SYNC enables mail members to send a
search to the DIR.X-SYNC server by e-mail. Using this
function, authorized administrators of the synchronized
directories can acquire copies of the corporate directory
data.
* Administration of the DIR.X-SYNC server with an
administration tool which can be used via command line or a
command file.
Other features include:
* Replication and distribution: In addition to the central
solution with a single corporate directory server, DIR.X-SYNC
also supports replicated or distributed data storage in
DIR.X-SYNC server.
* Authentication/Authorization: To prevent unauthorized use of
the corporate directory system, the O/R addresses of the
authorized administrators and users are configured by the
DIR.X-SYNC administrator. When a query by mail or an update
arrives, the sender address is compared with this address.
* Logging: In the case of error, e.g. incorrect file format,
the sender (and the administrator configurable) are informed
of the fault by mail. At the same time, the error message is
saved in a log file for the DIR.X-SYNC administrator. In
addition, a "history file" enables the monitoring of the
uploads that have run or are currently running
DIR.X-SYNC is a directory application.
DIR.X-SYNC is a directory application.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
To report bugs and/or to retrieve additional information on SNI's
directory products please send mail to infoline-
com@s41.mch1.x400scn.sni.de.
The DIR.X-SYNC server runs with SNI's mail service products MAIL.X V2.3 or MAIL.X V3.0.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
SNI platforms (RM200/300/400/600, MX300i/500i)
HP 9000
SINIX 5.42
HP-UX 10.0
100
DIR.X-SYNC V2.0 can be delivered as a binary product. It is commercially available from:
Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG ASW BA COM 1 D- 81730 Munich Germany
Please contact
Giovanni Rabaioli
Voice: +49/89-636-41095
Fax: +49/89-636-42552
Mail: Giovanni.Rabaioli@mch.sni.de
April 1996
The following X.500 products are also part of SNI's X.500 product family:
DIR.X V4.0 1993 X.500 Directory Service
DIR.X V3.1 1988 X.500 Directory Service
DIR.D V2.6 LDAP browser for information retrieval
ORG.D V2.1 Full administrative LDAP browser
DX500 OpenDirectory(tm)
Datacraft Australia Pty Ltd
DX500 OpenDirectory is a family of carrier grade, version 1993 X.500 conformant products
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
See WEB page: http://www.datacraft.com.au/dx500ovr.html for up to date details.
PICS are available upon request.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
OpenDirectory DSA supports:
* DX-plorer, 93 full DAP stack, [RFC 1006] client over Winsock
* ISOPRO 1.5+ messaging clients
* ISOPRO for MAPI messaging clients
* ISOPLEX Navigator
* ISOPLEX Management Centre
* ISOPLEX DS
* ISOPLEX Web Gateway
* Uni of Mich. - WAX500
* Quipu emulation mode
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The software is commercially available from Datacraft, or its distributors.
March, 96
Capable of supporting a million entries, with subsecond response time, on small Unix, with 32 mgbytes of ram, due to a unique patented meta-data design.
Forum LOOK'UP (tm)
Telis Systemes & Communications
Forum LOOK'UP (tm) is a Corporate directory solution based on the X.500 recommendations. It includes:
* a Directory System Agent (DSA),
* Directory User Agents (DUAs).
* local network connections
* remote workstation access
* a WEB and videotex access
* data updating tools
* a directory editing tool
Forum LOOK'UP is a product based on PIZARRO, the research prototype developed at INRIA by Christian Huitema's team, and commercialized by Telis, a member of the France Telecom group.
Characteristics of the DSA are:
* The DAP and DSP protocols are provided conformant with X.500
(88).
* The DIB is maintained in ASN.1 encoded format in the Unix
file system.
* Utilities are provided to load and dump the DIB from and to
ASCII text files.
* As an option, an ORACLE V7 database can also be used.
* The DIT structure is held in main memory. Frequently used
attributes may be held in inverted tables in memory to speed
up searches.
* Knowledge management: knowledge on managed domains is stored
in Forum LOOK'UP specific attributes of the DSA entries.
* Schema: The X.500 (88), X.400 (88) and most of the Cosine and
Internet Schema are supported. Object class and attribute
definitions are enforced. Users may define their own.
* Simple authentication is provided strong authentication and
signed operations have been tested operationally through
Telis's participation in PASSWORD, a VALUE project with aim
to pilot a European security infrastructure for network
applications.
* Access control : the DSA offers a mechanism defined by Telis
that is functionally equivalent to a profile of the X500 '93
access control mechanism. The mechanism is based on the
notion of administrative domains (autonomous and semi-
autonomous). A domain defines the user groups (categories)
and their access rights (consult, modify) to specified
attribute types. The access rights are defined in
prescriptive and entry ACI attributes.
* Phonetic searches : administrators may specify a language
(English, French, ...) for a subtree of the DIT. Approximate
(phonetic) searches will then be carried out in the given
language. The software loads a rule database to which new
languages and new rules may be added easily.
* Management: a Forum LOOK'UP DSA object has been defined to
allow operational parameters of the DSA to be managed via
DAP. Forum LOOK'UP conforms to X.500 (88) as specified in
poaragraph 9 of X.519 Administration tools are provided :
* to generate usage statistics automatically and distribute
these by mail to administrators
* to replicate subtrees of the DIT to other FORUM LOOK'UP
DSAs and automatically update shadow copies,
* to extract hardcopy listings from the database in an Excel
compatible format for "paper" directories, all the
management tasks are performed through a GUI (X/Motif).
* The GUI includes a "dashboard" for monitoring of servers and
the hardware they are installed on.
* The DUAs include a graphical directory browser with powerful
search functionality for PCs and Macintosh.
Forum LOOK'UP conforms to X.500 (88) as specified in paragraph 9 of X.519
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[RFC 1274], [RFC 1277], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1779] are supported
[RFC 1278], [RFC 1279] are supported
Through the use of Forum LOOK'UP in the French Paradise pilot, interoperability has been informally but extensively tested with Quipu, Marben, SNI DIR/X.
DSA connectivity to the PARADISE pilot.
Forum LOOK'UP is a commercial product. As such, it is supported and bugs are fixed when detected.
Bug reports can be sent to our support team via electronic mail.
* The DIT structure and inverted attribute tables are stored in
main memory.
* The recommended main memory size for a DSA is 1kb per node,
i.e., 10 Mb for a database of 10,000 objects.
* The current recommended maximum for the proprietary database
(based on the Unix file system) is a database size of the order
of 100,000 objects.
* For a larger database one unique server (up to 300,000 objects),
the use of the Oracle database is recommended
* Of the selected attribute types defined in X.500 (88), the
searchGuide attribute is not supported
* neither are the following attributes from the Cosine and
Internet Schema [RFC 1274]: OtherMailbox, MailPreferenceOption
and the various quality attributes.
Forum LOOK'UP includes a transport stack for TP0 with TCP/IP [RFC 1006] and X.25. The stack has been ported to SunNet OSI for TP4 with CLNP.
DUAs on a LAN (Novell Netware, Microsoft Lan Manager, IBM Lan Server) can access the DSA without the need for IP on every Workstation. A module (called SOLO server) available on Novell, OS/2 and UNIX allows to have an IP or X.25 stack only on the file server. It is in charge of forwarding the request to a DSA.
A direct access (DUA / DSA) through IP, X.25, PSTN or ISDN is also available.
Forum LOOK'UP can easily be ported to any UNIX machine.
It currently runs on: Sun Solaris and Hewlett Packard.
A port on IBM AIX is to be completed.
The Forum LOOK'UP server is portable to any UNIX-like operating system. X/Motif is the interface used for management.
The DUAs are available on Windows and Macintosh.
ORACLE V7 can be used as a database (option).
30 servers
Forum LOOK'UP is commercially available. For further information contact:
Laurence Puvilland, Product manager
Email: C=fr A=atlas P=telis-sc O=telis-sc OU1=paris S=puvilland
laurence.puvilland@paris.telis-sc.fr
or:
Ascan Woermann, X.500 development manager
Email: C=fr A=atlas P=telis-sc O=telis-sc OU1=sophia S=Woermann
ascan.woermann@sophia.telis-sc.fr
April 1996
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
FX*500
Firefox International Limited
FX*500 is a core component of Firefoxs product suite for mail, messaging and directories.
FX*500 provides a Directory System Agent (DSA) which adheres to the latest 1993 X.500 standards.
FX*500 may be used in conjunction with the Firefox FX*400 messaging products or may be combined with a range of Directory User Agent and Gateway products in order to satisfy a broad range of directory requirements.
FX*500 affords unique integration opportunities with Novell's NetWare Directory Service (NDS) by offering the option of true dynamic directory integration between NDS and X.500.
FX*500 provides support for key features of the X.500 1993 standard while continuing to support interworking with 1988 based directory user agents and system agents. The main 1993 features of X.500 supported by FX*500 are:
* Basic Access Control
* The 1993 DSA Information Model
* Replication and Shadowing
In summary, FX*500 supports:
* 1988 and 1993 X.500 Directory Access Protocol (DAP)
* 1988 and 1993 X.500 Directory System Protocol (DSP)
* 1993 X.500 Directory Information Shadowing Protocol (DISP)
* 1993 Basic (or Simplified) Access Control
* the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), as defined
by [RFC 1777]
* configuration of knowledge information for distributed
operation using 1993 operational attributes
* local management services, including a knowledge
configuration application and extensive diagnostic facilities
* an extended set of management applications
* operation in a wide variety of network environments including
connectivity over X.25, TCP/IP [RFC 1006] and OSI LANs.
* an application developer's toolkit
The optional application developer's toolkit includes:
* the X/Open Directory Services (XDS) API to support directory
user agent applications
* a Gateway (G-XDS) API which is based on a simplified version
of the XDS API syntax and allows developers to implement
gateways to existing/ proprietary directory databases
* a Network Management Interface (NMI) to support management
applications and integration with management services.
FX*500 is delivered with a schema defined to support the Common Use and MHS (X.402) Schemas defined by UK GOSIP V4. The subschema for FX*500 can be modified by the customer and updated dynamically.
FX*500 provides for search optimisation by supporting keyed search whereby specific attributes can be identified as 'keyed' through local configuration data. This optimisation avoids the need to do a "brute force" search which requires a traversal of all the nodes of a subtree. Approximate match search filters are also supported by using a phonetic search based on the "Soundex" algorithm.
FX*500 meets both the static and dynamic requirements implied by section 9.2 of X.519 1988.
