Thanks for the reply joe, however one last questions
remains:
Is the process of binding to the GC (in the case I'm
connecting to port 3268) different from say: A user authentication to AD when
logging on to a workstation? Does it use the same kerberos ticket
system?
Thanks!!
Francis
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of joe
Sent: 11 mars 2005 11:28
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Binding to ldap process..
You have two major functions in this
area
1. Connect. This is where you specify the server, port, and
network protocol you want to use. If you select connectionless you are using
UDP, otherwise you are using TCP. For most folks, UDP is useless, so you may not
want to play with it too much. You can also specify an SSL connection. Until you
work out the basics, don't worry about it.
2. Bind. This is where you specify the ID you want to
connect to AD with and the authentication mechanism you want to use. The
calls are all going against the server/port that you specified in 1. Note that
you can't authenticate a UDP connection (just one reason why you don't generally
want to play with UDP).
Some apps combine that all together in the background so
you don't see it such as my adfind command line tool. You simply specify what
you want and off it goes and handles the binding and connecting and everything
else for you.
joe
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Francis Ouellet
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2005 11:03 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ActiveDir] Binding to ldap process..
Hi,
I'm trying to
understand the process of binding to an ldap server. I'm toying with ldp.exe and
I'd like to know a little bit more about the different bind
options...
If you decide to
connect to port 3268 to query the GC and then decide to bind do you bind on port
389 or continue to authenticate to the GC? You see, I'm just a wee bit confused
as to what happens in the background :)
Thanks,
Francis
Ouellet
