Kyocera Ai5555 NC-2 Instruction Hand Book - Page 57
Con Using NetWare 4.x NetWare Directory Services
View all Kyocera Ai5555 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 57 highlights
NetWare Configuration Configure Using NetWare 4.x NetWare Directory Services Overview NetWare Directory Services (NDS) offers a different, more advanced approach to network management than previous NetWare versions. Generally, it stores and tracks all network objects. As a rule, all 4.x servers must have NDS loaded in order to function. In this way, every NetWare 4.x server is a Directory server, because it services named Directory objects, such as printers, print servers and print queues. With the appropriate privileges, you can create a print server object, which, once configured in its context (or location) on the network, eliminates the cumbersome setup of print servers on every network server. NDS provides true enterprise networking based on a shared network database rather than on individually defined physical sites. The result is greatly improved print server setup and management. NetWare 4.x also provides backward compatibility for 2.x, 3.x and 4.x print service in Bindery emulation. The Directory Information Base (DIB) is used to store information about servers and services, users, printers, gateways, etc., and is a distributed database, allowing access to data anywhere on the network wherever it is stored. NetWare versions prior to 4.x provide the same data found in the DIB but the data is stored in the NetWare Bindery. DIB was designed with more flexible access, more specific security, and, since it is distributed, it was designed to be partitioned. The Directory uses an object-oriented structure rather than the flat-file structure of the Bindery, and offers network-oriented access, rather than server-oriented access found in the Bindery. The Directory is backward-compatible with the NetWare Bindery through Bindery emulation mode. When Bindery emulation is enabled, Directory Services will accept Bindery requests and respond just as if a Bindery existed on the NetWare server being accessed. 3-36 NetWare Configuration