From section 9.2 of X.519 1988 regarding DSA conformance:
* FX*500 supports both the directoryAccessAC and
directorySystemAC application contexts.
* The FX*500 DSA can act as a first level DSA
* The chained mode of operation is supported.
* The security levels "none" and "simple" are supported, the
"strong" security level can be supported with the addition of
an appropriate security module.
* The attribute types defined in X.520 and the object classes
defined in X.521 are supported.
FX*500 meets both the static and dynamic requirements implied by sections 9.2, 9.3 and 9.4 of X.519 1993 regarding the conformance of DSA, Shadow Supplier and Shadow Consumer.
From section 9.2 of X.519 1993 regarding DSA conformance:
* FX*500 supports both the directoryAccessAC and
directorySystemAC application contexts
* the FX*500 DSA can act as a first level DSA
* the chained mode of operation is supported.
* the security levels "none" and "simple" are supported, the
"strong" security level can be supported with the addition of
an appropriate security module.
* the selected attribute types defined in X.520 are supported.
The UNIVERSAL STRING choice for DirectoryString is supported
but cannot be used for matching rules.
* the selected object classes defined in X.521 are supported.
* FX*500 supports the following 1993 extensions to the DAP and
DSP protocols:
* subentries
* copyShallDo
* attributeSizeLimit
* extraAttributes
* useAliasOnUpdate
* newSuperior
* FX*500 supports the following operational attributes:
* structural object class
* governing structural rule
* create timestamp
* modify timestamp
* creators name
* modifiers name
* prescriptive ACI
* entry ACI
* subentry ACI
* myAccessPoint
* superiorKnowledge
* supplierKnowledge (supported by local mechanism)
* consumerKnowledge (supported by local mechanism)
* secondaryShadows (supported by local mechanism)
* specificKnowledge
* nonSpecificKnowledge
* FX*500 supports return of alias names and indication that
returned entry information is complete
* support is given to modifying the object class attribute to
add and/or remove values identifying auxiliary object classes
* FX*500 supports both Basic Access Control and Simplified
Access Control
* FX*500 supports the name bindings defined in X.521
From section 9.3 and 9.4 of X.519 1993 regarding conformance of a Shadow Supplier and Shadow Consumer respectively:
* FX*500 supports the shadowSupplierInitiatedAC and
shadowConsumerInitiatedAC application contexts
* the security levels "none" and "simple" are supported, the
"strong" security level can be supported with the addition of
an appropriate security module.
* FX*500 supports the following UnitOfReplication:
* Entry filtering on object class
* Inclusion of subordinate knowledge in the replicated area
* Inclusion of extended knowledge in addition to subordinate
knowledge
* FX*500 can act as a secondary shadow supplier.
Supports [RFC 1274], [RFC 1567],[RFC 1777],[RFC 1778],[RFC 1779]
FX*500 maintains statistics that are a superset of those defined by [RFC 1567] "X.500 Directory Monitoring MIB".
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Firefox are members of EurOSInet and test FX*500 by direct links with other members and at interoperability workshops.
Firefox are participating in the NameFLOW-Paradise project, which is the successor to the Paradise European X.500 directory pilot.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
FX*500 utilises the Firefox FX*STACK product to provide an OSI stack for use over local or wide-area networks. This enables the X.500 DAP, DSP and DISP protocols operate over a range of different network types. The current network options are:
* OSI LANs are supported by Transport Class 4 over CLNP (ISO
8473), including the ES-IS routing protocol.
* X.25 networks are supported in either a Connection-Oriented
Network Service (CONS) or a Connection-Less Network Service
(CLNS) environment.
* For CONS, Transport Classes 0, 2 and 4 are supported over
X.25(1984).
* For CLNS, Transport Class 4 is supported over CLNP (ISO
8473) utilising X.25 as a subnetwork.
* TCP/IP networks are supported by an implementation of [RFC
1006], which supports Transport Class 0 over TCP/IP.
Intel 386, 486, Pentium
FX*500 is available on NetWare 3.12 and 4.1, UnixWare 1.1.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
FX*500 is commercially available.
For further details please contact:
Keith Vallance
Product Manager
Firefox International Limited
668 Hitchin Road
Stopsley
Bedfordshire LU2 7UH
UK
Tel: +44 (0)1582 29007
Fax: +44 (0)1582 29107
email: keithv@firefox.co.uk
Ken Sanofsky
Firefox (U.S.) Inc.
Seventh Floor
2099 Gateway Place
San Jose
CA 95110-1017
Tel: +1 408 321 8344
Fax: +1 408 321 8311
email: kens@firefox.com
April 1996
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Global Directory Server
Control Data Systems, Inc.
Control Data's X.500 implementation, called the Global Directory Server, is compliant with the 1993 ITU-T Recommendations X.500-X.521, except for DOP, schema publication, and non-specific subordinate references. Features include:
* 1993 administrative framework
* 1993 operational attributes
* 1993 reference structure
* 1993 distributed operations
* 1993 incremental and full replication including:
* Supplier or consumer initiated
* Periodic (by update interval) or onchange replication
* Complete subtree specification to select replicated
area
* Reference replication
* 1993 basic access control including:
* Prescriptive, entry and subentry ACI supported
* Item first and user first specification
* All user classes supported including users by subtree
specification
* Access control by entry, attribute, and attribute value
* All priority levels supported
* 1993 collective attributes
* 1993 hierarchical attributes
* 1993 operational extensions
* 1993 modifyDN operation
* Full interoperability with "quipu" implementations including:
* quipu replication for designated portions of DIT
* quipu reference model for designated portions of DIT
* enhanced quipu access controls (ACLs)
* quipu operational attributes for designated portions of
DIT
* Can "automatically" migrate quipu DIT to 1993 DIT:
* Migration process is dynamic, can occur while DSA is
operating
* Process preserves quipu attributes if desired
Also:
* Directory API based on the X.400 API
* Support for X.400 objects including those to support MHS use
of directory to support MHS routing
* Integration with Control Data's Mail*Hub standards-based E-
mail and directory integration products
* DUA interfaces that support the full set of directory
operations
* A DUA daemon that provides directory access for applications
* Directory synchronization tools for synchronizing
PC/Mac/DEC/IBM mail directories and other sources of
information, such as human resources databases, with X.500
* Hash indexing for fast string search
* dixie, dad, finger, whois, and ph.x500 support
* SNMP based monitoring and management of DSAs
* Support for DAP, LDAP, DSP, and DISP
* Can be browsed via standard World Wide Web browsers
Control Data Systems offers complete integration services to design, plan, install, configure, tailor and maintain X.500 services. These services may include the preparation of customer unique DUAs and tools for X.500 integration, synchronization, operational control and management.
The Global Directory Server complies with the 1988 CCITT
Recommendations X.500-X.521 [CCITT-88] and the 1988 NIST OIW Stable
Implementation Agreements [NIST-88]. It also complies with all
static and dynamic requirements of X.519.
The Global Directory Server also provides:
* Full interoperability with "quipu" implementations including:
* quipu replication for designated portions of DIT
* quipu reference model for designated portions of DIT
* enhanced quipu access controls (ACLs)
* quipu operational attributes for designated portions of
DIT
* Can "automatically" migrate quipu DIT to 1993 DIT:
* Migration process is dynamic, can occur while DSA is
operating
* Process preserves quipu attributes if desired
The Global Directory Server complies with the 1993 ITU-T
Recommendations X.500-X.521, except for DOP, schema publication, and
non-specific subordinate references. It also complies with the 1994
NIST OIW Stable Implementation Agreements. And it complies with all
static and dynamic requirements of X.519. Compliance features:
* 1993 administrative framework
* 1993 operational attributes
* 1993 reference structure
* 1993 distributed operations
* 1993 incremental and full replication including:
* Supplier or consumer initiated
* Periodic (by update interval) or onchange replication
* Complete subtree specification to select replicated area
* Reference replication
* 1993 basic access control including:
* Prescriptive, entry and subentry ACI supported
* Item first and user first specification
* All user classes supported including users by subtree
specification
* Access control by entry, attribute and attribute value
* All priority levels supported
* 1993 collective attributes
* 1993 hierarchical attributes
* 1993 operational extensions
* 1993 modifyDN operation
Global Directory Server is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1274], [RFC 1276], [RFC 1277], [RFC 1567], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1779]
Global Directory Server is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1202], [RFC 1249], [RFC 1275], [RFC 1278], [RFC 1279], [RFC 1558], [RFC 1562], [RFC 1617], [RFC 1781], [RFC 1801], [RFC 1802], [RFC 1803], [RFC 1836], [RFC 1837], [RFC 1838]
Control Data X.500 has successfully interoperated with other X.500 implementations including those from HP, DEC, ESL, ISODE Consortium, Telstra, ICL, Marben (HP), Nexor, Unisys, and Siemens.
Control Data's X,500 implementation interoperates with other implementations in the Internet X.500 pilots. It also provides the base routing tree for the MHS Use of the Directory pilot (Longbud) on the Internet.
Control Data provides complete software maintenance services with products.
None.
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP, TP4 with CLNS, TP0 with X.25.
Global Directory Server is supported on UNIX for SUN SPARC, HP 9000, and IBM RS/6000 platforms, and on Windows NT for Intel platforms. Other platforms are pending.
Distributed and supported for SUN Solaris 2.x, HP-UX 10.x, IBM AIX 4.x, and Windows NT.
Product was introduced in December 1995. 5 implementations in the field to date.
Control Data Systems Inc.
Electronic Commerce Solutions, ARH290
4201 Lexington Avenue North
Arden Hills, MN 55126-6198 U.S.A.
1-800-257-OPEN (U.S. and Canada)
1-612-482-6736 (worldwide)
FAX: 1-612-482-2000 (worldwide)
EMAIL: info@cdc.com
or
s=info p=cdc a=attmail c=us
July 1996
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
i500 Enterprise Directory Server
ICL
ICL's i500 Enterprise Directory Server (simply termed "i500") is a high performance X.500 distributed Directory system providing features such as:
* multi-protocol support covering 1993-edition DAP, DSP and
DISP plus LDAP and WWW client access
* dynamically configurable schema (object classes, attributes,
structure rules etc.) including support for user-defined
schema items and auxiliary object classes
* a scalable, disk-based database incorporating configurable
indexing facilities to enable rapid, large-scale searching,
including approximate matching
* storage of a variety of information types including text,
image and sound
* the capabaility to operate as a "first-level" DSA
* 1993-edition replication of information (both primary and
secondary shadowing using DISP and supporting total refresh,
incremental or on-change updates)
* information security, using X.509 authentication techniques
together with either 1993-edition Basic or Simplified Access
Controls
* gateway facilities to enable X.500, LDAP and WWW client
access to non-X.500 based information
* a variety of APIs and associated development toolkits
including LDAP and X/Open XDS/XOM Directory access APIs
* support of the [RFC 1567] "MADMAN" systems management MIB
* a Windows (3.11, 95 or NT) based management station
i500 is compliant with the 1993-edition of X.500 and interoperates with 1988-edition DUAs and DSAs.
i500 is compliant with the 1993-edition of X.500 and is implemented in-line with the ISO/ITU-T Directory Implementor's Guide and the emerging 1993 International Standardized Profiles (ISPs) being produced by the NIST OIW, EWOS and AOW workshops.
