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Outlook sees group, but no addresses show up.
We've successfully gotten Outlook talking to our OpenLDAP server running
on the latest official fedora core 1 rpm of slapd. There's only one major
problem though: Outlooks sees groups we created, but no addresses are
associated with those groups. Any ideas? I've included below an LDIF
dump of the group we created that was visible and the records pointed to
which didn't show up in Outlook.
dn: ou=outlook,ou=services,dc=patientadvocate,dc=org
ou: outlook
objectClass: organizationalUnit
# IT, outlook, services, patientadvocate.org
dn: cn=IT,ou=outlook,ou=services,dc=patientadvocate,dc=org
cn: IT
objectClass: groupOfNames
member: uid=aaronm,ou=staff,ou=people,dc=patientadvocate,dc=org
member: uid=gregb,ou=staff,ou=people,dc=patientadvocate,dc=org
description: it folk
dn: uid=aaronm,ou=staff,ou=people,dc=patientadvocate,dc=org
uid: aaronm
cn: Aaron Marshall
sn: Marshall
mail: aaronm@patientadvocate.org
objectClass: inetOrgPerson
objectClass: posixAccount
objectClass: top
objectClass: shadowAccount
userPassword:: HAHAHAH
shadowLastChange: 12565
shadowMax: 99999
shadowWarning: 7
loginShell: /bin/bash
uidNumber: 504
gidNumber: 504
homeDirectory: /home/aaronm
l: Newport News
st: VA
postalAddress: 700 Thimble Shoals Blvd, Suite 200
postalCode: 23606
telephoneNumber: 757-873-6668
o: Patient Advocate Foundation
title: IT Director
dn: uid=gregb,ou=staff,ou=people,dc=patientadvocate,dc=org
uid: gregb
cn: gregb
sn: gregb
mail: gregb@patientadvocate.org
objectClass: inetOrgPerson
objectClass: posixAccount
objectClass: top
objectClass: shadowAccount
userPassword:: hahaha
shadowLastChange: 12565
shadowMax: 99999
shadowWarning: 7
loginShell: /bin/bash
uidNumber: 506
gidNumber: 506
homeDirectory: /home/gregb
l: Newport News
st: VA
postalAddress: 700 Thimble Shoals Blvd, Suite 200
postalCode: 23606
telephoneNumber: 757-873-6668
o: Patient Advocate Foundation
--
</chris>
There are two ways of constructing a software design. One way is to make
it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies. And the other way
is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies.
-- C.A.R. Hoare