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<div> I am using Fedora-DS with the multimaster replication, works great. Thus I have two authentication servers running at the same time synchronized with each other. I have all clients pointing to both servers (Linux and Macs). Thus if the 1st choice server goes down, the client simply requests from the other server. This was the most simply solution (fewest wagons) in our case.<br><br>Chris<br></div>
<blockquote style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); padding-left: 5px; margin-left: 5px;">
-------------- Original message from Jeff Hubbs <jeffrey.hubbs@gmail.com>: --------------
<br>
<br>
<br>> The one that requires me to hook my horse up to the fewest wagons:
<br>> OpenLDAP.
<br>>
<br>> Brandon Colbert wrote:
<br>> > All,
<br>> >
<br>> > I been tasked to setup a fail-over ldap solution at work. We have one
<br>> > running openldap. I wanted to get everyone opinion on the difference
<br>> > between OpenLDAP, CentOS-DS, Fedora-DS, and Redhat-DS.
<br>> >
<br>> > If you had your choice, which one will you use?
<br>> >
<br>> >
<br>> > FYI: In the near future we will tie samba and radius with ldap.
<br>>
<br>>
<br>> _______________________________________________
<br>> Ale mailing list
<br>> Ale@ale.org
<br>> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
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