Full Protocol Implementation Conformance Statements (PICS) are available on request to either:
i500@reston.icl.com or k.richardson@man0523.wins.icl.co.uk
i500 supports a variety of proposed Internet standards and in particular, [RFC 1274] (schema), [RFC 1567] (MIB) and [RFC 1777] (LDAP).
i500 is developed in-line with any necessary informational and experimental RFCs, e.g.[RFC 1278] and [RFC 1558] are supported.
ICL are members of EuroSInet and EEMA. As such, i500 is regularly tested for interoperability at EuroSInet workshops and has also been included in public demonstrations of X.500 interoperability at EEMA annual exhibitions. Other X.500 products with which i500 has been proven to interoperate include those from the following vendors:
* Boldon-James * Control Data * DCL * Digital * ISOCOR * ISODE
* Net-Tel * NeXor * SNI * Unisys * WorldTalk
i500 operates within the Internet PARADISE network controlled by DANTE.
No known bugs. World-wide software maintenance services are provided with primary support desks based in North America and Europe.
None.
TCP/IP for LDAP and WWW client (HTTP) access
TCP/IP with [RFC 1006]
OSI TP0, TP2, TP3, (X.25, CONS) and TP4 (CLNP)
HP, Intel PC, ICL, SUN, Pyramid and platforms which support UNIXWARE 2.0
HP UX-9.04 and 10.0, Windows NT 3.51, ICL DRS/NX 7, SUN Solaris 2.4 and 2.5, Pyramid OSx, UNIXWARE 2.0
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
i500 is commercially available from ICL High Performance Systems. For further information please contact either:
i500 Marketing Manager, or David Longley (i500 Business Manager),
ICL Inc., ICL,
11490 Commerce Park Drive, Wenlock Way,
Suite 500, West Gorton,
Reston, Manchester,
VA 22091-1532 USA M12 5DR, UK
Tel. +1 703 648 3300 Tel. +44 (0)161 223 1301 ext.2832
Fax. +1 703 648 3350 Fax. +44 (0)161 223 0482
I/net. i500@reston.icl.com I/net.
d.c.longley@man0505.wins.icl.co.uk
Information on i500 is also provided at
http://www.icl.com/hps/i500.html.
July 29, 1996
None.
ISODE Consortium Release 3.0 X.500(1993) Directory ISODE Consortium Ltd.
This implementation is a source release of an X.500(1993) Directory System Agent (DSA). It has been designed an implemented as an X.500 1993 DSA not as a 1988 DSA with '93 extensions. Emphasis has been placed on providing support for a flexible information model, access control, X.509 security features, and standard replication.
The 1993 DSA offers a strong technical foundation on which to build an information and messaging infrastructure that relies on robust and scalable directory services. The implementation of this DSA incorporates the experience gained through the development, support, and maintenance of the earlier QUIPU, as well as operational experience and standards support.
The DSA is aligned to the 1988 ISO IS and the NIST OIW Directory Implementors Guide Version 1. X.500(1993) features such as replication, access control, as well as X.509 certification are also available. Interoperability testing with other DSAs has been performed.
Please contact the ISODE Consortium if you wish to obtain our protocol information conformance statements. PICS may also be available from member organizations for their binary products.
[RFC 1781],[RFC 1779],[RFC 1778],[RFC 1777], [RFC 1274], [RFC 1277].
[RFC 1838], [RFC 1837], [RFC 1836],[RFC 1801], [RFC 1275], [RFC 1278], [RFC 1279].
Interoperability with several other DSAs has been demonstrated in pilot operation and at Eurosinet in October 1995.
At Eurosinet, X.500 interoperability testing used the X.500 DAP (Directory Access) and DSP (Directory System) protocols. Successful testing was done between the ISODE Consortium X.500(1993) DSA and DSAs from four other vendors including Siemens-Nixdorf and Bull. The ISODE Consortium was the only vendor to bring an X.500(93) compliant DSA to the workshop for the scheduled X.500(93) testing.
Connectivity to the global research pilots (PARADISE etc.) has been demonstrated. It is expected that this system will be used extensively in a wide range of pilot activities. DUA Connectivity, and DSA Connectivity.
Bugs should be reported to the ISODE Consortium via email.
None
The IC R3.0 release is application level code, and assumes vendor provided lower layers. It provides the following modules with support for a range of APIs to handle associated lower layers:
* [RFC 1006] (vendor supplied TCP/IP using sockets or TLI)
* Transport service (vendor supplied transport, which may be
any class and use any network service. TLI, XTI and various
vendor-specific APIs).
* TP0 (Vendor supplied X.25 or CONS using NTI and various
vendor specific APIs).
Reference platform is SUN SPARC Solaris 2. The software has been ported to various other platforms by the IC and by member organizations. Contact the ISODE Consortium for a complete member product list.
Reference OS is Solaris 2.3/2.4. It is also known to run on various other UNIX platforms. Contact the ISODE Consortium for a complete member product list.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Available to members of the ISODE Consortium. Membership is open to any organisation. An earlier version of the source release is available under licence (zero cost) to universities and equivalent educational institutions.
Contact:
ISODE Consortium
The Dome, The Square
Richmond
TW9 1DT
UK
Phone: +44-181-332-9091
Fax: +44-181-332-9019
Email: <ic-info@isode.com>
January 1996
More information may be obtained by contacting the ISODE Consortium, or by visiting our WWW site, http://www.isode.com/
Our X.400 address is s=ic-info; o=ISODE Consortium; p=ISODE; a=MAILNET; c=FI
ISOPLEX DS (tm) DSA
ISOCOR
ISOCOR's ISOPLEX DS Directory Services Product Family also includes:
ISOPLEX DS Import/Export Utility for Windows
ISOPLEX DS Navigator
ISOPLEX DS Directory Access XDS/XOM APIs
ISOGATE DS (tm) Oracle
The ISOPLEX DS provides a 1988 X.500 conformant Directory System Agent (DSA), a Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) daemon to service Directory requests via LDAP, a UNIX Directory shell user agent (DISH), a Motif Directory Administrator interface to configure the first level and subordinate DSAs, and supporting utilities to handle bulk loading of the Directory, maintain statistics, and provide logging information.
In addition to supporting memory-based Directory Information Bases (DIBs), the ISOPLEX DS includes the optional configuration of delegate DSA processes for storing selected subtrees of the Directory Information Tree (DIT) in disk-based index and data files.
The ISOPLEX DS includes a set of utilities integrating it with key technology. The most important of these tools is the World Wide Web to X.500 gateway, which supports Hyper-Text Markup Language (HTML)- based DUA bindings to the ISOPLEX DS DSA via the ISOPLEX DS LDAP daemon process.
The ISOPLEX DS additionally provides Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) functionality that works in conjunction with an existing SNMP environment. The ISOPLEX DS functionality is specifically designed to monitor a DSA's DSP and DAP connections from a network managment system and uses the X.500 Directory monitoring Management Information Base (MIB), which is based on [RFC 1567].
The ISOPLEX DS conforms to the 1988 CCITT Recommendations X.500-X.521 as detailed in the Protocol Implementation Conformance Statements X.581 (1988) and X.582 (1988). It conforms in part to Version 7 of the NIST OIW Stable Implementation Agreements.
The ISOPLEX DS does not conform to the 1993 ITU-T Recommendations X.500-X.521.
The ISOPLEX DS conforms with the following proposed Internet Standard RFCs: [RFC 1274], [RFC 1276], [RFC 1277], [RFC 1567], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1779], and [RFC 1798].
The ISOPLEX DS is consistent with the following informational and experimental RFCs: [RFC 1275], [RFC 1278], [RFC 1279], [RFC 1558], [RFC-1617], [RFC 1781], [RFC-1801], [RFC-1803], and [RFC-1804].
The ISOPLEX DS interoperates with the following systems: Control Data, Digital Equipment, Hewlett Packard, Marben, Nexor, The Wollongong Group, and Unisys.
The ISOPLEX DS provides DUA Connectivity and DSA Connectivity via the PARADISE project in Europe and via the Internet in North America.
If problems arise with the ISOPLEX DS, the customer can report these to the relevant ISOCOR reseller or contact ISOCOR Technical Support directly. ISOCOR Technical Support staffs are available in two locations: one in the US at +1 (310) 581-8100 (phone), +1 (310) 581- 8111 (fax), and helpdesk@isocor.com; the other in Ireland at +353 (1) 284-3802 (phone), +353 (1) 280-0365, and helpdesk.isocor.ie.
Not applicable.
Though the internetworking capability of the product depends on the specific hardware/software platform, the ISOPLEX DS in general supports the following environments:
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP
TP2 over X.25, CONS (ISO 8878), APS on Async
TP4 over CLNS, PAD (X.29) Server
Hewlett Packard
Intel 486/Pentium
Sun
Stratus
Hewlett Packard HP-UX v9.x/v10.x, HP OSI Transport Services 9000
SCO v3.2.4, v3.2.5, SCO OpenDesktop, TCP/IP, IEEE 802.3, Eicon R3.1 for X.25 networking software and hardware
Solaris v2.4, Sunlink OSI 8.0.2, Sunlink X.25 8.0.2
Stratus ftx v2.2, OSI Open Networking Platform (ONP), Stratus Window Manager 1.2 End User System, MIT X11R5 Graphics End User System, MIT X11R5 Graphics Fonts package, MIT X11R5 Graphics Openlook Software package
Motif/X11R5 runtime support
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The ISOPLEX DS is commercially available either directly from ISOCOR or from a licensed ISOCOR reseller.
December 31, 1995.
Not applicable.
LDAP
University of Michigan
UM-LDAP is an implementation of the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol. LDAP is a draft Internet standard directory service protocol that runs over TCP/IP. It can be used to provide a stand- alone directory service, or to provide lightweight access to the X.500 directory. LDAP is defined by [RFC 1777] and [RFC 1778].
