I can't speak about whether or not this is a good practice, but I recently removed an intermediate organization from my LDAP tree. It was great as a logical entity but in practice it added an another layer to an already complex structure. I've had a great deal of experience with Novell that allows many layers to a directory structure through NDS. It can become very confusing to the average user about where they reside in the directory structure. Keep it as simple as possible. On Mon, 2003-11-10 at 17:11, Shekhar Ayyappan wrote:> Guys, > > I have recently been playing around with directory servers. > > My quick question of the day is as follows. > > I have a directory installed whose root points to o=xyz > > > > So for a user the dn is > > > > cn=user1,ou=users,o=xyz > > > > is this a good practice??? Is it ok to omit the c=nz??? > > I am not goin to hook my directory onto the internet, this is for my > private disposal.. > > Any thoughts guys??? > > > > Cheers and thnx in advance. > > shekhar > > > > ______________________________________________________________________ > This email message and attachments are confidential to our > organisation and subject to legal privilege. If you have received > this email in error, please advise the sender immediately and destroy > the message and any attachments. If you are not the intended recipient > you are notified that any use, distribution, amendment, copying or any > action taken or omitted to be taken in reliance of this message or > attachments is prohibited. You can read our Privacy Policy here: > www.asbbank.co.nz/privacystatement.stm > ______________________________________________________________________-- Kent nasve525@regis.edu kent@wareham.k12.ma.us W 508 291-3510 X122 C 508 317-2755 Tips:----------------------------------------------> "OpenOffice.org ... Stops Word macro viruses DEAD!" "Postgresql.org ... Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster" "Technology is legislation - C. Einfeldt on OO.o discuss list"