This
is probably a misfeature of LDP.
AD
presents timestamps through the LDAP interface as defined by RFC 2252 section
6.14 "Generalized Time". The RFC defers to the ITU definition in X.208, which
was superceded by X.680. Note that Active Directory includes a decimal and
tenths of second, which is optional according to the ITU definition, for
instance "200104121003314.0Z"
HTH,
-gil
-----Original Message-----
From: Isham, Alan A [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2003 4:19 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] Time stamp format in "your" Active DirectoryIt might have always been this way, but I don't recall.Recently, we had a user escalate an issue requiring us to investigate date and time information on the user's account. To our surprise, we noticed the time was "11:7:2" and "17:1:40" which aren't human readable time formats if you ask me (see paste below).1> whenChanged: 2/25/2003 11:7:2 Pacific Standard Time Pacific Daylight Time;
1> whenCreated: 5/10/2000 17:1:40 Pacific Standard Time Pacific Daylight Time;Can someone bring up LDP and confirm they have the same time formatting too?Thanks!Alan Isham
Product Manager, Messaging and Active Directory Engineering
IT Global Engineering, Intel Corporation