The UM-LDAP package includes the following components:
* slapd - a stand-alone LDAP directory server
* slurpd - a stand-alone LDAP replication server
* ldapd - an LDAP-to-X.500 gateway server
* centipede - an LDAP centroid generation and maintenance
program
* libldap - an LDAP client library
* liblber - a lightweight BER/DER encoding/decoding library
* ldif tools - data conversion tools for use with slapd
* in.xfingerd - a finger-to-LDAP gateway server
* go500 - a gopher-to-LDAP gateway server for searching
* go500gw - a gopher-to-LDAP gateway server for searching and
browsing
* rcpt500 - an email-to-LDAP query responder
* mail500 - an LDAP-capable mailer
* fax500 - an LDAP-capable mailer that supports remote printing
* LDAP tools - A collection of shell-based LDAP utility
programs
In addition, there are some contributed components:
* web500 - an HTTP-to-LDAP gateway
* whois++d - a WHOIS++-to-LDAP gateway
* saucer - a simple command-line oriented client program
The latest information about LDAP can always be found on the LDAP Home Page at this URL:
http://www.umich.edu/~rsug/ldap/
The U-M LDAP distribution is a complete implementation of the LDAP protocol. The LDAP protocol does not support access to all X.500 features and operations. The operations supported are bind, search, compare, add, delete, modify, modify RDN, and abandon. Note that read and list operations can be emulated using the search operation. Size and time limits may be specified, as may alias dereferencing and searching, but all X.500 service controls are not supported.
Since the LDAP protocol itself has not yet been updated to support any 1993-specific X.500 features, this implementation does support any 1993 features yet either.
Believed to be compliant with:
[RFC 1274], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1779], [RFC 1781]
Includes an implementation of the LDAP API, as defined in [RFC 1823]. Search filters used within UM-LDAP comply with [RFC 1558].
The current implementation of the X.500-backended LDAP server (ldapd) is known to work with ISODE-based DAP libraries and the QUIPU DSA.
DUA connectivity should be possible to all pilots.
Bug reports should be sent to bug-ldap@umich.edu.
None, aside from those mentioned above under completeness.
LDAP clients use TCP to communicate with the LDAP server. The LDAP server normally uses [RFC 1006] with TCP/IP to communicate with the DSA, though any other transport mechanism for DSA communication supported by ISODE should be possible.
The complete UM-LDAP package has been ported to a wide variety of UNIX systems, including: Sun3 and SPARCs running SunOS 4.1.x or Solaris 2.x, DECStations running Ultrix 4.3, HP 9000 series running HP-UX 9.05, IBM RS6000 running AIX 3.2.5, PCs running SCO, FreeBSD, NetBSD, or LINUX, DEC Alphas running OSF/1, and NeXTStatios running NeXTSTEP 3.2. The complete package has also been ported to VMS. In addition, the LDAP client libraries and some client programs have been ported to Apple Macintosh and PCs running MSDOS or Windows.
The complete UM-LDAP package has been ported to a wide variety of UNIX systems, including: SunOS 4.1.x, Solaris 2.x, Ultrix 4.3, HP-UX 9.05, AIX 3.2.5, SCO, FreeBSD, NetBSD, LINUX, OSF/1, and NeXTSTEP 3.2. It has also been ported to VMS. In addition, the LDAP client libraries and some clients have been ported to Macintosh (System 7), MSDOS (some TCP/IP stacks), and Microsoft Windows 3.1, 95, and NT.
Unknown; used by almost all Internet X.500 sites.
This software is openly available for all to use. It may be obtained by anonymous FTP from terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu in the /ldap/ directory (URL: ftp://terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu/ldap/). The latest information about LDAP can always be found on the LDAP Home Page at this URL:
http://www.umich.edu/~rsug/ldap/
Send e-mail to ldap-support@umich.edu for additional assistance.
This software was developed at the University of Michigan by Tim Howes with help from Mark Smith, Bryan Beecher, Gordon Good, Steve Rothwell, Lance Sloan as well as many others around the Internet. It is subject to the following copyright:
Copyright (c) 1992-1996 Regents of the University of Michigan. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted provided that this notice is preserved and that due credit is given to the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. The name of the University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. This software is provided ``as is'' without express or implied warranty.
December 1995
[No Information Provided -- Ed.]
maX.500 :: Macintosh DUA Interface
University of Michigan
maX.500 is a Directory User Agent (client) for Apple Macintosh. It is widely used within Paradise and other Internet X.500 pilots. maX.500 supports searching, browsing, and modifying directory entries. Display of textual information, playing of audio, and viewing of both black-and-white (fax) and color (JPEG) images are supported. Communication with directory servers is via the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) over TCP/IP. maX.500 works both with standalone LDAP directory servers (such as slapd) and with X.500-backended LDAP servers (such as ldapd).
maX.500 is a native Macintosh application, and has a friendly interface. It requires System Software version 6.0.5 or later and Apple's MacTCP or Open Transport TCP/IP networking. The current version of maX.500 is 2.0.2, although version 2.1 is in beta test.
The latest information about maX.500 can always be found on the
maX.500 Home Page at this URL:
http://www.umich.edu/~rsug/ldap/max500/
maX.500 works over LDAP, and is subject to LDAP's limitations. The bind, search, compare, add, delete, abandon, modify, and modifyrdn operations are all used by maX.500. Size and time limits may be specified, as may alias dereferencing control.
maX.500 currently uses LDAP as defined in [RFC 1777], which does not support any 1993-specific X.500 features.
Believed to be compliant with:
[RFC 1274], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1779], [RFC 1781]
Search filters comply with [RFC 1558].
Uses the LDAP API, as defined in [RFC 1823].
maX.500 is known to work with the U-M LDAP servers (ldapd and slapd). It has also been tested with other commerical LDAP servers, such as Control Data's server. maX.500 has been used with a wide variety of DSAs (always through an LDAP server).
DUA connectivity should be possible to all pilots.
Bug reports should be sent to max500-bugs@umich.edu.
maX.500 does not support modification of "photo" (fax), "jpegPhoto", or "audio" attributes. Versions of maX.500 before 2.1 did not support a fully functional browse facility.
maX.500 is an LDAP client, and as such is uses TCP to communicate with the LDAP server. Apple's MacTCP control panel or Open Transport TCP/IP networking is required.
maX.500 runs on Apple Macintosh Plus or later Macintosh computers, including PowerMacs. It requires 600K of free RAM.
maX.500 requires Apple System Software 6.0.5 or later (System 7 preferred) and MacTCP 1.1 or later (2.0.6 preferred). maX.500 2.1, which is currently in beta test, will run natively on the PowerMac and use the native Open Transport networking interface if it is installed.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
This software is openly available for all to use. It may be obtained by anonymous FTP from terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu in the /ldap/max500 directory (URL: ftp://terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu/ldap/max500). The latest information about maX.500 can always be found on the maX.500 Home Page at this URL:
http://www.umich.edu/~rsug/ldap/max500/
Send e-mail to max500@umich.edu for additional assistance.
This software was developed at the University of Michigan by Mark Smith with help from Tim Howes and many others around the Internet. It is subject to the following copyright:
Copyright (c) 1995 Regents of the University of Michigan. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in binary forms is permitted provided that this notice is preserved and that due credit is given to the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. The name of the University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this] software without specific prior written permission. This software is provided ``as is'' without express or implied warranty.
December 1995
[No Information Provided -- Ed.]
Messageware DSA
NEXOR
Messageware DSA is a high performance X.500(93) DSA. Characteristics of the DSA are:
* DAP access
* DISP for replication and shadowing information
* DSP access
* LDAP
* Full 1993 Basic and Simple Access Control
* Support for X.400, X.500, and [RFC 1274] attributes and
object classes
* Approximate match based on Soundex.
* Flexible schema management
* Anti-trawling access control
* Knowledge management mapped onto DIT
* Attribute inheritance
* Remote management
Messageware DSA is an X.500 1993 compliant DSA
XT-QUIPU is a X.500 1988 compliant DSA conforming to NIST SIA version 2.
Messageware DSA isn X.500 1993 compliant DSA implementing standard access control, replication and shadowing, X.509, for a full conformance statement see the NEXOR web site(http://www.nexor.com).
The following are supported: String DN format [RFC 1485], [RFC 1274], [RFC 1276], and [RFC 1277].
The following are supported: UFN [RFC 1781], [RFC 1278], and [RFC 1279].
Messagware DSA has been extensively interoperability tested at Eurosinet workshops and at the EEMA X.500 demonstration. Other vendors DSAs/DUAs interoperated with include:
ICL, Control Data, Unisys, Digital, Isocor, DCL, SNI, Boldon James
It is also in operation with DSAs used in the PARADISE and other pilot projects.
Messageware DSA is fully connected to the PARADISE and PSI White Pages X.500 Pilots.
No known bugs. Support is given via phone or email to
"support@nexor.co.uk"
None.
OSI TP4 wtih CLNP
OSI TP0 with X.25 or CONS
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP
Sun: SunOS
Solaris
X86
IBM RS/6000: AIX
HP 9000
It is available on a number of other UNIX platforms
SunOs 4.1.3 Solaris 2.4 AIX 3.2 DRS/NX 6000 HP-UX 9.01 Other software platforms are available.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Messageware DSA is available from NEXOR and NEXOR partners. For more details contact:
NEXOR
PO Box 132
Nottingham
NG7 2UU
UK
DN: c=GB@o=NEXOR Ltd
Telephone: +44 115 952 0510
Fax: +44 115 952 0519
E-Mail: info@nexor.co.uk
Dec 95
[No Information Provided--Ed.]
MESSAGEWARE PC-DUA
NEXOR
PC-DUA provides a MS Windows based user interface to the X.500 Directory.
Features include:
Compliant with LDAP 3.
Compliant with 1993 versions of ITU X.500/ISO 9594 services and protocols
The following are supported: [RFC 1006]
[RFC 1202]
[RFC 1274]
[RFC 1277]
[RFC 1777]
[No information provided--Ed.]
PC-DUA has interoperated with LDAP 2.0 and 3.0 distributions.
Eurosinet Workshop:
SNI, CDS, AT&T, ICL, Digital, ISOCOR, UNISYS and QUIPU.
Full DUA connectivity to the NADF, PARADISE and PSI White Pages X.500 Pilots.
No known bugs. Support is given via phone or email to
"support@nexor.co.uk"
None.
