On 04/15/15 19:28, Michael Ströder wrote:
dE wrote:
"An object or alias entry is characterized by precisely one
structural object class superclass chain which has a single
structural object class as the most subordinate object class.
This structural object class is referred to as the structural
object class of the entry."
There's a bit of ambiguity with this
"which has a single structural object class as the most subordinate
object
class"
What do you mean by 'most subordinate'? Is it that there must be no
parallel
entries at the same level in the hierarchy?
It's always better to provide a reference to the full text of a
quoted text.
The hierarchy in this case is the the structural object classes
hierarchy,
not the directory information tree (DIT). Read in RFC 4512 about
what SUP in
object class description means:
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4512#section-4.1.1
Note that there's also an attribute type hierarchy defined with SUP.
Yes, I know that.
Actually the question was --
What do you mean by 'most subordinate'? Is it that there must be no
parallel
structural object class at the same level in the class hierarchy?