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Integrated Directory Services Arlene Getchell
Working Group Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
INTERNET-DRAFT Srinivas Sataluri
AT&T Bell Laboratories
October 1993
A Revised Catalog of Available X.500 Implementations
Filename: draft-ietf-ids-catalog-00.txt
Status of this Memo
The goal of this document is to provide information regarding the
availability and capability of implementations of X.500. This memo
is a follow-up to the RFC 1292 - A Catalog of Available X.500
Implementations - edited by Ruth Lang and Russ Wright.
This document is an Internet Draft. Internet Drafts are working
documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its
Areas, and its Working Groups. Note that other groups may also
distribute working documents as Internet Drafts.
Internet Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six
months. Internet Drafts may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by
other documents at any time. It is not appropriate to use
Internet Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than
as a "working draft" or "work in progress."
Please check the I-D abstract listing contained in each Internet
Draft directory to learn the current status of this or any other
Internet Draft.
This Internet Draft expires March 15th, 1994.
Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Comments and critiques of
this document, and new or updated descriptions of X.500
implementations are welcome. Send them to the Integrated Directory
Services (IDS) Working Group (ids@merit.edu) or to the editors.
Abstract
This document is the result of a survey that gathered new or updated
descriptions of currently available implementations of X.500,
including commercial products and openly available offerings. This
document is a revision of RFC 1292. We contacted each contributor in
RFC 1292 and requested an update and published the survey template in
several mailing lists and obtained new product descriptions.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 1]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
This document contains detailed description of twenty (20) X.500
implementations - DSAs, DUAs, and DUA interfaces.
1. Introduction
This document catalogs currently available implementations of X.500,
including commercial products and openly available offerings. For
the purposes of this survey, we classify X.500 products as,
DSA
A DSA is an OSI application process that provides the Directory
functionality,
DUA
A DUA is an OSI application process that represents a user in
accessing the Directory and uses the DAP to communicate with a
DSA, and
DUA Interface
A DUA Interface is an application process that represents a user
in accessing the Directory using either DAP but supporting only
a subset of the DAP functionality or a protocol different from
DAP to communicate with a DSA or DUA.
Section 2 of this document contains a listing of implementations
cross referenced by keyword. This list should aid in identifying
implementations that meet your criteria.
To compile this catalog, the IDS Working Group solicited input from
the X.500 community by surveying several Internet mailing lists,
including: iso@nic.ddn.mil, isode@nic.ddn.mil, osi-ds@cs.ucl.ac.uk,
and ids@merit.edu. We also contacted many people by telephone and
sent the template to several individuals and mailed a floppy disk
containing the survey template to a person who did not have Internet
access.
Readers are encouraged to submit comments regarding both the form and
content of this memo. New submissions are welcome. Please direct
input to the parties as described in the Status of this Memo section.
IDS will produce new versions of this document when a sufficient
number of changes have been received. This will be determined by the
IDS chairpersons.
1.1 Purpose
The growth of existing X.500 pilot activities (e.g., White Pages
Pilot Project) and the advent of new pilots (e.g., AARNet Directory
Services Project, NIST/GSA Pilot Project) and service providers
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 2]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
(e.g., PSI, InterNIC Directory and Database Services) demonstrate
that X.500 is a viable directory service technology for building a
Distributed Internet Directory. This document hopes to provide an
easily accessible source of information on X.500 implementations and
facilitate the continued growth of X.500.
1.2 Scope
This document contains descriptions of both free and commercial X.500
implementations. It does not provide instructions on how to install,
run, or manage these implementations. The descriptions and indices
are provided to make the readers aware of available options and thus
enable more informed choices.
1.3 Disclaimer
Implementation descriptions were written by implementors and vendors,
and not by the editors. We worked with the description authors to
ensure uniformity and readability, but can not guarantee the accuracy
or completeness of the descriptions, or the stability of the
implementations.
1.4 Overview
Section 1 contains introductory information.
Section 2 contains a list of keywords, their definitions, and a cross
reference of the X.500 implementations by these keywords.
Section 3 contains the X.500 implementation descriptions.
Section 4 has a list of references.
Section 5 has the body - "Security issues are not discussed in this
memo."!
Section 6 lists the editors' addresses.
1.5 Acknowledgments
The creation of this catalog would not have been possible without the
efforts of the description authors and the members of the IDS Working
Group. Our special thanks to the editors of RFC 1292, Ruth Lang and
Russ Wright who helped us get started and made key suggestions that
enabled us to learn from their experience.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 3]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
2. Keywords
Keywords are abbreviated attributes of the X.500 implementations.
The list of keywords defined below was derived from the
implementation descriptions themselves. Implementations were indexed
by a keyword either as a result of: (1) explicit, not implied,
reference to a particular capability in the implementation
description text, or (2) input from the implementation description
author(s).
2.1 Keyword Definitions
This section contains keyword definitions. They have been organized
and grouped by functional category. The definitions are ordered
first alphabetically by keyword category, and second alphabetically
by implementation name within keyword category.
2.1.1 Availability
Available via FTP
Implementation is available using FTP.
Commercially Available
This implementation can be purchased.
Free
Available at no charge, although other restrictions may apply.
Limited Availability
Need to contact provider for terms and conditions of
distribution.
Source
Source code is available, potentially at an additional cost.
2.1.2 Compatibility with Proposed Internet Standards
RFC-1202
Implementation supports RFC 1202: Rose, M. T., Directory
Assistance Service. February 1991.
RFC-1249
Implementation supports RFC 1249: Howes, T., M. Smith, and B.
Beecher, DIXIE Protocol Specification, University of Michigan,
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 4]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
August 1991.
RFC-1274
Implementation supports RFC 1274: Barker, P., and S. Kille, The
COSINE and Internet X.500 Schema, University College, London,
England, November 1991.
RFC-1275
Implementation supports RFC 1275: Kille, S., Replication
Requirements to provide an Internet Directory using X.500,
University College, London, England, November 1991.
RFC-1276
Implementation supports RFC 1276: Kille, S., Replication and
Distributed Operations extensions to provide an Internet
Directory using X.500, University College, London, England,
November 1991.
RFC-1277
Implementation supports RFC 1277: Kille, S., Encoding Network
Addresses to support operation over non-OSI lower layers,
University College, London, England, November 1991.
RFC-1278
Implementation supports RFC 1278: Kille, S., A string encoding
of Presentation Address, University College, London, England,
November 1991.
RFC-1279
Implementation supports RFC 1279: Kille, S., X.500 and Domains,
University College, London, England, November 1991.
RFC-1484
Implementation supports RFC 1484: Hardcastle-Kille, S., Using
the OSI Directory to achieve User Friendly Naming, ISODE
Consortium, July 1993.
RFC-1485
Implementation supports RFC 1485: Hardcastle-Kille, S., A String
Representation of Distinguished Names, ISODE Consortium, July
1993.
RFC-1487
Implementation supports RFC 1487: Yeong, W., T. Howes, and S.
Kille, X.500 Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, July 1993.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 5]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
2.1.3 Implementation Type
API
Implementation comes with an application programmer's interface
(i.e., a set of libraries and include files).
DSA Only
Implementation consists of a DSA only. No DUA is included.
DSA/DUA
Both a DSA and DUA are included in this implementation.
DUA Interface
Implementation is a DUA-like program that uses either DAP, but
supporting only a subset of the DAP functionality, or uses a
protocol different from DAP to communicate with a DSA or DUA.
DUA Only
Implementation consists of a DUA only. No DSA is included.
LDAP
DUA interface program uses the Lightweight Directory Access
Protocol (LDAP).
2.1.4 Internetworking Environment
CLNS
Implementation operates over the OSI ConnectionLess Network
Service (CLNS).
CONS
Implementation operates over the OSI Connection-Oriented Network
Service (CONS).
OSI Transport
Implementation operates over one or more OSI transport
protocols.
RFC-1006
Implementation operates over RFC-1006 with TCP/IP transport
service.
X.25
Implementation operates over OSI X.25.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 6]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
2.1.5 Pilot Connectivity
DUA Connectivity
The DUA can be connected to the pilot, and information on any
pilot entry looked up. The DUA is able to display standard
attributes and object classes and those defined in the COSINE
and Internet Schema.
DSA Connectivity
The DSA is connected to the DIT, and information in this DSA is
accessible from any pilot DUA.
2.1.6 Miscellaneous
Included in ISODE
DUAs that are part of ISODE.
Limited Functionality
Survey states that the implementation has some shortcomings or
intended lack of functionality, e.g., omissions were part of the
design to provide an easy-to-use user interface.
Motif
Implementation provides a Motif-style X Window user interface.
Needs ISODE
ISODE is required to compile and/or use this implementation.
OpenLook
Implementation provides an OpenLook-style X Window user
interface.
X Window System
Implementation uses the X Window System to provide its user
interface.
2.1.7 Operating Environment
386
Implementation runs on a 386-based platform.
Bull
Implementation runs on a Bull platform.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 7]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
DEC ULTRIX
Implementation runs under DEC ULTRIX.
DEC Vax OpenVMS
Implementation runs on a DEC VAX platform running OpenVMS.
HP
Implementation runs on an HP platform.
IBM PC
Implementation runs on a PC.
IBM RISC
Implementation runs on IBM's RISC UNIX workstation.
ICL
Implementation runs on an ICL platform.
Macintosh
Implementation runs on a Macintosh.
Multiple Vendor Platforms
Implementation runs on more than one hardware platform.
Sequent
Implementation runs on a Sequent platform.
Solbourne
Implementation runs on a Solbourne platform.
Sun
Implementation runs on a Sun platform.
Tandem
Implementation runs on a Tandem platform.
UNIX
Implementation runs on a generic UNIX platform.
2.2 Implementations Indexed by Keyword
This section contains an index of implementations by keyword. You
can use this list to identify particular implementations that meet
your chosen criteria.
