Implementing the Service Location Protocol
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Directory Filters
The first two directory filters allow only services of types ndap.novell and bindery.novell to be
stored in the Scope Unit container object associated with this scope. The second two directory
filters allow only services with the URLs specified to be stored in the Scope Unit container
object associated with this scope.
INCLUDE((TYPE == ndap.novell))
INCLUDE (TYPE == bindery.novell))
or
INCLUDE((URL == service:ndap.novell:///
GLOBAL_PARTITION1.CORP_TREE.))
INCLUDE (URL == service:ndap.novell:///
GLOBAL_PARTITION2.CORP_TREE))
When the Directory Agent is operating in Local mode, the registration, response, and directory
filters are stored in the local system’s registry and are persistent across system boots.
When the Directory Agent is operating in Directory mode, the registration, response, and directory
filters are stored as part of the Scope Unit directory object defining the filtered scope. The Scope
Unit object has a Registration Filters, Response Filters, and Directory Filters attribute. These
attributes are multivalued of type SYN_CI_STRING. Each INCLUDE and EXCLUDE filter
directive is stored as a separate string in the Registration Filters, Response Filters, or Directory
Filters attribute.
15.5.4 Using the Service Location Protocol Directory Agent
The following scenarios show some of the many options for deploying SLP.
“Scenario 1: Remote Site with a Mixed NetWare and Windows NT Environment” on page 399
“Scenario 2: Remote Office with Windows NT Servers Only” on page 399
“Scenario 3: Using the Directory Agent for a Small Group of Users” on page 400
“Scenario 4: Restricting SLP Information” on page 400
“Scenario 5: Synchronizing SLP Information over a WAN Link” on page 400
“Scenario 6: Replicating SLP Information to a Remote Site” on page 400
“Scenario 7: Running a Directory Agent in Local Mode” on page 400
“Scenario 8: Using the Proxy Feature” on page 401
Scenario 1: Remote Site with a Mixed NetWare and Windows NT Environment
Situation:
A remote office is running NT servers and NetWare clients with no NetWare servers.
The administrator wants the clients to see all the network services from a local server, avoiding
sending on-demand service queries over the slow link.
Solution:
The Directory Agent can be installed on a Windows NT server to allow the clients to see
all the network services from a local server without causing on-demand traffic over the slow link.
Scenario 2: Remote Office with Windows NT Servers Only
Situation:
A remote office is running NT servers, and the administrator wants local clients to see
only a limited set of services.
Summary of Contents for EDIRECTORY 8.8 SP2
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