it was about replication
http://www.zytrax.com/books/ldap/apd/ CSN The Change Sequence Number (CSN) used OpenLDAP to identify changes in a replicated configuration. CSNs appear to be only defined in an expired RFC draft draft-chu-ldap-csn-xx.txt and for version 2.4 in this FAQ to consist of a timestamp - including microseconds, an operation-within-second counter (6 octets), a 3 octet replica id (as defined by ServerID) and a 6 octet counte-within-modify operation. Yes it is still alive who knows what happens in the future ;) On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 12:04 PM, Emmanuel Lecharny <[email protected]> wrote: > On 3/30/11 10:51 AM, Omer Faruk SEN wrote: >> >> Hi, >> I have a dump of Sun LDAP Directory server (6.3.1) I see >> >> dn: cn=me,ou=groups,dc=me,dc=com >> nsUniqueId: 1255060a-46e511dd-803ce5f5-385faa0b >> objectClass;vucsn-4869456e0009002d0000: top >> objectClass;vucsn-4869456e0009002d0000: groupOfUniqueNames >> cn;vucsn-4869456e0009002d0000;mdcsn-4869456e0009002d0000: everyone >> description;vucsn-4869456e0009002d0000: everyone >> >> lines what is the meaning of vucsn,mdcsn and adcsn? > > What about asking on the Sun DS mailing list (if it's still alive :) ? > > > -- > Regards, > Cordialement, > Emmanuel Lécharny > www.iktek.com > >