The index is organized as follows: keywords appear in alphabetical
order; implementations characterized by that keyword are listed
alphabetically as well. Note that a "*" is used to indicate that the
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 8]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
particular implementation, or feature of the implementation, may not
be available at this time.
For formatting purposes, we have used the following abbreviations for
implementation names: DEC X.500 DSA (DEC X.500 Directory Server), DEC
X.500 Admin (DEC X.500 Administration Facility), LDAP (University of
Michigan LDAP Implementation), and HP X.500 DD (HP X.500 Distributed
Directory).
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 9]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
386 Commercially Available
PathWay Messaging DEC X.500 DSA
PC-DUA DEC X.500 Admin
UCOM X.500 HP X.500 DD
HP X.500 DUA
API PathWay Messaging
PC-DUA
Custos UCOM X.500
DEC X.500 DSA XT-DUA
DEC X.500 Admin XT-QUIPU
HP X.500 DD
HP X.500 DUA CONS
LDAP
QUIPU DEC X.500 DSA
UCOM X.500 DEC X.500 Admin
HP X.500 DD
Available via FTP HP X.500 DUA
PC-Pages
Custos QUIPU
DE XT-DUA
DOS-DE XT-QUIPU
LDAP
ldap-whois++ DEC ULTRIX
maX.500
Xdi DEC X.500 DSA
DEC X.500 Admin
Bull LDAP
ldap-whois++
UCOM X.500 UCOM X.500
XT-DUA
XT-QUIPU DEC VAX OpenVMS
CLNS DEC X.500 DSA
DEC X.500 Admin
DEC X.500 DSA
DEC X.500 Admin DSA Connectivity
HP X.500 DD
HP X.500 DUA PathWay Messaging
PathWay Messaging QUIPU
UCOM X.500 UCOM X.500
XT-DUA XT-QUIPU
XT-QUIPU
DSA Only
DEC X.500 DSA
XT-QUIPU
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 10]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
DSA/DUA Free
Custos Custos
HP X.500 DD DE
PathWay Messaging DOS-DE
QUIPU LDAP
UCOM X.500 ldap-whois++
maX.500
DUA Connectivity MXLU
QUIPU
LDAP Xdi
maX.500 XLU
MXLU
PathWay Messaging HP
PC-DUA
PC-Pages HP X.500 DD
QUIPU HP X.500 DUA
UCOM X.500 LDAP
Xdi XT-DUA
XLU XT-QUIPU
XT-DUA
IBM PC
DUA Interface
DOS-DE
DE LDAP
DOS-DE PathWay Messaging
LDAP PC-DUA
ldap-whois++ PC-Pages
maX.500
Pathway Messaging IBM RISC
PC-DUA
QuickMailDUA LDAP
UCOM X.500
DUA Only XT-DUA
XT-QUIPU
DEC X.500 Admin
HP X.500 DUA ICL
MXLU
PC-Pages *XT-DUA
Xdi XT-QUIPU
XLU
XT-DUA Included In ISODE
DE
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 11]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
LDAP Multiple Vendor Platforms
DE Custos
DOS-DE DE
LDAP DOS-DE
ldap-whois++ LDAP
maX.500 MXLU
*Pathway Messaging PathWay Messaging
PC-DUA PC-Pages
*PC-Pages QUIPU
UCOM X.500
Limited Availability Xdi
XLU
PC-Pages XT-DUA
QuickMailDUA XT-QUIPU
Limited Functionality Needs ISODE
Custos Custos
Xdi DE
MXLU
Macintosh QuickMailDUA
Xdi
LDAP XLU
maX.500
PathWay Messaging OpenLook
Motif UCOM X.500
XT-DUA
DEC X.500 Admin
MXLU OSI Transport
UCOM X.500
XT-DUA Custos
DEC X.500 DSA
DEC X.500 Admin
HP X.500 DD
HP X.500 DUA
PathWay Messaging
PC-Pages
QUIPU
XT-DUA
XT-QUIPU
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 12]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
RFC-1006 RFC-1277
Custos DEC X.500 DSA
DEC X.500 DSA DEC X.500 Admin
DEC X.500 Admin PathWay Messaging
LDAP QUIPU
PathWay Messaging UCOM X.500
PC-Pages XT-DUA
QUIPU XT-QUIPU
UCOM X.500
XT-DUA RFC-1278
XT-QUIPU
DEC X.500 DSA
RFC-1202 DEC X.500 Admin
PathWay Messaging
PathWay Messaging QUIPU
UCOM X.500
RFC-1274 XT-DUA
XT-QUIPU
DE
DEC X.500 DSA RFC-1279
DEC X.500 Admin
DOS-DE QUIPU
LDAP UCOM X.500
maX.500 XT-QUIPU
QuickMailDUA
QUIPU RFC-1484
UCOM X.500
Xdi DE
XT-DUA DOS-DE
XT-QUIPU *LDAP
*maX.500
RFC-1275 QUIPU
Xdi
QUIPU XT-DUA
XT-QUIPU
RFC-1276
RFC-1485
QUIPU
XT-QUIPU LDAP
maX.500
QUIPU
XT-QUIPU
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 13]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
RFC-1487 UNIX
DE Custos
DOS-DE DE
LDAP ldap-whois++
ldap-whois++ MXLU
maX.500 QUIPU
PC-DUA UCOM X.500
QUIPU Xdi
XLU
Sequent
X Window System
UCOM X.500
MXLU
Solbourne Xdi
XLU
XT-DUA XT-DUA
XT-QUIPU
X.25
Source
DEC X.500 DSA
DE DEC X.500 Admin
LDAP HP X.500 DD
MXLU HP X.500 DUA
QUIPU PathWay Messaging
Xdi QUIPU
XLU UCOM X.500
XT-DUA
Sun XT-QUIPU
Custos
LDAP
ldap-whois++
PathWay Messaging
QuickMailDUA
QUIPU
UCOM X.500
Xdi
XT-DUA
XT-QUIPU
Tandem
UCOM X.500
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 14]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
3. Implementation Descriptions
In the following pages you will find descriptions of X.500
implementations listed in alphabetical order. In the case of name
collisions, the name of the responsible organization, in square
brackets, has been used to distinguish the implementations. Note
that throughout this section, the page header reflects the name of
the implementation, not the date of the document. The descriptions
follow a common format, as described below:
NAME
The name of the X.500 implementation and the name of the
responsible organization. Implementations with a registered
trademark indicate this by appending "(tm)", e.g., GeeWhiz(tm).
KEYWORDS
A list of the keywords defined in Section 2 that have been used
to cross reference this implementation.
ABSTRACT
A brief description of the application. This section may
optionally contain a list of the pilot projects in which the
application is being used.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
A statement of compliance with respect to the 1988 CCITT
Recommendations X.500-X.521 [CCITT-88], specifically Section 9
of X.519, or the 1988 NIST OIW Stable Implementation Agreements
[NIST-88].
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
A statement of compliance with respect to the several proposed
Internet Standards.
INTEROPERABILITY
A list of other DUAs and DSAs with which this implementation can
interoperate.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Describes the level of connectivity it can offer to the pilot
directory service operational on the Internet in North America,
and to pilots co-ordinated by the PARADISE project in Europe.
Levels of connectivity are: Not Tested, None, DUA Connectivity,
and DSA Connectivity.
BUGS
A warning on known problems and/or instructions on how to report
bugs.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 15]
INTERNET-DRAFT October 1993
CAVEATS AND GENERAL LIMITATIONS
A warning about possible side effects or shortcomings, e.g., a
feature that works on one platform but not another.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
A list of environments in which this implementation can be used,
e.g., RFC-1006 with TCP/IP, TP0 or TP4 with X.25.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
A list of hardware platforms on which this application runs, any
additional boards or processors required, and any special
suggested or required configuration options.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
A list of operating systems, window systems, databases, or
unbundled software packages required to run this application.
AVAILABILITY
A statement regarding the availability of the software (free or
commercially available), a description of how to obtain the
software, and (optionally) a statement regarding distribution
conditions and restrictions.
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
The month and year within which this implementation description
was last modified.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 16]
INTERNET-DRAFT Custos
NAME
Custos
National Institute of Standards and Technology
KEYWORDS
API, Available via FTP, DSA/DUA, Free, Limited Functionality,
Multiple Vendor Platforms, Needs ISODE, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, Sun,
UNIX
ABSTRACT
The implementation consists of a set DUA library routines, a terminal
interface, and a DSA. The implementation was developed in C on Sun
SPARCstations under SunOS 4.1.1. All underlying services are provided
by the ISODE development package. The development package is also
used for encoding and decoding ASN.1 data as well as for other data
manipulation services. Using the ISODE package the implementation can
be run over both TCP/IP and OSI protocols.
The DSA provides full support for both DAP and DSP protocols,
conformant with ISO 9594 / CCITT X.500 standards. The DIB is
maintained using a locally developed relational database system. The
interface to the database system consists of a set of sql-like C
functions. These are designed to allow straightforward replacement
of the local database system with a more powerful commercial system.
To achieve better performance several options are supported that
permit loading of selected portions of the database in core. When
these options are selected data can be retrieved more quickly from in
core tables; all modifications to the DIB are directly reflected in
the in core tables and the database.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
Custos is fully compliant with the 1988 Standard with the following
omissions: Search request decomposition Modify Entry operation Modify
RDN operation Abandon operation Strong Authentication Schema checking
There are no present plans to extend Custos to include the 1992 X.500
extensions.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
[No information provided--Ed.]
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 17]
INTERNET-DRAFT Custos
INTEROPERABILITY
Have successfully interoperated with QUIPU and OSIWARE over the DAP.
No DSP interoperability testing has been done.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Limited DUA and DSA connectivity to PSI White Pages Project.
BUGS
Bugs may be reported to the general discussion list,
x500@osi.ncsl.nist.gov.
