Jottings about some of the things that keep me amused in my spare time, either observations or items of a creative or constructive nature... (This does not include much about British birds. And you've probably come to the wrong place if you're expecting titillation of any kind!)
Sunday, 1 March 2020
Using NIS with OpenLDAP on a server
Network Information Service (NIS) — formerly known as Yellow Pages (YP) — is an information sharing technology developed by Sun Microsystems in the 1980s for the Unix Operating System. Despite the introduction of an improved system named NISplus in the 1990s, the use of NIS persisted, and became supported by the Linux Operating System as well as Unix. When the time came to upgrade NIS to a more capable technology, the system of choice was often Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), or (ironically) Microsoft’s Active Directory (AD).
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