*grin* im not sure about anything, really.  how do i find out about whether i have 
subgroups?  guess i need to ask the administrator (he doesn't seem to know much 
either, really).  is there any other way to find out?  

-----Original Message-----
From: Vernaillen Tim [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, August 22, 2003 9:49 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Question about cf and ldap


idd, it's right, i looked it up, it's possible.

are you sure you have no 'cn' or 'ou', so no subgroups

eg: o=Carnegie Mellon University, ou=group1, ou=group2

-----Original Message-----
From: Zimba, Janice C. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: vrijdag 22 augustus 2003 15:42
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Question about cf and ldap


I'm not sure at all, but I think it must be ok because I tried accessing a public one 
I found at Carnegie Mellon with the following code and it worked fine: 

<cfldap server="ldap.andrew.cmu.edu"
        action="query"
        name="get_info"
        start="o=Carnegie Mellon University"
        attributes="Mail">

Think I've maybe got a couple of things going on with mine...first, its microsoft 
(doh) and second, I might have authentication problems.

Thanks,
Janice

-----Original Message-----
From: Vernaillen Tim [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, August 22, 2003 9:36 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Question about cf and ldap


are you sure the start parameter is right (o=Anne Arundel Commu...)?
I don't know for sure, but I think it's not allowed to use spaces.


-----Original Message-----
From: Janice Zimba [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: vrijdag 22 augustus 2003 15:29
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Question about cf and ldap


>I read somewhere that it needs to be a full name, 
>>not just the actual username, but I'm not sure what this means.  
>
>You probably need to use a full-qualified Windows domain name.  In 
>your code snippet, it would be something like the following:
>
>       <cfldap action="query"  
>       name="ldap_test"
>       start="o=Anne Arundel Community College" 
>       attributes="*" 
>       server="server_name_here" 
>       port="389" 
>       username="mydomain\username"
>       password="password">


Thanks, I tried that with username="aacc\username" as well as 
username="fullhostname\username" and both give me a cold fusion error: "Inappropriate 
authentication"

Do you have any examples or know where I could find one (I've done some searching) of 
cold fusion ldap accessing a microsoft active directory server?  Maybe I've missed 
something entirely.  :-(  It's made harder by the fact that I don't have any control 
over the directory settings(though in the long run, I'm probably better off--hehe), 
and my admin isn't inclined to being vast amounts of help.  

Thanks,
Janice





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