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
No limitations on file sizes, etc. The only side effects to creating
large files should be in the area of performance. Specifically,
optimization requires loading parts of the DIB in core so greater
memory requirements will be necessary for achieving better
performance with a large database. Any platform the implementation
can be ported to (generally any platform ISODE can be ported to)
should support all features.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
RFC-1006; TP4/CLNP (SunLinkOSI) over 802 and X.25 (SunLink X.25).
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
It's only been run on Sun 3 and SPARC, but there are no known reasons
why it shouldn't run on any hardware running the ISODE software.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
It requires UNIX and the ISODE software package. It's been developed
and tested with ISODE version 7.0 and Sun OS version 4.1.1. Uses a
locally developed relational DBMS that should be easily replaceable
with commercially available relational systems.
AVAILABILITY
Custos, the NIST implementation of X.500, the OSI Directory, is
available for anonymous ftp from osi.ncsl.nist.gov (129.6.48.100)
using the convention (user name = anonymous, password = ident). The
software is available in two forms: a tar file and a compressed tar
file.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 18]
INTERNET-DRAFT Custos
./pub/directory/CustosRel_0.2.tar
./pub/directory/CustosRel_0.2.tar.Z
Note: permissions on the directory ./pub/directory are set so that
you will be able to "get" files whose names you can provide. However,
you will not be able to "ls" the contents of the directory.
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
March 5th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 19]
INTERNET-DRAFT DE
NAME
DE
KEYWORDS
Available via FTP, DUA Interface, Free, Included in ISODE, LDAP,
Multiple Vendor Platforms, Needs ISODE, RFC-1274, RFC-1484, RFC-1487,
Source, UNIX
ABSTRACT
DE (Directory Enquiries) is intended to be a simple-to-use DUA
interface, suitable for the naive user, and suitable for running as a
public access dua. it will work on any terminal. The user is
presented with a series of (verbose) prompts asking for person's
name; department; organization; country. There is extensive on-line
help. The matching algorithms are such that near matches are
presented to the user before less good matches.
A lot of development has been done on the interface since it was
first described in RFC1292. The most significant enhancement has
been to add power searching - this allows a user to search for an
entry even when they do not know the name of the organisation in
which the person works - you still have to specify the country. DE
now provides UFN style searching. It is now possible to search
locality entries. DE now uses slightly different search algorithms
depending on whether it is accessing part of the Directory mastered
by a Quipu DSA - Quipu DSAs tend to use lots of replication and so
encourage searching. An experimental feature is intended to give the
user more feedback on the likely response time to a query - DE
maintains a database of past information availability and DSA
responsiveness. Translations exist into at least 4 different
languages.
DE runs over ISODE DAP and University of Michigan LDAP. There is a
version of DE, called DOS-DE, which has been ported to DOS, and this
uses LDAP.
DE was funded by the COSINE PARADISE project, and DE is used as the
PARADISE public access dua. You can test the software by telnet to
128.86.8.56 and logging in as dua -- no password required.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
n/a
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 20]
INTERNET-DRAFT DE
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
[RFC 1274], [RFC 1484], [RFC 1487]
INTEROPERABILITY
n/a
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
n/a (This is more a DUA rather than an interface question) The
interface is widely used in the global pilot.
BUGS
Doesn't handle aliases well when power searching.
Send bug reports to:
p.barker@cs.ucl.ac.uk
helpdesk@paradise.ulcc.ac.uk
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
DE tries to cater well for the general case, at the expense of not
dealing with the less typical. The main manifestation of this is
that the current version does not handle searching under localities
very well.
It is not possible to display photographs or reproduce sound
attributes.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
As for ISODE.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
As for ISODE.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
As for ISODE.
AVAILABILITY
The software is openly available as part of ISODE-8.0. An enhanced
version is available as part of the PARADISE project upgrade.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 21]
INTERNET-DRAFT DE
Both these versions are available by FTP from
<ftp.paradise.ulcc.ac.uk>, as src/isode-8.tar.Z and src/isode-
paradise.tar.Z.
The very latest code will be made available with the ISODE Consortium
release of ISODE. It is hoped it will be freely available to all.
Contact:
helpdesk@paradise.ulcc.ac.uk
p.barker@cs.ucl.ac.uk
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
March 12th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 22]
INTERNET-DRAFT DEC DSA
NAME
DEC X.500 Directory Server
Digital Equipment Corporation
KEYWORDS
API, CLNS, Commercially Available, CONS, DEC ULTRIX, DEC VAX OpenVMS,
DSA Only, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1277, RFC-1278, X.25
ABSTRACT
The DEC X.500 Directory Server product provides a high performance
Directory System Agent implemented according to the 1993 edition of
ISO/IEC 9594 and the CCITT X.500 series of Recommendations.
Specific features provided include:
(1) Integrated multi-protocol support allowing concurrent DAP and DSP
access over OSI and TCP/IP (using RFC1006) protocols.
(2) Indexed database supports high-performance searching and
sophisticated matching including approximate match.
(3) Based on the 1993 edition Extended Information Models.
(4) Support for chaining and referrals in support of a distributed
Directory Information Base.
(5) Support for the 1993 edition Simplified Access Control scheme.
(6) Configurable schema based on the 1993 edition (including
attributes, object classes, structure rules, name forms).
(7) Support for a simple Shadowing protocol to enhance read
availability.
(8) Remote management facilities to configure and control DSAs and log
significant events.
(9) Provides the X/OPEN XDS/XOM Application Program Interface so that
customers can construct their own DUA applications.
For Directory User Agent facilities see the associated entry for the
DEC X.500 Administration Facility
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
Conformance with respect to clause 9.2 of ISO/IEC 9594-5:1993:
(1) Supports the directoryAccessAC (DAP) and directorySystemAC (DSP)
application contexts.
(2) The DSA is capable of acting as a first-level DSA.
(3) Chaining is supported.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 23]
INTERNET-DRAFT DEC DSA
(4) Bind security levels of simple (unprotected password) and none
are supported.
(5) All attribute types defined in ISO/IEC 9594-6:1993 are supported
except for 1993 edition supertypes and collective attributes and
EnhancedSearchGuide. Customers can define new attribute types.
UNIVERSAL STRING is not supported for attributed based on
DirectoryString.
(6) All object classes defined in ISO/IEC 9594-7:1993 are supported.
Customers can define new object classes.
(7) The following operational attributes are supported:
governingStructureRule
createTimestamp
modifyTimestamp
myAccessPoint
superiorKnowledge
supplierKnowledge
consumerKnowledge
specificKnowledge
dseType
PrescriptiveACI
(8) Dynamic modification of object class is permitted
(9) A subset of Simplified Access Control is supported.
(10) All name forms defined in ISO/IEC 9594-7:1993 are supported.
Customers can defined new name forms and structure rules.
The X.500 Directory Server is compatible with and interworks with
1988 edition DUAs and DSAs. It is implemented to conform to relevant
NIST OIW and EWOS agreements and the X.500 Implementors Guide.
For details contact Digital.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
Supports RFC 1006, RFC 1274, RFC 1277 and RFC 1278
INTEROPERABILITY
All interoperability test results will be available on request from
Digital. Interoperability testing is being undertaken using the
harmonized OSIone X.500 test suite to which both OSInet and EurOSInet
have been key contributors.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Digital is actively involved in both public and private pilots of
X.500.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 24]
INTERNET-DRAFT DEC DSA
BUGS
[No information provided--Ed.]
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
[No information provided--Ed.]
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
The DEC X.500 Directory Service V1.0 operates over:
* RFC 1006 over TCP/IP on ULTRIX platforms.
* OSI TP0, TP2 and TP4 over CLNS and CONS as appropriate on ULTRIX
and OpenVMS platforms
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
The DEC X.500 Directory Service V1.0 runs on:
* VAX processors supported by OpenVMS
* RISC processors supported by ULTRIX
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
The DEC X.500 Directory Service V1.0 runs on:
* OpenVMS/VAX V5.5-2 or later running DECnet-VAX Extensions V5.4
* ULTRIX/RISC V4.2 or later running DECnet/OSI for ULTRIX, V5.1 or
later.
For availability on other hardware and software platforms please
contact Digital.
AVAILABILITY
The DEC X.500 Directory Service is commercially available from
Digital Equipment Corporation. For further information please
contact your local Digital office, or:
Gail Shlansky, Product Manager:
Tel: +1 508 486 5138
email: gail.shlansky@lkg.mts.dec.com
Digital Equipment Corporation
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 25]
INTERNET-DRAFT DEC DSA
Networks and Communications Engineering
550 King Street
Littleton, MA. 01460-1289
USA
DATE LAST UPDATED
August 2nd, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 26]
INTERNET-DRAFT DEC X.500 Administration Facility
NAME
DEC X.500 Administration Facility
Digital Equipment Corporation
KEYWORDS
API, CLNS, Commercially Available, CONS, DEC ULTRIX, DEC VAX OpenVMS,
DUA Only, Motif, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1277, RFC-
1278, X.25
ABSTRACT
The DEC X.500 Administration Facility product provides both command
line and Motif interfaces to manage the information stored in the
X.500 directory.
Specific features provided include:
(1) Multi-protocol support allowing DAP access over OSI and
TCP/IP (using RFC1006) protocols.
(2) Driven off the same configurable schema information as the DEC
X.500 Directory Service.
(3) Supports command line and OSF Motif interface styles.
(4) Provides access to all X.500 services.
Specific features of the OSF Motif interface include:
(1) Supports two ways of accessing directory information, either by
browsing the directory tree or by searching.
(2) Easy-to-use search based on customer-extensible set of predefined
filters.
(3) Window layouts and text fully extensible, based on the schema, to
support customer-defined object classes and attributes.
(4) Easy-to-use forms based method for creating and modifying entries
that simplifies use of the X.500 services.
