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Re: Setup syncrepl on Redhat Fedora
Am Tue, 07 Jun 2011 15:15:43 -0400
schrieb Daniel Qian <daniel@up247solution.com>:
> On 11-06-07 1:40 PM, Aaron Richton wrote:
> > On Tue, 7 Jun 2011, Daniel Qian wrote:
> >
> >> Can anyone point out to me how I can add the module required to do
> >> replication on the provider side? I will make a document if I am
> >> able to set it up eventually.
> >
> > You can find examples of using olcModuleLoad to instruct
> > back-config to load the module in the OpenLDAP 2.4 Administrator's
> > Guide. While the directive is not overlay-specific, there is an
> > example that uses syncprov in section 18.3.3, as well as code
> > examples in the "tests" directory.
> >
> > If you're writing a document, it might be good to write back-config
> > examples suitable for some other section(s) of the Admin Guide
> > (perhaps, if you don't choose n-way multimaster, you can contribute
> > whatever you use for your installation)?
> >
> I think I know what I need to get done based on the info I gathered
> on some Ubuntu websites. I just have no idea how those settings fit
> into Redhat layout. Correct me if I am wrong. Basically I need to
> load the module with something like this :
>
> dn: cn=module{0},cn=config
> objectClass: olcModuleList
> cn: module{0}
> olcModuleLoad: {0}back_bdb
> *olcModuleLoad*: {1}*syncprov*
> olcModulePath: /usr/lib64/openldap
>
> and then use the overlay with something like this:
>
> dn: olcOverlay={0}syncprov,*olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config*
> objectClass: olcOverlayConfig
> objectClass: olcConfig
> objectClass: top
> objectClass: olcSyncProvConfig
> olcOverlay: {0}syncprov
> olcSpCheckpoint: 100 10
> olcSpSessionlog: 100
>
> But the question is in what files/folders I should put these
> settings? Fedora has a few database ldif files whose settings get
> loaded into openldap upon restart. Can I do the same with these
> settings as well?
You shouldn't put this data into any file or directory, just load this
information by means of an ldap operation like add or modify. You may
use an ldif file or any decent LDAP editor.
-Dieter
--
Dieter KlÃnter | Systemberatung
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