WinSock based TCP/IP stacks
386 PC or greater WITH 4MGBYTES RAM
MS WINDOWS 3.1
Windows NT
Windows95
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
PC-DUA is commercial software. For more details contact:
NEXOR
PO Box 132
Nottingham
NG7 2UU
UK
DN: c=GB@o=NEXOR Ltd
Telephone: +44 (0) 115 952 0510
Fax: +44 (0) 115 952 0519
E-Mail: info@nexor.co.uk
Dec 95
[No Information Provided--Ed.]
NonStop Directory Services (NSDS)
Tandem Computers, Inc.
The Tandem NonStop Directory Services (NSDS) product provides a distributed open directory service on Tandem platforms. It is an industrial strength implementation incorporating the Tandem product fundementals of resilience, linear extensibility, fault-tolerance, and continuous availability. NSDS runs on the NonStop Kernel Guardian Personality which includes support for Tandem system characteristics such as data integrity, process persistence, and server classes. NSDS supports access over X.25 WAN, LAN and TCP/IP networks.
NSDS is a port of OSF's DCE GDS Reference Implementation, with Tandem enhancements including 1993 X.500 Simplified Access Control. Tandem server class management provides fault events, tracing, accounting and configuration services for NSDS. TM/MP (Transaction Management) is used to protect all file operations that affect the integrity of the directory entries in the DIB.
Major Features Include:
* X/Open Directory Services (XDS) API and X/Open Object
Management (XOM) interface in conformance with X/Open CAE
Specifications, and an additional Tandem extension package
* 1988 Edition X.500 Conformant DAP and DSP, capable of inter-
operating with 1993 Edition DUA or DSA implementations
* Simplified Access Control as specified in the 1993 edition of
the X.500 standard.
* Unprotected Simple Authentication (name and password in
clear)
* Character set support for T61 Printables, IA5 and Teletex
Strings
* The DSA-SC server class performs the functions of a DSA.
Multiple processes are used for fault tolerance and load
balancing.
* The DUA-ACCESS server class handles communications between
local applications and remote DSA's using DAP across an OSI
stack.
* The DSA-ACCESS server class handles communications from
remote DUAs or DSAs to the DSA-SC server class using the
Tandem OSI stack implementation which includes [RFC 1006]
support for TCP/IP networks.
* The DSA-CHAIN server class handles chaining communications
between the DSA-SC server class and remote DSAs.
* NSDS GUI Viewer supports administration/management of an NSDS
DIB on a PC Windows workstation. The NSDS GUI Viewer is
supported by a persistent server process on the Tandem
NonStop Kernel. The GUI Viewer allows a directory entry and
a complete set of attributes and values to be inserted
anywhere in the directory tree (DIT), to be deleted or
changed, read or searched based on distinguished name
components, with or without wild-card.
* NSDS SCRIPTOR allows customers to explore features of the XDS
programmatic interface in advance of writing their XOM/XDS
application. NSDS SCRIPTOR is a menu-driven batch interface
to XDS functions.
* A BulkUnload/BulkLoad utility allows a branch of the DIB to
be dumped to an editable flat file and restored from that
file. The flat file can be modified before being bulk-loaded
into a DIB which may conform to a different schema
definition.
* Support for the LDAP protocol.
* Messaging-Based Directory Query (MDQ) provides a text-based
query interface to the directory from an X.400 messaging
system, such as Tandem OSI/MHS, via the XAPIA compliant GPI
interface.
NSDS complies with the '88 CCITT X.500 and ISO 9594 standard, and part of '93 X.500 standard.
NSDS DSA and DUA are compliant with OIW Agreements, with the following features yet to be implemented:
* Strong Authentication (Sections 6.6.2 and 8.4e)
* Priority Service Control (Section 7.4)
* Digital Signature, Replication and Shadowing (Sections 8.8-
8.12)
* Authentication (Sections 9.1.7 and 14.1-
14.2)
* Directory Trace Information (Section 9.2.2)
* Abandon and ROSE operation class 2 (Section 10.1)
* NSDS supports the directoryAccessAC (DAP) and directorySystemAC
(DSP) application contexts.
* The DSA is capable of acting as a first-level DSA.
* Chaining is supported.
* security levels of simple unprotected password and none are
supported.
* All attribute types defined in ISO/IEC 9594-6:1993 are supported
except for collective attributes and enhancedSearchGuide.
Customer defined attributes can also be added. UNIVERSAL STRING
is not supported.
* All object classes defined in ISO/IEC 9594-7:1993 are supported.
Customer defined object classes can be also be added.
* Name forms defined in ISO/IEC 9594-7:1993 are all supported.
Customer defined name forms can also be added.
* Simplified Access Control is supported.
* Support for collective attributes is not provided.
[RFC 1277], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1779], [RFC 1778]
[RFC 1279]
NSDS DSAs interoperate with various 1988 X.500 and 1993 X.500 conformant DUAs with unrecognized features of the incoming 1993-based request ignored.
Information is provided with the production installation guide.
The OSF/DCE "GDS Extension Package" is not supported by NSDS. A Tandem "NDS Extension Package" is provided to support 1993 Simplified Access Control.
The underlying protocols carrying DAP and DSP protocols are provided by OSI higher layer stack over X.25, LAN and/or TCP/IP via [RFC- 1006].
Tandem NonStop Himalaya Systems
D30.02 NonStop Kernel. The operator's GUI runs under Microsoft Windows 3.1 or later.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The NSDS Rev 1.0 production version has been available since October 1995.
For more details, please contact:
Don S. Jones
NSDS Product Manager
Phone: (408) 285-6480
Fax: (408) 285-6004
e-mail: JONES_S_DON@TANDEM.COM
July 1996.
None.
ORG.D (tm) V2.0 / V2.1
Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG
ORG.D V2.0 is Siemens Nixdorf's administrative directory client product. Through its file manager like user interface retrieval and DIT administration operations are supported. ORG.D offers a DDE interface and with ORG.D V2.1 additionally OLE / OCX / MAPI interfaces are supported. ORG.D V2.1 is an MS-Windows application acting as an LDAP client.
Among others, ORG.D has the following features:
* Comprehensive, simple-to-use search and positioning options
* complex searches, including approximate search
* Several databases visible at the same time in an interface
* Private address books: available on every desktop
* Optional use of distribution lists and private address book
* Support for MS-Word mail merge by means of special export
format
* adaptable print listings and comfortable list&label
functionality
* customizing tool in order to adapt to any directory schema
* Configurable user interface
* Automatic unbind after idle time
* Anonymous and simple unprotected bind
* Data transfer to Windows applications via file, Drag&Drop,
and DDE
* Central administration of distribution lists/groups
* "Domain administrators" with limited rights defined only for
home site/department
* Direct modification / creation of DIT entries from the user
interface
* Choice of a proposal list when new employee data is added
Tight integration in SNI4s X.400/SMTP-MIME mail service and CIT products
* DDE connection and drag&drop data transfer to SNI's X.400
user agent MAIL.D and SNI4s CIT product ComfoPhone
* Setting up and administering mailboxes on remote mailbox
servers
* Central administration of server addresses and logon data
ORG.D V2.1 is an LDAP client.
ORG.D V2.1 is an LDAP client.
ORG.D V2.1 is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1777], [RFC 1778], [RFC 1779].
ORG.D V2.1 is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC 1278], [RFC 1558].
ORG.D V2.1 is based on University of Michigan's LDAP implementation V3.0. It can interoperate with any LDAP server.
In future ORG.D will be used to browse in the European NameFLOW- PARADISE pilot network. Currently SNI's directory client product DIR.D V2.6 is used to browse in the European NameFLOW-PARADISE pilot network.
To report bugs and/or to retrieve additional information on SNI's
directory products please send mail to infoline-
com@s41.mch1.x400scn.sni.de.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
LDAP with TCP/IP
PC (Intel)
Windows 3.1 + Winsockets
Windows for Workgroups 3.11 + Winsockets
Windows 95
Windows NT 3.5
OS/2 3.0 + Windows for OS/2 + Winsockets
NUMBER OF IMPLEMENTATIONS IN THE FIELD
Field testing is to be started in Spring 1996.
ORG.D V2.0 / V2.1 can be delivered as a binary product. It is commercially available from:
Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG
ASW BA COM 1
D-81730 Munich
Germany
Please contact
Giovanni Rabaioli
Voice: +49/89-636-41095
Fax: +49/89-636-42552
Mail: Giovanni.Rabaioli@mch.sni.de
April 1996
DIR.X V4.0 1993 X.500 Directory Service DIR.X V3.1 1988 X.500 Directory Service DIR.D V2.6 LDAP browser for information retrieval DIR.X-SYNC V2.0 Directory synchronization
OSIAM X.500-88
MARBEN
OSIAM X.500-88 is Marben's 1988 compliant directory product. It provides:
* DUA, offering X/Open XOM and XDS APIs
* Pocket DUA, providing Microsoft MAPI(tm)
* DSA and C-ISAM based DIB
* LDAP Server
OSIAM DUA is a portable Directory User Agent implement, which implements DAP engine. It provides X/Open XOM and XDS APIs. It works on multiple lower layer stacks (OSI Transport or TCP/IP). An LDAP Server may be provided with the DUA.
Pocket DUA is a light DUA implement which offers full DAP access, but light in terms of code size and memory occupation, and is mainly designed for PC environments. It provides MAPI(tm) interface, as an address book provider. It provides multiple network connectivities: X.25, [RFC 1006] over TCP/IP, and APS.
OSIAM X.500 DSA provides full X.500 1988 functionality. Main features include: chaining/multicasting, extensible schema, proprietary access control list, comprehensive administration facilities.
MARBEN is currently developing a new generation of directory product, providing X.500 1993 functionality. Main targets are:
* high performance
* robustness and administration facility with DIB on commercial
RDBMS
* replication
* access control
* extended information models
Please contact MARBEN for more information on '93 product.
OSIAM X.500-88 DUA and DSA implement CCITT X.500 (1988) an ISO 9594 standards.
Compliant with EWOS and NIST OIW Stable Implementor's Agreement.
1993 product is under development.
Please contact MARBEN for more information on '93 product.
Compliant with the following Internet Standards:
* [RFC 1274]: the COSINE and Internet X.500 Schema (partially
supported)
* [RFC 1277]: encoding of network addresses
* [RFC 1778], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1779]: LDAP and related
standards
None is supported at the present time.
Have successfully interoperated, both on DAP and DSP, with QUIPU, E3X and other implementations involved in Paradise pilot project.