See also the entry for the DEC X.500 Directory Service.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
Conformance with respect to clause 9.1 of ISO/IEC 9594-5:1993:
(1) Supports the all operations of the directoryAccessAC application
context.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 27]
INTERNET-DRAFT DEC X.500 Administration Facility
(2) Bind security levels of none and simple (unprotected passwords).
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
Supports RFC 1006, RFC 1274, RFC 1277 and RFC 1278
INTEROPERABILITY
Interoperability test results will be available on request from
Digital. Interoperability testing is being undertaken using the
harmonized OSIone X.500 test suite to which both OSInet and EurOSInet
have been key contributors.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Digital is actively involved in both public and private pilots of
X.500.
BUGS
[No information provided--Ed.]
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
[No information provided--Ed.]
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
The DEC X.500 Administration Facility operates over:
* RFC 1006 over TCP/IP on ULTRIX platforms.
* OSI TP0, TP2 and TP4 over CLNS and CONS as appropriate on
ULTRIX and OpenVMS platforms
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
The DEC X.500 Administration Facility V1.0 runs on:
* VAX processors supported by OpenVMS
* RISC processors supported by ULTRIX
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
The DEC X.500 Administration Facility V1.0 runs on:
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 28]
INTERNET-DRAFT DEC X.500 Administration Facility
* OpenVMS/VAX V5.5-2 or later running DECnet-VAX Extensions V5.4
* ULTRIX/RISC V4.2 or later running DECnet/OSI for ULTRIX, V5.1 or
later.
For availability on other hardware and software platforms please
contact Digital.
AVAILABILITY
The DEC X.500 Administration Facility is commercially available from
Digital Equipment Corporation. For further information please
contact your local Digital office, or:
Gail Shlansky, Product Manager:
Tel: +1 508 486 5138
email: gail.shlansky@lkg.mts.dec.com
Digital Equipment Corporation
Networks and Communications Engineering
550 King Street
Littleton, MA. 01460-1289
USA
DATE LAST UPDATED
August 2nd, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 29]
INTERNET-DRAFT DOS-DE
NAME
DOS-DE
University of Bath
KEYWORDS
Available via FTP, DUA Interface, Free, IBM PC, LDAP, Multiple Vendor
Platforms, RFC-1274, RFC-1484, RFC-1487
ABSTRACT
DOS-DE (DOS Directory Enquiries) is intended to be a simple-to-use
DUA interface suitable for the naive user. It is an MS-DOS port of
the standard UNIX DE implementation - see the entry on DE for full
details. (All of the features DE are supported apart from the
experimental `Quality of Service' code).
The user is presented with a series of (verbose) prompts asking for
person's name; department; organization; country. There is extensive
on-line help. The matching algorithms are such that near matches are
presented to the user before less good matches. `Power searching' is
also available - this allows a user to search for an entry even when
they do not know the name of the organisation in which the person
works - you still have to specify the country. DOS-DE provides UFN
style searching. It is also possible to search locality entries.
DOS-DE uses slightly different search algorithms depending on whether
it is accessing part of the Directory mastered by a Quipu DSA - Quipu
DSAs tend to use lots of replication and so encourage searching.
DOS-DE runs over the University of Michigan LDAP.
DE was funded by the COSINE PARADISE project. DOS-DE was developed
by Andy Powell at the University of Bath.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
n/a
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
[RFC 1274], [RFC 1484], [RFC 1487]
INTEROPERABILITY
n/a
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 30]
INTERNET-DRAFT DOS-DE
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
n/a
BUGS
Doesn't handle aliases well when power searching.
Send bug reports to:
A.Powell@bath.ac.uk
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
DOS-DE tries to cater well for the general case, at the expense of
not dealing with the less typical. The main manifestation of this is
that the current version does not handle searching under localities
very well.
It is not possible to display photographs or reproduce sound
attributes.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
University of Michigan LDAP.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
IBM PC/AT/XT and compatibles.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
LDAP for MS-DOS running over the NCSA Telnet stack or SUN's PCNFS
version 4.1 or Novell's LAN Workplace (LWP).
AVAILABILITY
The software is openly available by FTP from ftp.bath.ac.uk, as
pub/x500/dosde.zip.
The very latest code will be made available with the ISODE Consortium
release of ISODE. It is hoped it will be freely available to all.
Contact:
A.Powell@bath.ac.uk
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 31]
INTERNET-DRAFT DOS-DE
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
March 18th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 32]
INTERNET-DRAFT HP X.500 Distributed Directory Products
NAME
HP X.500 Distributed Directory Products
Hewlett Packard
KEYWORDS
API, CLNS, Commercially Available, CONS, DSA/DUA, DUA only, HP, OSI
Transport, X.25
ABSTRACT
HP X.500 Distributed Directory. Its main components are:
DUA, and DUA Interface,
DSA and DIB support,
X.500 Address Lookup,
X/Open Application Tool Kit API (XAT) for XDS/XOM Interface,
X.500 High Level API (X5HLAPI) for XDS/XOM Interface.
HP X.500 DUA. Its main components are:
DUA, and DUA Interface,
X.500 Address Look-up,
X/Open Application Tool Kit API (XAT) for XDS/XOM Interface,
X.500 High Level API (X5HLAPI) for XDS/XOM Interface.
HP X.500 Distributed Directory is based on the 1988 CCITT X.500
standard. HP X.500 can be used for accessing names and electronic
mail addresses for multi-vendor messaging backbone networks. HP X.500
can also be used for the development of networked applications
requiring distributed directory functionality.
HP OpenMail users can access the enterprise wide HP X.500 distributed
directory directly from the HP OpenMail user interface, and select
X.500 addresses for mailing. HP-UX Sendmail users can access
electronic mail addresses from a X.500 server over a TCP/IP network.
Users of non-HP e-mail systems can access data stored in the X.500
Directory using X.500 Address Look-up. X.500 Address Look-up has an
easy to use interface, and phonetic search capability.
HP X.500 Distributed Directory includes a complete multi-threaded DUA
and DSA. The X.500 DIB is built on a database which has been
optimized for X.500 performance. HP X.500 contains full support for
DAP and DSP protocols.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 33]
INTERNET-DRAFT HP X.500 Distributed Directory Products
Data Shadowing and security access control of HP X.500 Distributed
Directory allow higher performance, and easier management of its DIB
database in a global environment.
HP X.500 Distributed Directory has menu driven administration and
user interface tools. The tools simplify directory configuration and
data retrieval. It supports X/Open X.500 APIs (XDS and XOM), and high
level APIs on top of XDS to allow developers to write their own X.500
based applications.
HP X.500 Distributed Directory supports comprehensive tracing and
logging facilities for quick diagnosis and resolution of problems. HP
also provides a rich set of troubleshooting tools to check the
interoperability of the network at various layers of the OSI stack.
COMPLIANCE
HP X.500 Distributed Directory complies with the following standards:
CCITT X.501: The Directory - Models
CCITT X.509: The Directory - Authentications Framework*
CCITT X.511: The Directory - Abstract Service Definition
CCITT X.518: The Directory - Procedures for Distributed
Operations
CCITT X.519: The Directory - Protocol Specifications
CCITT X.520: The Directory - Selected Attribute Types
CCITT X.521: The Directory - Selected Object Classes
CCITT X.219: Remote Operations - Model, Notation and Service
Definition
CCITT X.229: Remote Operations - Protocol Specifications
*x.509 describes simple and strong authentication. HP X.500
Distributed
Directory supports simple authentication. Strong authentication
is not
supported in the current release due to limited market demand.
HP X.500 Distributed Directory will comply with NIST and EWOS
directory functional profiles. Based on factors such as market needs
and NIST recommendations, HP will implement subsets of 1992 CCITT
functionality in a phased approach.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
[No information provided--Ed.]
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 34]
INTERNET-DRAFT HP X.500 Distributed Directory Products
INTEROPERABILITY
HP has done some unofficial interoperability testing. HP would
welcome suggestions on priorities for vendor interoperability
testing.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
[No information provided--Ed.]
BUGS
[No information provided--Ed.]
LIMITATIONS
HP X.500 Distributed Directory supports up to 30 DSA connections at
one time. This limit could be increased in the future if needed.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
HP X.500 Distributed Directory resides on an OSI stack, and can be
used in 802.3 LAN, or X.25 CLNS or CONS environment. HP is
investigating implementing X.500 for the TCP/IP environment.
HARDWARE PLATFORMs
HP X.500 Distributed Directory is available on HP 9000 Series 800
family of high performance servers which are scalable platform.
The HP X.500 Address Look-up facility is also available for the HP
9000 Series 300 and Series 700 for customers who have purchased the
X.500 product.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
HP X.500 Distributed Directory requires the following software
environment: HP-UX Operating System 8.0 or later OSI Transport
Services/9000 for the Series 800 HP Lan Link or HP X.25 product
Network Tracing and Logging ANSI C compiler (for the HP/XDS API)
AVAILABILITY
HP X.500 Distributed Directory is commercial available. The product
can be ordered through HP Sales offices. The ordering numbers are:
P/N J2152A
HP X.500 Distributed Directory/9000 for the Series 800.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 35]
INTERNET-DRAFT HP X.500 Distributed Directory Products
Product contains DSA server and DUA client.
P/N J2153A
HP X.500 DUA/9000 for the Series 800.
Product contains only DUA client.
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
August 16th, 1993.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 36]
INTERNET-DRAFT University of Michigan LDAP Implementation
NAME
University of Michigan LDAP Implementation
KEYWORDS
API, Available via FTP, DEC ULTRIX, DUA Connectivity, DUA Interface,
Free, HP, IBM PC, IBM RISC, LDAP, Macintosh, Multiple Vendor
Platforms, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1484, RFC-1485, RFC-1487, Source,
Sun
ABSTRACT
LDAP is the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol. It gives X.500
access to platforms that have only TCP/IP access, using simplified
BER encoding of many X.500 data elements. LDAP is currently a
proposed Internet Standard. The LDAP server is an intermediate
protocol server that communicates with Internet clients on one side
using the simple TCP-based LDAP protocol and an X.500 DSA on the
other side using the Directory Access Protocol (DAP). A subset of
the X.500 DAP is exported to the clients through the LDAP protocol.
