From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 11/10/2004 12:36 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: RE: [ActiveDir] Indexing an attribute
I second that :-p
Sincerely,
D�j� Ak�m�l�f�,
MCSE+M MCSA+M MCP+I
Microsoft MVP - Directory Services
www.readymaids.com
- we know IT
www.akomolafe.com
Do you now realize that Today is the
Tomorrow you were worried about
Yesterday?
-anon
________________________________
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Mulnick, Al
Sent: Wed
11/10/2004 9:22 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: OT: RE:
[ActiveDir] Indexing an attribute
Really, we should amend that to
'Joe *says* he maintains good hygiene.' Just
to be accurate and
all.
Al
-----Original Message-----
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of Tony Murray
Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2004 4:05 AM
To:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] Indexing an
attribute
I just realised that legacyExchangeDN was a bad example to pick
in my email
below because the syntax is "Case Insensitive String" and not
"Distinguished
Name". I guess this is to support the ADCDisabledMail
value, which is
clearly not DN format.
Sorry Joe
:-)
Tony
PS. This has been a great thread. I learned
that linked attributes are
indexed by default and that Joe maintains good
bodily hygiene!
-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Murray [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:
Dienstag, 9. November 2004 15:54
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:
RE: [ActiveDir] Indexing an attribute
> You still won't be able to do
wildcard searches because it is a DN
attribute.
You can still use a
wildcard where the beginning of the value is known,
e.g.
(&(|(objectclass=contact)(objectclass=group))(|(legacyExchangeDN=/o=MyCo/ou=
MyOU/*)(legacyExchangeDN=ADCDisabledMail*)(isDeleted=TRUE)))
I
think this is where the indexing would help.
Tony
---------- Original
Message ----------------------------------
From: "joe"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, 9 Nov 2004 06:03:07
-0800
You will have a little DIT growth, creation of new mailboxes might
be
impacted a little in terms of speed as insertion of the attribute might be
a
trifle slower (nothing you would notice I expect unless doing a ton of
new
creations quickly with MT C code and still you could blame it on the
RUS
faster than blaming it on the indexing).
Anything that searched on
that attribute would possibly be more efficient or
be quicker.
You
still won't be able to do wildcard searches because it is a
DN
attribute.
What are you looking to get out of it? Or to put it
another way, why do you
think you should do it?
Overall in the end, MS
and pretty much anyone is going to say you need to
test it in your test lab
with a comparable test data set as production to
really know specifically
what it will do.
joe
_____
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
On Behalf Of Holland Matthew BC
GB
Sent: Tuesday, November 09, 2004 4:36
AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [ActiveDir] Indexing an
attribute
Hi all,
Does anyone know the potential
impact of indexing an attribute in Active
Directory? The attribute is
HomeMDB, it's Single Valued and is a member of
the PAS (We have approx 17,000
Mail Enabled User objects in
Active
Directory).
Cheers,
Matty
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