Connected to Paradise pilot project.
[No Information Provided--Ed.]
[No Information Provided--Ed.]
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP, TP0 with X.25, TP4 with CLNS
OSIAM X.500-88 is highly portable, and has been ported to a wide range of platforms, including:
* HP9000 series
* SUN SPARC Stations
* SCO UNIX
* Tandem
* MARK III, etc.
MARBEN Pocket DUA runs on PC/Windows and NT.
See HARDWARE PLATFORMS.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Commercially available from:
MARBEN
11 Rue Curie
92150 Suresnes, France
Contact Person: Karim Jammal or Shaofeng Li
Phone: (33 - 1) 41 38 10 00
Fax: (33 - 1) 41 38 10 01
X.400: C=FR;A=Atlas;P=Marben;O=Suresnes;OU1=MxMs;S=KJammal
E-Mail:sli@wtk.suresnes.marben.fr
Also available from:
MARBEN Products Inc.
2105 Hamilton Avenue, Suite 320
San Jose, CA95125, USA
Contact Person: Jean-Francois Chapuis
Phone: (408) 879 4000
Fax: (408) 879 4001
E-Mail: jfchapuis@marben.com
October 1995
[No Information Provided--Ed.]
OSIAM X.500-93
MARBEN
OSIAM X.500-93 is Marben's 1993 compliant directory product.
Open Directory
* OSIAM X.500-93 provides both DAP and LDAP access
* Support for distribution using the DSP protocol
* Support for replication using the DISP protocol
* Pocket DUA, providing Microsoft MAPI0(tm) and MAPI1(tm)
interface to MS-Mail(tm) or Exchange(tm)
* WEB gateway to access Directory information from WEB browsers
* X/Open XOM/XDS API
* High performance direct API
High Capacity
* Mapped on a RDBMS
* Over 1.000.000 entries
* Use of transaction, to ensure robustness
* Can run on high-available hardware systems
* Isolated interface, to be customized for various RDBMS
High Performance
* Use of cache at DUA level
* Use of cache at DSA level
* Use of replication. Can act as shadow supplier, shadow
consumer or secondary shadow supplier. Support for total or
incremental refresh. Support for both scheduled update and
"on change" update.
* Based on an indexed database, to ensure high-performance
elaborated search.
Security
* Anonymous bind, simple and simple protected authentication
* X.509 certificates storage
* Access control
Ease of administration
* Extensible schema
* Backup-recovery
* Event logging
* Statistics information about Directory use
* Billing dockets generation
Ease of integration
* Provided as binary product or as portable source code
* MARBEN services: training, consulting, system integration,
hot-line support, maintenance.
OSIAM X.500-93 DUA and DSA implement CCITT X.500 (1988) and ISO 9594 standards.
Compliant with EWOS and NIST OIW Stable Implementor's Agreement.
OSIAM X.500-93 DUA and DSA implement CCITT X.500 (1993) and ISO 9594 standards.
Compliant with the following Internet Standards:
* [RFC 1274]: the COSINE and Internet X.500 Schema (partially
supported)
* [RFC 1277]: encoding of network addresses
* [RFC 1778], [RFC 1777], [RFC 1779]: LDAP and related
standards
None is supported at the present time.
Have successfully interoperated, both on DAP and DSP, with QUIPU, E3X and other implementations involved in Paradise pilot project.
Connected to Paradise pilot project.
[No Information Provided--Ed.]
[No Information Provided--Ed.]
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP, TP0 with X.25, TP4 with CLNS
OSIAM X.500-93 is highly portable, and has been ported to a wide range of platforms, including:
* Windows NT
* HP-UX
* IBM AIX
* SUN Solaris
* SCO UNIX
* IBM MVS
MARBEN Pocket DUA runs on PC/Windows and NT.
See HARDWARE PLATFORMS.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Commercially available from:
MARBEN
11 Rue Curie
92150 Suresnes, France
Contact Person: Marc Chauvin or Olivier Gatine
Phone: (33 - 1) 41 38 10 00
Fax: (33 - 1) 41 38 10 01
E-Mail:sales@suresnes.marben.fr
Also available from:
MARBEN Products Inc.
2105 Hamilton Avenue, Suite 320
San Jose, CA95125, USA
Contact Person: Jean-Francois Chapuis
Phone: (408) 879 4000
Fax: (408) 879 4001
E-Mail: jfchapuis@marben.com
July 1996
[No Information Provided--Ed.]
PMDF-X500
from:
Innosoft International, Inc. 1050 East Garvey Ave. South West Covina, California 91790
Phone: +1 818-919-3600 email: sales@innosoft.com
PMDF-X500 is Innosoft's implementation of the X.500 standards for Directory Services. PMDF-X500 is based upon the ISODE Consortium code-base. The core of PMDF-X500 is the Directory System Agent (DSA) server. This server provides directory information to Directory User Agents (DUA) using either OSI or TCP/IP networking protocols. Since PMDF-X500 is based on a widely used implementation, it interoperates particularly well with a whole host of X.500-based products from other sources.
In order to facilitate initial loading of directory data as well as ongoing coordination with other directory services, PMDF-X500 includes tools to import from and export directory information to Entry Description File (EDF) files. EDF files are flat text files. PMDF-X500 provides directory coordination functions using EDF files for the following directories:
* X.500 DSAs supporting LDAP access
* cc:Mail
* Digital's DDS
* GroupWise
* Microsoft Mail
* PMDF generic databases
OSI directory services as specified in CCITT X.500 Recommendations and ISO 9594 use the Directory Access Protocol (DAP) and the Directory System Protocol (DSP).
PMDF-X500 does not yet support the 1993 changes to the X.500 standard. Support for the 1993 X.500 recommendations is planned for a future release of PMDF-X500.
PMDF-X500 supports DAP and DSP accesses using Internet protocols as specified in [RFC 1006]. In addition, the Internet community has proposed two lightweight alternatives to DAP called Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), which is specified in [RFC 1777], and Connectionless Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (CLDAP), which is specified in [RFC 1798]. LDAP and CLDAP, which are currently specified to run over TCP/IP, are much simpler protocols than DAP and were designed to reduce the cost of entry associated with using X.500 protocols in client applications. PMDF-X500 includes both LDAP and CLDAP servers.
The LDAP server accesses X.500 directory information using DAP to communicate with X.500 DSAs. PMDF-X500 provides an LDAP server which translates LDAP requests into DAP requests to communicate with X.500 DSAs. CLDAP defines a very low overhead method for accessing X.500 directory information. CLDAP is suitable for providing access to information that does not require access controls.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
PMDF-X500 interoperates with a large number of DUAs and DSAs. This is demonstated by the fact that PMDF-X500 is DSA used by several Internet White Pages Project participants. PMDF-X500 DSA interoperability includes at least all of the DSA that are used in the White Pages Project.
PMDF-X500 is delivered with several DUAs and in addition is know to support the DUAs from Unisys and Digital Equipment Corporation as well as the publically available DUAs MaX500, Cello, Swix, and the NASA DUA.
PMDF-X500 is used by several sites that are participants of the Internet White Pages Project include the Innosoft DSA.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
DAP and DSP are layered on top of the OSI protocol suite. PMDF-X500 supports this protocol suite over multiple network transports. For a pure OSI protocol stack, DECnet/OSI can be used to provide the lower layers of the stack. In addition, PMDF-X500 supports running OSI upper layer protocols over a TCP/IP transport in accordance with [RFC 1006]. It is important to note that while [RFC 1006] specifies TCP/IP as a transport, all of the OSI upper layer protocols are always used with DAP and DSP.
Digital VAX systems
Digital Alpha/AXP systems
OpenVMS/VAX
OpenVMS/AXP
Digital UNIX
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
PMDF-X500 is a commerical product that is part of the PMDF family of eMail Interconnect products. PMDF-X500 requires the presence of PMDF-MTA, Innosoft's SMTP/MIME mailer. PMDF-X500 and PMDF-MTA can be obtained from:
Innosoft International, Inc.
1050 East Garvey Ave. South
West Covina, California 91790
Phone: +1 818-919-3600
FAX: +1 818-919-3614
email: sales@innosoft.com
December 1995
No information provided. -- Ed.]
TransIT 500 Unisys Corporation
TransIT 500 is a commercial-grade implementation of the 1993 X.500 directory standards (ITU X.500 Directory Services and ISO 9594) including replication, extensible schemas and access control. TransIT 500 is designed for performance, scalability, conformance and interoperability for enterprise-wide usage and is available for Microsoft Windows NT, Hewlett Packard HP/UX, Unisys U6000 and as portable source code. TransIT 500 is comprised of the following:
TransIT 500 Directory Services
TransIT 500 Directory Services is a high-performance, 1993 standards based Directory System Agent (DSA). TransIT 500 includes many features required by today's enterprise for global access and mission-critical applications:
* Adheres to the 1993 ITU & ISO 9594 X.500 Directory Services
standards
* Full support for Replication (X.525/DISP)
* Access controls and extensible schemas
* Support of all X.520 attribute types & syntaxes, all X.521
object classes & attribute sets
* Automated loading of directory entries
* Support for Basic Access Control and Simplified Access
Control
* High performance, commercial-grade operations
* Integration with popular databases such as Microsoft SQL
Server, Informix, and Oracle
* Multi-platform availability
* Authentication services
* Support of industry standard APIs, including LDAP, DAP, DSP,
DISP, XDS/DOM and XAP
* High-capacity network integration with both TCP/IP (RFC 1006)
and OSI networks.
TransIT 500 Administrator
TransIT 500 Administrator is an extremely powerful tool designed to assist administrators in all directory administration, maintenance and security functions. Available for Microsoft Windows NT, Windows 95 and Windows 3.1.1 based systems, TransIT 500 Graphical Administration is the first tool of its kind to provide fully graphical X.500 directory management. All functions are provided and multiple DSAs can be managed simultaneously from a single administrative console:
* Directory Service Operations
* Directory Controls Management
* Access Control Management
* Schema Management & Maintenance
* Directory Information Tree Management
* Knowledge References & Information
* Replication Agreements & Information
* Logging, Tracing and System Logs
* Directory System Configuration
* Data Import & Export
* Directory Backup & Restore Operations
TransIT 500 Browser
TransIT Browser is a powerful, graphical information retrieval tool designed to make navigating directories as simple as possible. The Browser interface makes detailed directory searches and retrievals easy while the unique Directory Lookup interface provides extra ease-of-use for simple lookups. TransIT Browser is available for Microsoft Windows 3.1, Windows 95 and Windows NT systems.