The U-M LDAP distribution contains the following components: LDAP
server LDAP client library, including both synchronous and
asynchronous APIs Lightweight BER library, including an API that
supports a printf/scanf-like interface Various LDAP client programs,
including a finger daemon (xfingerd), gopher to X.500 gateway
(go500gw), command-line DUA (ud), e-mail query server (rcpt500), and
an X.500 mailer (mail500)
COMPLIANCE
The U-M LDAP distribution is a complete implementation of the LDAP
protocol. The LDAP protocol does not support access to all X.500
features and operations. The operations supported are bind, search,
compare, add, delete, modify, modify RDN, and abandon. Note that
read and list operations can be emulated using the search operation.
Size and time limits may be specified, as may alias dereferencing and
searching, but all X.500 service controls are not supported.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
Compliant with [RFC 1485], [RFC 1487], [RFC 1274], and preliminary
support is included for [RFC 1484].
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 37]
INTERNET-DRAFT University of Michigan LDAP Implementation
INTEROPERABILITY
The current implementation of the LDAP server is known to work with
the QUIPU DSA and DAP library.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
DUA connectivity should be possible to all pilots, though only
AARNET, PARADISE, and PSI White Pages Project have actually been
tried.
BUGS
Bug reports should be sent to bug-ldap@umich.edu.
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
None, aside from those mentioned above under completeness.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
LDAP clients use TCP to communicate with the LDAP server. The LDAP
server normally uses RFC 1006 with TCP/IP to communicate with the
DSA, though any other transport mechanism for DSA communication
supported by ISODE should be possible.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
The LDAP server is known to run on Sun 3 and Sun 4 platforms DEC's,
HP's, and RS 6000's. The LDAP client libraries and some clients have
been ported to the Macintosh and the PC.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
The LDAP server and clients are known to run under and SunOS 4.1.x,
ULTRIX, HP-UX, and AIX. The LDAP client libraries also work under
Macintosh System 6.0 or higher and MS-DOS 5.0.
AVAILABILITY
This software is openly available. It may be obtained by anonymous
FTP from terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu in the x500 directory.
Documentation on the LDAP and lightweight BER libraries is provided
in the form of man pages distributed with the source code. More
information can be obtained from ldap-support@umich.edu.
This software was developed at the University of Michigan by Tim
Howes with help from Mark Smith and Bryan Beecher, as well as many
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 38]
INTERNET-DRAFT University of Michigan LDAP Implementation
others around the Internet. It is subject to the following
copyright.
Copyright (c) 1993 Regents of the University of Michigan. All rights
reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are
permitted provided that this notice is preserved and that due credit
is given to the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. The name of the
University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived
from this software without specific prior written permission. This
software is provided ``as is'' without express or implied warranty.
DATE LAST UPDATED OR CHECKED
March 13th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 39]
INTERNET-DRAFT ldap-whois++
NAME
ldap-whois++
KEYWORDS
Available via FTP, DEC ULTRIX, DUA Interface, Free, LDAP, RFC-1487,
Sun, UNIX
ABSTRACT
ldap-whois++ is a dua interface that implements the IETF WNILS draft
whois++ proposal using the LDAP libraries developed by the University
of Michigan.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
N/A
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
RFC 1487
IETF WNILS WG Whois++ Architecture Draft
INTEROPERABILITY
N/A
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
There are a number of servers running across the Internet.
BUGS
None reported.
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
Based on an early draft of the Whois++ Architecture Document so there
may be some inconsistencies with the latest draft.
It is considered a "beta" release due to the volatility of the
whois++ work. Once there is a whois++ RFC then a real release will
be made.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 40]
INTERNET-DRAFT ldap-whois++
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
N/A
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
DEC RISC, SUN RISC
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
ULTRIX 4.3, SunOS 4.1.x
AVAILABILITY
Available via anonymous ftp from ftp.adelaide.edu.au as
pub/whois/whois++beta.tar.Z.
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
Aug 3rd, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 41]
INTERNET-DRAFT maX.500
NAME
University of Michigan maX.500 Macintosh DUA Interface
KEYWORDS
Available via FTP, DUA Connectivity, DUA Interface, Free, LDAP,
Macintosh, RFC-1274,RFC-1484, RFC-1485, RFC-1487
ABSTRACT
maX.500 is a Directory User Agent for Apple Macintosh. It is
currently at version 2.0, which uses the Lightweight Directory Access
Protocol (LDAP) over TCP/IP to access The Directory. maX.500 can be
used to search for, view, create, delete, and modify entries. It
supports viewing of textual information, playing of audio, and
viewing of black and white (fax) and color (JPEG) images.
maX.500 is a native Macintosh application, and as such has a friendly
interface. It requires System Software version 6.0.5 or later and
Apple's MacTCP control panel.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
maX.500 works over LDAP, and is subject to LDAP's limitations. The
X.500 bind, search, compare, add, delete, abandon, and modify
operations are used by maX.500. Size and time limits may be
specified, as may alias dereferencing and searching.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
Compliant with [RFC 1485], [RFC 1487], [RFC 1274], and preliminary
support is included for [RFC 1484] (same as U-M LDAP)
INTEROPERABILITY
maX.500 2.0 is known to work with the U-M LDAP server. It has been
used successfully with the QUIPU DSA and others.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
DUA connectivity should be possible to all pilots, though only
AARNET, PARADISE, and PSI White Pages Project have actually been
tried.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 42]
INTERNET-DRAFT maX.500
BUGS
Bug reports should be sent to max500-bugs@umich.edu.
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
maX.500 does not support modification of "photo" (fax), "jpegPhoto",
or "audio" attributes. Modify RDN is also unsupported.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
maX.500 is an LDAP client, and as such is uses TCP to communicate
with the LDAP server. Apple's MacTCP control panel is required on
the Macintosh.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
maX.500 runs on Apple Macintosh Plus or later computers. It requires
1MB of RAM.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
maX.500 requires Apple System Software 6.0.5 or later (System 7
preferred) and MacTCP 1.1 or later (1.1.1 preferred).
AVAILABILITY
This software is openly available. It may be obtained by anonymous
FTP from terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu in the x500 directory. More
information can be obtained from ldap-support@umich.edu.
This software was developed at the University of Michigan by Mark
Smith with help from Tim Howes and many others around the Internet.
It is subject to the following copyright:
Copyright (c) 1993 Regents of the University of Michigan. All
rights reserved. Redistribution and use in binary forms is
permitted provided that this notice is preserved and that due
credit is given to the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. The
name of the University may not be used to endorse or promote
products derived from this software without specific prior written
permission. This software is provided ``as is'' without express or
implied warranty.
DATE LAST UPDATED OR CHECKED
July 26th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 43]
INTERNET-DRAFT MXLU
NAME
MXLU
Brunel University, UK
KEYWORDS
DUA Connectivity, DUA Only, Free, Motif, Multiple Vendor Platforms,
Needs ISODE, Source, UNIX, X Window System
ABSTRACT
MXLU (Motif/X LookUp) is an X.500 DUA interface for the X Window
System using Motif.
Ported from the Athena widgets version, MXLU can be configured for
many different styles of interaction. Example configurations are
provided for single window and multiple window use.
MXLU implements the `User-Friendly Naming' search strategy and also
has a form-filling search mode. Asynchronous directory operations are
used.
Full user friendly add and modify functions are provided, with the
ability to tailor the modify screen to present simple subsets of the
available attributes.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
88 Standard compliant: Strong authentication not yet implemented. No
plans for support of the 1992 Standard.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
No plans at present.
INTEROPERABILITY
[No information provided--Ed.]
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
DUA Connectivity: The interface is in use in the UK Academic
Directory Pilot.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 44]
INTERNET-DRAFT MXLU
BUGS
Bugs should be reported to x500@brunel.ac.uk.
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
[No information provided--Ed.]
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
As ISODE.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
Most UNIX machines.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
UNIX
Motif 1.1 >
ISODE/QUIPU (version 8.0 >)
AVAILABILITY
Sources are freely available for commercial or non-commercial use.
Contacts.
Postal Address:
Andrew Findlay
Computing and Media Systems
Brunel University
Cleveland Road
Uxbridge, Middlesex
UB8 3PH
UK
E-mail: x500@brunel.ac.uk.
Fax: +44 895 32806 (Andrew Findlay)
Telephone: +44 895 203066 (Andrew Findlay)
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
March 1st, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 45]
INTERNET-DRAFT PathWay Messaging
NAME
PathWay Messaging
KEYWORDS
386, CLNS, Commercially Available, DSA Connectivity, DSA/DUA, DUA
Connectivity, DUA Interface, IBM PC, LDAP, Macintosh, Multiple Vendor
Platforms, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1202, RFC-1277, RFC-1278,
Sun, X.25
ABSTRACT
PathWay Messaging Services is a full X.400 MTA and X.400-Internet
gateway that includes an integrated X.500 DSA/DUA. It supports full
DUA and DSA functions as well as full DAP and DSP protocols specified
in X.519. The DSA may be used exclusively for enterprise-wide
messaging, or as a general purpose X.500 DSA. The product has
successfully participated in OSInet X.500 I-Lab interoperability
tests.
PathWay Messenger is an email application for desktop class machines
with a limited functionality DUA Light Weight Client that provides
access (per RFC 1202, Directory Assistance Service - support for LDAP
is planned) over TCP/IP to the X.500 DSA/DUA included with PathWay
Messaging Services.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
PathWay Messaging Services is a complete implementation of the 1988
X.500 Recommendations with the exception of strong authentication as
outlined in X.509. It is conformant to NIST, EWOS, and UK GOSIP
Directory profiles. It provides network through application layer
protocol support, with support for all attribute types, syntaxes, and
object classes defined in X.520 and X.521. Support for 1992
extensions to X.500 is planned for future release as is support for
X/Open Object Management (OM) and X/Open Directory Services (XDS)
standards.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
PathWay Messaging Services' X.500 supports the following Internet
Proposals: [RFC 1202], [RFC 1277], [RFC 1278].
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 46]
INTERNET-DRAFT PathWay Messaging
INTEROPERABILITY
PathWay Messaging Services has undergone successful interoperability
testing with Control Data, DEC, HP, and the ISODE Consortium using
EurOSInet test suites.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Tested: DUA and DSA connectivity with PARADISE and PSI
White Pages
Project.
BUGS
Send bug reports to:
prod-eng@twg.com
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
[No information provided--Ed.]
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
RFC1006 with TCP/IP, TP4 with CNLS, TP0/2 or TP4 with X.25.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
PathWay Messaging Services runs on all models of Sun SPARC and
generic 386/486 systems. PathWay Messenger (email with lightweight
DUA) also runs on Macintosh, and on IBM PC/AT and compatibles.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
PathWay Messaging Services supports SunOS 4.1.2, Solaris 1.0.1, and
SunSoft INTERACTIVE UNIX. PathWay Messenger also supports SCO, MacOS
and MS-Windows.
AVAILABILITY
PathWay Messaging is commercially available from:
The Wollongong Group, Inc.
1129 San Antonio Road
Palo Alto, CA 94303 USA
Sales and Information: (415) 962 7100
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 47]
INTERNET-DRAFT PathWay Messaging
FAX: (415) 969-5547
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
July 27th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 48]
INTERNET-DRAFT PC-DUA
NAME
PC-DUA
NEXOR
KEYWORDS
386, Commercially Available, DUA Connectivity, DUA Interface, IBM PC,
LDAP, RFC-1487
ABSTRACT
PC-DUA provides a MS Windows based user interface to the X.500
Directory.
Features include:
- Searching
- Directory Browser - to enable user to identify directory entry
- History - allowing quick access to previously referenced parts
of the DIT.
- User Friendly Name (UFN) based searching
- Hypertext-like navigation.
- Friendly names for attribute labels.
- Intelligent choice of entries to display when moving to a new
location in the DIT.
- O-line hypertext help.
COMPLIANCE
Compliant with LDAP.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
The following are supported:
RFC 1487
INTEROPERABILITY
PC-DUA has interoperated with LDAP 2.0 and 3.0 beta distributions.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Full DUA connectivity to the PARADISE and PSI White Pages X.500
Pilots.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 49]
INTERNET-DRAFT PC-DUA
BUGS
No known bugs. Support is given via phone or email to
"support@nexor.co.uk"
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
None.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
WinSock based TCP/IP stacks
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
386 PC WITH 4MGBYTES RAM
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
MS WINDOWS 3.1
AVAILABILITY
PC-DUA is commercial software. For more details contact:
NEXOR
8 Faraday Building
Highfields Science Park
Nottingham
NG7 2QP
UK
DN: c=GB@o=NEXOR Ltd
Telephone: +44 602 520500
Fax: +44 602 520519
E-Mail: sales@nexor.co.uk
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
August 6th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 50]
INTERNET-DRAFT PC-Pages
NAME
PC-Pages
Brunel University, UK
KEYWORDS
CONS, DUA Connectivity, DUA Only, IBM PC, LDAP, Limited Availability,
Multiple Vendor Platforms, OSI Transport, RFC-1006
ABSTRACT
PC-Pages is a MS-DOS based X.500 DUA interface. It is currently only
available for MS-Windows; a DOS character mode interface is being
prepared.
Features include: "Form" based searching. Supports the User Friendly
Name (UFN) specification (RFC 1484). Tailorable entry display -
display only those attributes required. Integrates with the
WhiteMail X.400 user agent. Hooks are provided to allow integration
with other user agents. Directory browsing. Support for JPEG photo
attributes. Modify directory entries. Add directory entries.
Delete directory entries. Rebind to a configured DSA. Some support
for configuration of DAP service parameters.
At present PC-Pages uses X.500 DAP. An LDAP version is planned.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
88 Standard compliant: Strong authentication not yet implemented. No
plans for support of the 1992 Standard.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
LDAP support is planned.
INTEROPERABILITY
Tested with Quipu 8.0.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
DUA Connectivity: The interface is in use in the UK Academic
Directory Pilot.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 51]
INTERNET-DRAFT PC-Pages
BUGS
Bugs should be reported to x500@brunel.ac.uk.
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
[No information provided--Ed.]
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
RFC1006 with TCP/IP. TP4 with CONS. A NetBIOS gateway to the
previously listed protocols.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
PC-Pages for Windows requires an IBM PC compatible with 286 or
higher, 2mb+ memory.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
Windows 3.0 or 3.1 running in Standard or Enhanced mode. WhiteStack
1.1, provided by the Edinburgh University Computing Service.
AVAILABILITY
Terms of availability are as yet undecided. Please send queries to:
Postal:
Andrew Findlay
Computing and Media Services
Brunel University
Cleveland Road
Uxbridge, Middlesex
UB8 3PH
UK
E-mail: x500@brunel.ac.uk.
Fax: +44 895 32806 (Andrew Findlay)
Telephone: +44 895 203066 (Andrew Findlay)
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
February 22nd, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 52]
INTERNET-DRAFT QuickMail
NAME
QuickMail/X.500 Interface (DUA Interface)
NASA
KEYWORDS
DUA Interface, Limited Availability, Needs ISODE, RFC-1274, Sun
ABSTRACT
The NASA QuickMail/X.500 Interface program is a program which
translates QuickMail name service requests into X.500 requests and
returns the results from the DSA to the QuickMail user. This system
allows QuickMail users the ability to find non-QuickMail users' or
non-local QuickMail users' addresses, while retaining the normal
QuickMail lookup interface. The program speaks QuickMail name
service protocol on one side, and DAP on the other.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
[Same as dish] -- does not support strong authentication. No support
for 1992 extensions needed.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
RFC 1274 supported to the extent that we use provided schema to store
QuickMail addresses.
INTEROPERABILITY
Works with Quipu (ISODE 8.0, ICR1)
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Connected to PSI WPPP, PARADISE. Other projects may use data if they
are connected to either of these DSAs.
BUGS
No known bugs. Default QuickMail name service lookup time out of 10
seconds may be too fast for some DSAs to respond to.
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
Requires the Columbia AppleTalk Package (CAP 6.0) to work.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 53]
INTERNET-DRAFT QuickMail
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
EtherTalk or IPTalk on the Macintosh side, any ISODE supported
environment on the X.500 side.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
Known to run on Sun 4/470
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
SunOS 4.1.1 and 4.1.3 can be used to host the package. Additionally
may need SunLink OSI 7.0.1, Sunlink X.25 7.0. ISODE 8.0 or ISODE
Consortium Release 1 needed to provide DAP support.
AVAILABILITY
Limited availability. For more details contact,
Peter Yee
MS 233-18
NASA Ames Research Center
Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000
(415) 604-3812
(415) 604-6999 (FAX)
yee@atlas.arc.nasa.gov
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
February 18th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 54]
INTERNET-DRAFT QUIPU (ISODE Consortium Release 1.0)
NAME
QUIPU (ISODE Consortium Release 1.0)
ISODE Consortium
KEYWORDS
API, CONS, DSA Connectivity, DSA/DUA, DUA Connectivity, Free,
Multiple Vendor Platforms, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-
1275, RFC-1276, RFC-1277, RFC-1278, RFC-1279, RFC-1484, RFC-1485,
RFC-1487, Source, Sun, UNIX, X.25
ABSTRACT
This implementation is a source release derived from the earlier
openly available version of QUIPU, and will be used as base
technology for products by a number of vendors. The release comprises
of a DSA, and a number of sample DUAs which may be used in
conjunction with the DSA.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
The DSA is aligned to the 1988 ISO IS and the NIST OIW Directory
Implementors Guide Version 1, with the following exceptions: Strong
authentication is not implemented (but hooks are provided for use
with two packages). QUIPU does not enforce the bounds constraints on
attributes, filters or APDU size. T.61 string formatting characters
are not rejected. If a DN is supplied with no password in an
unprotected simple bind, QUIPU does not always check to see if the DN
exists. If the DSA connected to can say authoritatively the DN does
not exist, the association is rejected. However, if a chain
operation is required to check the DN, the bind IS allowed. When
comparing attributes of UTCtime syntax, if the seconds field is
omitted, QUIPU does not perform the match correctly (i.e., the
seconds field in the attribute values should be ignored, but are
not). QUIPU always supplies the optional Chaining argument
``originator'' even if the CommonArgument ``requestor'' is used.
QUIPU always supplies the optional Chaining argument ``target'' even
if the base object in the DAP arguments is the same. The object
class ``without an assigned object identifier'' is not recognised
unless the ``alias'' object class is also present. Non Specific
Subordinate References are never followed by a QUIPU DSA, but they
are passed on correctly to the client if generated.
Compliance with X.500(1993) standards is planned. DAP and replication
(DISP) will be available in March 1994. Other 1993 features, with the
exception of DOB, but including security features will be available.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 55]
INTERNET-DRAFT QUIPU (ISODE Consortium Release 1.0)
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
[RFC 1485], [RFC 1484], [RFC 1487], [RFC 1274], [RFC 1275], [RFC
1276], [RFC 1277], [RFC 1278], [RFC 1279].
INTEROPERABILITY
Interoperability with several other DSAs has been demonstrated in
pilot operation and at the COS X.500 Interoperability Lab, enhancing
interoperability results from the earler versions of QUIPU.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Connectivity to the global research pilot (PARADISE etc.) has been
demonstrated. It is expected that this system will be used
extensively in a wide range of pilot activities. DUA Connectivity,
and DSA Connectivity.