* Browse multiple directories from a single console
* Two interfaces to directories:
* Tree-oriented Browser
* Tabular Directory Lookup
* Object classes mapped to icons to enhance object recognition
* Extensive attribute search capabilities
* Save/Load scratchpad for search criteria & prefix criteria
* LDAP support
* Configurable cache to speed data delivery
TransIT 500 Developer
TransIT 500 Developer is a development toolkit which provides programming interfaces, utilities and documentation for the development of directory enabled applications. The Directory Information Tree (DIT) can be extended and re-compiled for the addition of application-specific information to the directory. The Administration application provides for the verification and installation of new schemas and the maintenance of directory tree items. Utilities are provided for the bulk importation or exportation or directory information from and to external sources.
TransIT 500 also supports user-written programs using the X/Open Directory Services Application Program Interface (XDS API).
The TransIT 500 implementation conforms to the specifications outlined in the ISO/IEC 9594-1 to ISO 9594-9, CCITT X.500 standards.
TransIT 500 makes the following claims of conformance as outlined in ISO/IEC 9594-5:
Conformance by DUAs:
Statement Requirements
Conformance is claimed for the following operations:
* DirectoryBind
* DirectoryUnbind
* Read
* Compare
* Abandon
* List
* Search
* AddEntry
* RemoveEntry
* ModifyEntry
* ModifyDN
Conformance is claimed for the following security-levels:
* None
* Simple
Conformance is claimed for the following extensions:
* subentries
* copyShallDo
* extra attributes
* useAliasOnUpdate
* newSuperior
Static Requirements
The DUA supports the application contexts directoryAccessAC and directorySystemAC.
The DUA conforms to the following extensions for which the DUA is capable of initiating:
* subentries
* copyShallDo
* extra attributes
* useAliasOnUpdate
* newSuperior
Dynamic Requirements
The DUA conforms to the mapping of the DAP services (i.e., DirectoryBind, DirectoryUnBind) onto the used services of the ACSE.
The DUA conforms to the versions and rules of extensibility as outlined in clause 7.5.1 of X.519.
Conformance by DSAs:
Statement Requirements
The DSA supports the application contexts directoryAccessAC and directorySystemAC.
The DSA does not make any claims for operational binding types.
The DSA is capable of acting as a first-level DSA as defined in ITU-T Rec. X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-4.
The DSA supports the application context directorySystemAC and the chained mode of operation.
Conformance is claimed for the following security-levels:
* None
* Simple
Conformance is claimed for all attribute types defined in ITU-T Rec. X.520 ISO/IEC 9594-6.
Conformance is claimed for all object classes defined in ITU-T Rec. X.521 ISO/IEC 9594-7.
Conformance is claimed for the following extensions:
* subentries
* copyShallDo
* extra attributes
* useAliasOnUpdate
* newSuperior
Conformance is not claimed for collective attributes as defined in X.501 and X.511.
Conformance is not claimed for hierarchical attributes as defined in X.511.
Conformance is claimed for the following operational attribute types defined in X.501:
* createTimestamp
* modifyTimestamp
* creatorsName
* modifiersName
* administrativeRole
* subtreeSpecification
* collectiveExclusions
* accessControlScheme
* prescriptiveACI
* entryACI
* subentryACI
* dseType
* myAccessPoint
* superiorKnowledge
* specificKnowledge
* nonSpecificKnowledge
* supplierKnowledge
* consumerKnowledge
* secondaryShadows
* dITStructureRules
* nameForms
* dITContentRules
* objectClasses
* attributeTypes
* matchingRules
* matchingRuleUse
Conformance is claimed for return of alias names as defined in 7.7.1 of X.511 IS0/IEC 9594-3.
Conformance is claimed for indicating that returned entry information is complete, as described in 7.7.6 of X.511 ISO/IEC 9594-3.
Conformance is claimed for modifying the object class attribute to add and/or remove values identifiying auxiliary object classes, as described in 11.3.2 of X.511 ISO/IEC 9594-3.
Conformance is claimed for Basic Access Control.
Conformance is claimed for Simplified Access Control.
Conformance is claimed for the DSA s ability to administer the subschema for its portion of the DIT, as defined in X.501 ISO/IEC 9594-2.
Conformance is claimed for all name bindings defined in X.521 ISO/IEC 9594-7.
Conformance is claimed for the DSA s ability to administer collective attributes, as defined in X.501 ISO/IEC 9594-2.
Static requirements
The DSA supports the application contexts directoryAccessAC and directorySystemAC.
The DSA conforms to the information framework defined by X.501 ISO/IEC 9594-2.
The DSA conforms to the minimal knowledge requirements defined in ISO/IEC 959-4.
The DSA operates as a first-level DSA and conforms to the requirements support of the root context as defined in X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-4.
The DSA supports the attributes for which conformance is claimed above.
The DSA supports the object classes for which conformance is claimed above.
The DSA conforms to the following extensions for which conformance is claimed:
* subentries
* copyShallDo
* extra attributes
* useAliasOnUpdate
* newSuperior
Conformance is claimed for the DSA s ability to administer the subschema for its portion of the DIT, as defined in X.501 ISO/IEC 9594-2.
Conformance is not claimed for collective attributes, as defined in X.501 ISO/IEC 9594-3.
Conformance is not claimed for hierarchical attributes, as defined in X.501 ISO/IEC 9594-3.
The DSA supports the operational attribute types for which conformance is claimed above.
The DSA supports Basic Access Control and is capable of holding ACI items that conform to the definitions of Basic Access Control.
The DSA supports Simplified Access Control and is capable of holding ACI items that conform to the definitions of Simplified Access Control.
Dynamic Requirements
The DSA conforms to the mapping onto used services as defined in clause 8.
The DSA conforms to the procedures for distributed operations of the Directory related to referrals, as defined in X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-4.
The DSA supports application-context directoryAccessAC and conforms to the procedures of X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-4 as they relate to the referral mode of the DAP.
The DSA supports application-context directorySystemAC and conforms to the referral mode of operation, as defined in X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-4.
The DSA conforms to the chained mode of interaction as defined in X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-4.
The DSA conforms to rules of extensibility procedures as defined in clause 7.5.2 of X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-4.
The DSA supports Basic Access Control and has the capability to protect information within the DSA in accordance with the procedures of Basic Access Control.
The DSA supports Simplified Access Control and has the capability to protect information within the DSA in accordance with the procedures of Simplified Access Control.
Conformance is not claimed for shadowOperationalBindingID -- as such, conformance is not claimed for the procedures of X.525 ISO/IEC 9594-9 and X.501 ISO/IEC 9594-2 as they relate to DOP.
Conformance is not claimed for specificHierarchicalBindingID -- as such, conformance is not claimed for the procedures of X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-9 and X.501 ISO/IEC 9594-2 as they relate to operational bindings.
Conformance is not claimed for non-
specificHierarchicalBindingID -- as such, conformance is not
claimed for the procedures of X.518 ISO/IEC 9594-9 and X.501
ISO/IEC 9594-2 as they relate to operational bindings.
Conformance by a shadow supplier:
Statement Requirements
The DSA supports the application contexts
shadowSupplierInitiatedAC.
Conformance is claimed for the following security-levels:
* None
* Simple
Conformance is claimed for UnitofReplication.
Static Requirements
The DSA supports the application contexts
shadowSupplierInitiatedAC for which conformance is claimed.
Conformance is claimed for the operational attributes modifyTimestamp and createTimestamp.
Dynamic Requirements
The DSA conforms to the mapping onto used services as defined in clause 8.
The DSA conforms to the procedures of X.525 ISO/IEC 9594-9 as they relate to the DISP.
Conformance by a shadow consumer:
Statement Requirements
The DSA supports the application contexts
shadowConsumerInitiatedAC.
Conformance is claimed for the following security-levels:
* None
* Simple
Static Requirements
The DSA supports the application contexts
shadowConsumerInitiatedAC for which conformance is claimed.
The DSA supports operational attributes modifyTimestamp and createTimestamp.
The DSA supports the copyShallDo service control.
Dynamic Requirements
The DSA conforms to the mapping onto used services as defined in clause 8.
The DSA conforms to the procedures of X.525 ISO/IEC 9594-9 as they relate to the DISP.
TransIT 500 supports the following standards: RFC-1777, RFC-1778, RFC-1779.
RFCs supported include: RFC-1558.
Interoperability has been achieved with numerous directory systems. TransIT 500 has participated in Eurosinet internetworking demonstrations involving DSAs from:
* AT&T GIS
* Bolden James
* Control Data
* DEC
* ICL
* Nex-tel
* Nexor
* Siemens Nixdorf
TransIT 500 is actively involved in pilot projects, including the COS X.500 Internetworking Project based at The Southern Company in Atlanta, Georgia, where interoperation was performed with directories from Digital, Control Data, Hewlett-Packard and Telstra.
TransIT 500 products are fully supported category 1 software, which means:
* These products are periodically updated, revised, and
enhanced.
* Unisys provides software corrections for these products as
necessary.
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The TransIT 500 software operates on the following hardware platforms:
* Unisys U6000 Series and Clearpath SMP
* HP 9000 Series
* 386 and above Intel platforms
The DSA is supported on any of the following platforms:
* System V Release 4 (SVR4)
* HP-UX
* Windows NT
The DUA is supported on any of the following platforms:
* Windows 95
* Windows for Workgroups
* Windows NT
Additional software required to run TransIT 500 includes Database software:
* SQL Server
* Informix
* Oracle
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
TransIT 500 is commercially available through Unisys Corporation.
For further information, contact the following:
Unisys Corporation
Malvern Building, M.S. B221
2476 Swedesford Road
Paoli, PA 19301, USA
Phone: (800) 874-8647, ext. 584
Fax: (610) 695-5378
e-mail: transit@unisys.com
waX.500
University of Michigan
waX.500 :: Windows Access to X.500
waX.500 is a (currently 16-bit) DUA that run on Microsoft Windows (3.1, Win95, & WinNT). It uses libldap.dll which uses the winsock (v1.1) interface. It works on any vendors tcp/ip stack that I've seen so far (some configuration may be required).
waX.500 was developed by the University of Michigan for use by its faculty, staff and students. UM's online directory is an X.500 directory containing 50,000+ entries.
I keep the following Web page up to date with respect to latest
release, etc.:
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~rsug/ldap/wax500/
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Can see and browse anything in the world as far as I know.
report bugs to wax500.bugs@umich.edu
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
Microsoft Windows (3.1, 95, & NT) Winsock (v1.1) tcp/ip (any vendor)
Any Windows machine with internet connectivity. Both ethernet and dialup PPP.
Microsoft Windows (3.1, 95, & NT) Winsock (v1.1) tcp/ip (any vendor).
This implementation is distributed at no cost to the user; accurate numbers are not available.
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~rsug/ldap/wax500
ftp://terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu/ldap/wax500/wax...
13 Dec 1995
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
X500-DS
X500-DUA
Bull S.A.
X500-DS and X500-DUA are integral part of the large Bull OSI offer.
Although based on the DCE/GDS (Distributed Computing
Environment/Global Directory Service) of OSF, those two products may
be installed and used without the DCE environment. Some enhancements
have been added for the user and the management facilities. X500-DS is
designed to implement both the DUA and the DSA functions, whilst
X500-DUA only provides the DUA functions.
The X500-DUA package contains:
* The standards APIs XOM (X/Open OSI-Abstract-Data Manipulation
API) and XDS (X/Open Directory Service API) for the
development of portable applications,
* A core DUA to translate all user's requests (bind, read,
list, compare, modify, modifyRDN, search, add, remove, unbind
...) into the DAP protocol used for communication with
distant DSAs,
* The OSI standard high layers (ASN.1, ROSE, ACSE, Presentation
and Session) for communication with the distant DSAs. The
interface with the low layers is XTI. [RFC 1006] is supported
under XTI or the OSI Session,
* A DUA Cache to improve performances when accessing remote
DSAs,
* A powerful management application facilitating the
configuration of the product and controlling the operations,
logs and traces,
* A user application for the manipulations of the database
entries,
* A generic tool to load and unload ASCII and binary files
in/from distributed DSAs,
* The support of the LDAP [RFC 1777] thanks to an LDAP Server,
* A DUA Server that allows to use A-Window-To-Directory (refer
to this DUA product description) on a PC.
The X500-DS package contains:
* All components of the X500-DUA,
* A core DSA to process all requests received from distant DUAs
through DAP protocol or from distant DSAs through DSP
protocol,
* The support of the referral, chained and multi-casting modes
of operation, access control lists and management of
knowledge information (for distribution, shadows and copies
of sub-trees),
* The support of the simple authentication and of the DCE
authentication,
* A management application for managing the schema information
(creation, deletion and modification of object classes and of
attribute types, management of the rules of the DIT).
* A C-ISAM database that is specially designed for high
performances: e.g. less than 10 ms to read an entry on an
Escala at the XOM/XDS interface.
These two products are easely installed, configured and administered thanks to the System Management Interface Tool (SMIT) screens of AIX.
Compliant with EWOS and OIW Agreements
Consists of both DUA and DSA implementation according to the '88 CCITT X.500 and ISO 9594 standard. The X/Open standard XDS and XOM interface libraries are also provided. When the product is installed with the DCE environment, XDS and XOM interfaces are also used to access DCE/CDS (Local Cell Directory Service) transparently. A GDA (Global Directory Agent) serves then as the gateway between the DCE CDS and GDS.
[New description field -- Ed.]
Supports [RFC 1277], [RFC 1777].
[No information provided--Ed.]
This implementation of DAP and DSP can interoperate with other X.500 implementations from other Cebit and EUROSINET demo participants including IBM, HP, ICL, Siemens-Nixdorf, SUN, Marben, NEXOR, etc. It also interoperates with ISODE QUIPU.
[No information provided--Ed.]
Bull S.A. provides complete software maintenance with the products.
[No information provided--Ed.]
OSI TP4 with CLNP (WAN - LAN)
OSI TP0, 2 & 4 with X.25 (WAN)
[RFC 1006] with TCP/IP
Either BSD sockets or XTI can be used to access the transports.
Through XTI, both OSI and TCP/IP protocols are possible on the same machine, thus permitting to build a Directory Service distributed on OSI and TCP/IP networks.
DPX/20, Escala SMP
AIX 4.1.4
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
The release 3.1 described here is commercially available since 2 Q 96
Please contact:
Daniel Monges
Tel: + (33) 76 39 79 83
Fax: + (33) 76 39 77 70
e-mail: D.Monges@frec.bull.fr
Note that after October 18th 1996 (23:00), the telephon and fax numbers will be:
Tel: + (33) 04 76 29 79 83
Fax: + (33) 04 76 29 77 70
April 1996
[No information provided. -- Ed.]
[CCITT-88] CCITT, "Data Communications Networks Directory", Recommendations X.500-X.521, Volume VIII Fascicle VIII.8, IXth Plenary Assembly, Melbourne, November 1988.
[ITU-T-93] ITU-T,"Information Technology - Open Systems
Interconnection - The Directory", Recommendations X.500-X.525, May
1993.
[NIST-88] National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Stable Implementation Agreements for Open Systems Interconnection Protocols", Version 2 Edition 1, NIST Special Publication 500-162, December 1988.
[NIST-94] National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Stable Implementation Agreements for Open Systems Interconnection Protocols", Version ? Edition ?, NIST Special Publication ???-???, December 1994.
[RFC 1006] Rose, M., and Cass, D., "ISO Transport Service on top of the TCP", STD 35, RFC 1006, Northrop Research and Technology Center, May 1987.
[RFC 1070] Hagens, R., Hall, N., and Rose, M., "Use of the Internet as a Subnetwork for Experimentation with the OSI Network Layer", RFC
1070, U of Wisconsin - Madison, The Wollongong Group, February 1993.
[RFC 1202] Rose, M., "Directory Assistance Service", RFC 1202, Performance Systems International, Inc., February 1991.
[RFC 1249] Howes, T., Smith, M., and B. Beecher, "DIXIE Protocol Specification", RFC 1249, University of Michigan, August 1991.
[RFC 1274] Barker, P., and S. Kille, "The COSINE and Internet X.500 Schema", RFC 1274, University College, London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1275] Kille, S., "Replication Requirements to provide an Internet Directory using X.500," RFC 1275, University College, London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1276] Kille, S., "Replication and Distributed Operations extensions to provide an Internet Directory using X.500", RFC 1276, University College, London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1277] Kille, S., "Encoding Network Addresses to support operation over non-OSI lower layers", RFC 1277, University College, London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1278] Kille, S., "A string encoding of Presentation Address", RFC 1278, University College, London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1279] Kille, S., "X.500 and Domains", RFC 1279, University College, London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1484] Kille, S., "Using the OSI Directory to achieve User Friendly Naming", RFC 1484, ISODE Consortium, July 1993.
[RFC 1485] S. Kille, "A String Representation of Distinguished Names", RFC 1485, ISODE Consortium, July 1993.
[RFC1487] Yeong, W., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "X.500 Lightweight Directory Access Protocol", RFC 1487, Performance Systems International, University of Michigan, ISODE Consortium, July 1993.
[RFC 1488] Howes, T., Kille, S., Yeong, W., and C. Robbins, "The X.500 String Representation of Standard Attribute Syntaxes", RFC 1488, University of Michigan, ISODE Consortium, Performance Systems International, NeXor Ltd., July 1993. RFC-1558
[RFC 1558] Howes, T., "A String Representation of LDAP Search Filters", RFC 1558, University of Michigan, December 1993.
[RFC 1562] Michaelson, G. and Prior, M., "Naming Guidelines for the AARNet X.500 Directory Service", RFC 1562, The University of Queensland, The University of Adelaide, December 1993.
[RFC 1567] Mansfield, G., and Kille, S., "X.500 Directory Monitoring MIB", RFC 1567, AIC Systems Laboratory, ISODE Consortium, January 1994.
[RFC 1608] Johannsen, T., Mansfield, G., Kosters, M., and Sataluri, S., "Representing IP Information in the X.500 Directory", RFC 1608, Dresden University, AIC Systems Laboratory, Network Solutions, Inc., AT&T Bell Laboratories, March 1994.
[RFC 1609] Mansfield, G., Johannsen, T., and Knopper, M., "Charting Networks in the X.500 Directory", RFC 1609, AIC Systems Laboratory, Dresden University, Merit Networks, Inc., March 1994.
[RFC 1617] Barker, P., Kille, S., and Lenggenhager, T., "Naming and Structuring Guidelines for X.500 Directory Pilots", RFC 1617, University College London, ISODE Consortium, SWITCH, May 1994.
[RFC 1777] Yeong, W., Howes, T., and Kille, S., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol", RFC 1777, Performance Systems International, University of Michigan, ISODE Consortium, March 1995.
[RFC 1778] Howes, T., Kille, S., Yeong, W., and Robbins, "The String Representation of Standard Attribute Syntaxes", RFC 1778, University of Michigan, ISODE Consortium, Performance Systems International, NeXor Ltd., March 1995.
[RFC 1779] Kille, S., "A String Representation of Distinguished Names", RFC 1779, ISODE Consortium, March 1995.
[RFC 1781] Kille, S., "Using OSI Directory to Achieve User Friendly Naming", RFC 1781, ISODE Consortium, March 1995.
[RFC 1798] Young, A., "Connection-less Lightweight Directory Access Protocol", RFC 1798, ISODE Consortium, June 1995.
[RFC 1801] Kille, S., "MHS Use of the X.500 Directory to support MHS Routing", RFC 1801, ISODE Consortium, June 1995.
[RFC 1803] Wright, R., Getchell, Howes, T., Sataluri, S., Yee, P., and Yeong, W., "Recommendations for an X.500 Production Directory Service", RFC 1803, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, University of Michigan, AT&T Bell Laboratories, NASA Ames Research Center, Performance Systems International, Inc., June 1995.
[RFC 1804] Mansfield, G., Rajeev, P., Raghavan, S., and Howes, T., "Schema Publishing in X.500 Directory", RFC 1804, AIC Laboratories, Hughes Software Systems, Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, University of Michigan, June 1995.
[RFC 1823] Howes, T. and Smith, M., "The LDAP Application Programming Interface", RFC 1823, University of Michigan, August 1995.
Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
Chris Apple
Room 2D-104
AT&T Laboratories
600 Mountain Ave.
Murray Hill, NJ 07974
U.S.A.
e-mail: capple@master.control.att.com
Voice: (908) 582-2409
FAX: (908) 582-6113
Ken Rossen
MCI Systemhouse, Inc.
10 Williamsville Road
Hubbardston Center, MA 01452-1311
U.S.A.
e-mail: kenr@shl.com
Voice: (508) 928-5368
FAX: (508) 928-5399