BUGS
Bugs should be reported to <bug-quipu@isode.com>
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
None
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
The IC R1.0 release is application level code, and assumes vendor
provided lower layers. It provides the following modules with support
for a range of APIs to handle associated lower layers: RFC 1006
(vendor supplied TCP/IP using sockets or TLI) Transport service
(vendor supplied transport, which may be any class and use any
network service. TLI, XTI and various vendor-specific APIs). TP0
(Vendor supplied X.25 or CONS using NTI and various vendor specific
APIs).
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
Reference platform is SUN SPARC.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
Reference OS is SUNOS 4.1.3. It is also known to run on various other
UNIX platforms.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 56]
INTERNET-DRAFT QUIPU (ISODE Consortium Release 1.0)
AVAILABILITY
Available to members of the ISODE Consortium. Membership is open to
any organisation. Also available under licence (zero cost) to all
non-commercial research organisations. Contact:
ISODE Consortium
Headquarters
PO Box 505
London
SW11 1DX
UK
Phone: +44-71-223-4062
Fax: +44-71-223-3846
Email: <ic-info@isode.com>
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
August 11th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 57]
INTERNET-DRAFT UCOM.X 500
NAME
UCOM.X 500 (tm) - E3.X [DSA and DUA]
KEYWORDS
386, API, Bull, CLNS, Commercially Available, DEC ULTRIX, DSA
Connectivity, DSA/DUA, DUA Connectivity, IBM RISC, Motif, Multiple
Vendor Platforms, OpenLook, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1277, RFC-1278,
RFC-1279, Sequent, Sun, Tandem, UNIX, X.25
ABSTRACT
UCOM.X 500 includes a Directory System Agent (DSA), various directory
access APIs and Directory User Agents (DUAs). UCOM.X 500 is a product
based on PIZARRO, the research prototype developed at INRIA by
Christian Huitema's team, and commercialized by TS-E3X, a member of
the France Telecom group.
Characteristics of the DSA are: The DAP and DSP protocols are
provided conformant with X.500 (88). The DIB is maintained in ASN.1
encoded format in the Unix file system. Utilities are provided to
load and dump the DIB from and to ASCII text files. The DIT
structure is held in main memory. Frequently used attributes may be
held in inverted tables in memory to speed up searches. Knowledge
management: knowledge on managed domains is stored in UCOM.X specific
attributes of the DSA entries. Schema: The X.500 (88), X.400 (88)
and most of the Cosine & Internet Schema are supported. Object class
and attribute definitions are enforced. Users may define their own.
Simple authentication is provided; strong authentication and signed
operations are being tested operationally through TS-E3X's
participation in PASSWORD, a VALUE project with aim to pilot a
European security infrastructure for network applications. Access
control: private mechanisms are provided to allow access control
lists to be specified for parts of the DIT, to control modifications,
and to specify access restrictions on attributes. Management: a
UCOM.X DSA object has been defined to allow operational parameters of
the DSA to be managed via DAP. Administration utilities are provided
to, e.g., generate usage statistics and periodically update the
database from various data sources including a knowledge discovery
tool.
The product offers a C language API conformant to X/Open's X/DS
specification, and a C++ API (for release 10/93).
The DUAs include a graphical directory browser with powerful search
functionality for OpenLook and Motif, and a full-screen curses-based
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 58]
INTERNET-DRAFT UCOM.X 500
interface with full DAP functionality.
TS-E3X's strategy for UCOM.X500 is three-fold: Firstly, to use it as
the directory service for Spheris, France Telecom's range of
electronic mail products based on X.400 (88) (release mid '94).
Secondly, to offer it to third parties developing specific
applications using X.500: current applications include a distributed
application to control document transfer in a large French hospital
and distributed applications management in the French Post Office;
planned uses include office applications for control of document
circulation (workflow) and cooperative document editing. Thirdly, to
offer it to telecomms operators such as France Telecom for
application in network management. UCOM.X 500 is used extensively by
French research centers involved in PARADISE.
COMPLIANCE
UCOM.X 500 conforms to X.500 (88) as specified in paragraph 9 of
X.519.
Development of the product based on X.500 (93) is planned for '94
with release of a product conformant to the principal extensions at
the end of '94. Emphasis is being placed on the shadowing protocol,
the schema and access control.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
The COSINE and Internet Schema (RFC 1274) is supported with minor
exceptions. RFC 1279 (X.500 and Domains) is supported.
The string representation of PSAPs and their internal encoding
conforms to RFCs 1277 and 1278.
The string representation of DNs will migrate to the Internet RFC
1485 definition.
AFRO (algorithme francais de recherche optimise), the search / name
resolution algorithm proposed by UCOM.X 500, differs from the UFN
algorithm principally in that it attempts to optimize by performing
read operations before resorting to searches in order to exploit the
name error information.
INTEROPERABILITY
Through UCOM.X 500's use in the French PARADISE pilot,
interoperability has been informally but extensively tested with
Quipu and other implementations.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 59]
INTERNET-DRAFT UCOM.X 500
Detailed interoperability tests with Quipu, Marben and Siemens/Bull
DIR/X are being conducted by the PARADISE OIFP (Operational
Interworking) team at INRIA Rocquencourt, France.
The product is currently also undergoing formal tests for
conformance to the CTS2 DSA/DAP and ACSE/Presentation/Session
specifications at the French OSI conformance test centre.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
DSA and DUA connectivity to the PARADISE pilot.
BUGS
UCOM.X 500 is a commercial product. As such, it is supported and bugs
are fixed when detected. Bug reports can be sent to our support team
via electronic mail.
CAVEATS AND GENERAL LIMITATIONS
The DIT structure and inverted attribute tables are stored in main
memory. The recommended main memory size for a DSA is 1 kb per node,
i.e., 10 Mb for a database of 10,000 objects. The current recommended
maximum is a database size of the order of 100,000 objects.
Of the selected attribute types defined in X.500 (88), the
searchGuide attribute is not supported ; neither are the following
attributes from the Cosine and Internet Schema (RFC 1274):
OtherMailbox, MailPreferenceOption and the various quality
attributes.
The X/DS API supports the Basic Directory Contents (BDCP), the MHS
Directory User (MDUP) and the Strong Authentication (SAP) packages
with minor limitations. A proprietary mechanism for defining new
classes and attributes is offered. Asynchronous operations and
multiple concurrent sessions are not supported. Whilst referral may
be handled automatically, continuation references are not.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
UCOM.X 500 includes a transport stack for TP0 with TCP/IP (RFC 1006)
and X.25. The stack has been ported to SunNet OSI for TP4 with CLNP.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
UCOM.X 500 can easily be ported to any UNIX machine. It currently
runs on: Sun 3 and 4, IBM RS 6000, DEC ULTRIX (Vax and Mips), 386-
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 60]
INTERNET-DRAFT UCOM.X 500
based PCs, Bull DPX/2 and DPX/20, Sequent, Tandem and others.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
UCOM.X 500 is portable to any UNIX-like operating system. It has been
ported to: UNIX SVR3 and SVR4, SUN OS 4, AIX, SCO Unix, Interactive
Unix, ULTRIX, HP-UX, Dynix (Sequent), BOS (Bull) and others.
Ports to the following are planned: OS/2 ('94), Windows 3 ('94).
The product does not make use of an external DBMS for the information
base.
AVAILABILITY
UCOM.X is commercially available. For further information contact:
Pascal Duchamp, International Sales
Address: TS-E3X, Le Capitole 44, avenue des Champs Pierreux,
99029 Nanterre Cedex, France
Tel: (+33) 1-46-14-50-00
Fax: (+33) 1-46-14-58-16
Email: C=FR;A=atlas;P=e3x;O=e3x;OU1=paris;S=duchamp
duchamp@paris.e3x.fr
or: Laurence Puvilland, Marketing
Email: C=fr;A=atlas;P=e3x;O=e3x;OU1=paris;S=puvilland
puvilland@paris.e3x.fr
or: Ascan Woermann, R&D
Email: C=fr;A=atlas;P=e3x;O=e3x;S=Woermann
woermann@e3x.fr
DATE LAST UPDATED
July, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 61]
INTERNET-DRAFT Xdi
NAME
Xdi - DUA
Bellcore
KEYWORDS
Available via FTP, DUA Connectivity, DUA Only, Free, Limited
Functionality, Multiple Vendor Platforms, Needs ISODE, RFC-1274,
RFC-1484, Source, Sun, UNIX, X Window System
ABSTRACT
Xdi is a Directory User Agent (DUA) for the X Window System. In
addition to providing a user-friendly interface, it supports
Directory interactions of different levels of complexity. Users can
select different window screens to browse, search and modify the
Directory. There are two different search screens for name based
search and attribute based search. It is simple to use for novice
users but is also useful for more advanced users to formulate complex
search filters. Xdi also supports "user-friendly naming" in many
cases so that users are not required to know X.500 naming format.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
88 standard compliant: Delete and Add operations, and strong
authentication not implemented. There are no facilities to modify the
RDNs of entries.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
RFC 1484 and RFC 1274 are supported.
INTEROPERABILITY
Believed to be interoperable with other DSAs. Only tested against
ISODE/QUIPU DSAs.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
DUA Connectivity
BUGS
Send bug reports to sywuu@thumper.bellcore.com
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 62]
INTERNET-DRAFT Xdi
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
Same as ISODE.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
This software has been tested on SUN4. It is expected that the
software is portable to SUN3 and other UNIX machines.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
Xdi is expected to run on ISODE (release 7.0 upwards) in UNIX
environment. The 'xdi' directory has been designed to fit directly
into the ISODE source tree. Xdi requires X11R4, the associated Xt
toolkit and Athena widget libraries. Also see the operating
environments of ISODE.
AVAILABILITY
The Xdi software is available via anonymous FTP from
thumper.bellcore.com in file pub/xdi.tar.Z. Source code and
executables can be freely distributed or modified for non-commercial
and non-profit use provided that all copyright notices, permission
and nonwarranty notice included in the software distribution remain
intact.
For further information contact Sze-Ying Wuu at
sywuu@thumper.bellcore.com.
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
March 18th, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 63]
INTERNET-DRAFT XLU
NAME
XLU
Brunel University, UK
KEYWORDS
DUA Connectivity, DUA Only, Free, Multiple Vendor Platforms, Needs
ISODE, Source, UNIX, X Window System
ABSTRACT
XLU (X LookUp) is an X.500 DUA interface for the X Window System.
XLU can be configured for many different styles of interaction.
Example configurations are provided for single window and multiple
window use.
XLU implements the `User-Friendly Naming' search strategy and also
has a form-filling search mode. Asynchronous directory operations are
used.
Full user friendly add and modify functions are provided, with the
ability to tailor the modify screen to present simple subsets of the
available attributes.
COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs and DUAs)
88 Standard compliant: Strong authentication not yet implemented. No
plans for support of the 1992 Standard.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
No plans at present.
INTEROPERABILITY
[No information provided--Ed.]
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
DUA Connectivity: The interface is in use in the UK Academic
Directory Pilot.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 64]
INTERNET-DRAFT XLU
BUGS
Bugs should be reported to x500@brunel.ac.uk.
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
[No information provided--Ed.]
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
As ISODE.
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
Most UNIX machines.
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
UNIX
MIT X11R5 libraries
ISODE/QUIPU (version 8.0 >)
AVAILABILITY
Sources are freely available for commercial or non-commercial use.
Contacts.
Postal Address:
Andrew Findlay
Computing and Media Systems
Brunel University
Cleveland Road
Uxbridge, Middlesex
UB8 3PH
UK
E-mail: x500@brunel.ac.uk.
Fax: +44 895 32806 (Andrew Findlay)
Telephone: +44 895 203066 (Andrew Findlay)
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
March 1st, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 65]
INTERNET-DRAFT XT-DUA
NAME
XT-DUA
NEXOR
KEYWORDS
Bull, CLNS, Commercially Available, CONS, DUA Connectivity, DUA Only,
HP, IBM RISC, ICL, Motif, Multiple Vendor Platforms, OpenLook, OSI
Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1277, RFC-1278, RFC-1484,
Solbourne, Sun, X Window System, X.25
ABSTRACT
XT-DUA provides a X-Windows based user interface to the X.500
Directory. Both Motif and OpenLook styles are supported.
Browsing features include:
- Passing of user address information to the XT-MUA X.400 user agent.
- History - allowing quick access to previously referenced parts of
the DIT.
- Customizable entry display - allowing subsets of attributes be
displayed when showing an entry.
- User Friendly Name (UFN) based searching
- Hypertext-like navigation.
- Support for application entities e.g. startup of ftam session.
- User defined name for attribute labels.
- Support for photo and audio attributes.
- Attribute value on scanline.
- Intelligent choice of entries to display when moving to a new
location in the DIT.
Management features include:
Creation of new entries.
- Modification of existing entries (including RDN) - based on
Quipu EDB format.
- Deletion of entries.
- Friendly editor of modifying Quipu ACLs.
- Rebinding - authenticated and to named DSA.
- Full configuration of DAP request parameters
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 66]
INTERNET-DRAFT XT-DUA
COMPLIANCE
Compliant with X.500(88), and NIST SIA version 2 except X.509 strong
authentication not implemented (under development).
NEXOR is committed to migrate XT-DUA to the 1992 standards.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
The following are supported:
UFN [RFC 1484]
RFC 1274
RFC 1277
RFC 1278
INTEROPERABILITY
XT-DUA has interoperated with all DSAs used in the PARADISE pilot.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
Full DUA connectivity to the PARADISE and PSI White Pages X.500
Pilots.
BUGS
No known bugs. Support is given via phone or email to
"support@nexor.co.uk"
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
None.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
OSI TP4 with CLNP
OSI TP0 with X.25 or CONS
RFC 1006 with TCP/IP
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
Sun
Solbourne
IBM RS/6000
Bull DPX 6000
HP Apollo 9000
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 67]
INTERNET-DRAFT XT-DUA
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
SunOs 4.1.x
AIX 3.2
HP-UX 9.01
Windows 3.1 (over LDAP)
Other ports planned include SCO Unix and ICL DRS6000.
AVAILABILITY
XT-DUA is commercial software. For more details contact:
XT-DUA Sales
NEXOR
8 Faraday Building
Highfields Science Park
Nottingham
NG7 2QP
UK
DN: c=GB@o=NEXOR Ltd
Telephone: +44 602 520500
Fax: +44 602 520519
E-Mail: sales@nexor.co.uk
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
August 2nd, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 68]
INTERNET-DRAFT XT-QUIPU
NAME
XT-QUIPU
NEXOR
KEYWORDS
Bull, CLNS, Commercially Available, CONS, DSA Connectivity, DSA Only,
HP, IBM RISC, ICL, Multiple Vendor Platforms, OSI Transport, RFC-
1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1276, RFC-1277, RFC-1278, RFC-1279, RFC-1484,
RFC-1485, Solbourne, Sun, X.25
ABSTRACT
XT-QUIPU is an X.500(88) DSA. Characteristics of the DSA are:
- Full DAP access
- Full DSP access
- Support for X.400, X.500, and RFC 1274 attributes and
object classes
- Approximate match based on Soundex.
- Flexible schema management
- RFC 1276 Replication
- Attribute level access control
- Search and list access control
- Knowledge management mapped onto DIT
- Attribute inheritance
- Caching
- Remote management
COMPLIANCE
Compliant with X.500(88), and NIST SIA version 2 except X.509 strong
authentication not implemented (under development).
NEXOR is committed to migrate XT-QUIPU to the 1992 standards.
COMPATIBILITY WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
The following are supported:
String DN format [RFC 1485]
UFN [RFC 1484]
RFC 1274
RFC 1276
RFC 1277
RFC 1278
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 69]
INTERNET-DRAFT XT-QUIPU
RFC 1279
INTEROPERABILITY
XT-QUIPU interoperates will all DSAs used in the PARADISE pilot.
PILOT CONNECTIVITY
XT-QUIPU DSAs are fully connected to the PARADISE and PSI White Pages
X.500 Pilots.
BUGS
No known bugs. Support is given via phone or email to
"support@nexor.co.uk"
CAVEATS and GENERAL LIMITATIONS
None.
INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
OSI TP4 wtih CLNP
OSI TP0 with X.25 or CONS
RFC 1006 with TCP/IP
HARDWARE PLATFORMS
Sun
Solbourne
IBM RS/6000
Bull DPX 6000
ICL DRS/6000
HP Apollo 9000
SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
SunOs 4.1.x
AIX 3.2
DRS/NX 6000
HP-UX 9.01
Other ports planned include SCO Unix.
AVAILABILITY
XT-QUIPU is commercial software. For more details contact:
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 70]
INTERNET-DRAFT XT-QUIPU
XT-QUIPU Sales
NEXOR
8 Faraday Building
Highfields Science Park
Nottingham
NG7 2QP
UK
DN: c=GB@o=NEXOR Ltd
Telephone: +44 602 520500
Fax: +44 602 520519
E-Mail: sales@nexor.co.uk
DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED
August 2nd, 1993
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 71]
INTERNET-DRAFT August 1993
4. References
[CCITT-88] CCITT, "Data Communications Networks Directory,"
Recommendations X.500-X.521, Volume VIII - Fascicle
VIII.8, IXth Plenary Assembly, Melbourne, November 1988.
[NIST-88] National Institute of Standards and Technology, "Stable
Implementation Agreements for Open Systems
Interconnection Protocols," Version 2 Edition 1, NIST
Special Publication 500-162, December 1988.
[RFC 1202] Rose, M. T., "Directory Assistance Service." February
1991.
[RFC 1249] Howes, T., M. Smith, and B. Beecher, "DIXIE Protocol
Specification," University of Michigan, August 1991.
[RFC 1274] Barker, P., and S. Kille, "The COSINE and Internet X.500
Schema," University College, London, England, November
1991.
[RFC 1275] Kille, S., "Replication Requirements to provide an
Internet Directory using X.500," University College,
London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1276] Kille, S., "Replication and Distributed Operations
extensions to provide an Internet Directory using
X.500," University College, London, England, November
1991.
[RFC 1277] Kille, S., "Encoding Network Addresses to support
operation over non-OSI lower layers," University
College, London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1278] Kille, S., "A string encoding of Presentation Address,"
University College, London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1279] Kille, S., "X.500 and Domains," University College,
London, England, November 1991.
[RFC 1484] Kille, S., "Using the OSI Directory to achieve User
Friendly Naming." July 1993.
[RFC 1485] S. Kille, "A String Representation of Distinguished
Names." July 1993.
[RFC 1487] Yeong, W., T. Howes, and S. Kille, "X.500 Lightweight
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 72]
INTERNET-DRAFT August 1993
Directory Access Protocol." July 1993.
[RFC 1488] Howes, T., S. Kille, W. Yeong, and C. Robbins, "The
X.500 String Representation of Standard Attribute
Syntaxes." July 1993.
5. Security Considerations
Security considerations are not discussed in this memo.
6. Editors' Addresses
Arlene F. Getchell
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
National Energy Research Supercomputer Center
P.O. Box 5509, L-561
Livermore, CA 94551
(510) 423-6349
getchell@es.net
X.400: s=getchell;p=esnet;a= ;c=us;
Srinivas R. Sataluri
AT&T Bell Laboratories
Room 1C-429, 101 Crawfords Corner Road
P.O. Box 3030
Holmdel, NJ 07733-3030
(908) 949-7782
sri@qsun.att.com
This Internet Draft expires March 15th, 1994.
IETF IDS Working Group [Page 73]