Hi Jim, I'd guess most people just hack their ldif files with a text editor, but if you want a smoother way to do it, use JXplorer's 'view offline' facility to look at the entire LDIF tree, and then export your subtree from that... I think that will work, let me know if it doesn't :-). cheers, Chris
Hello everyone, There is a way to export a subtree in LDIF, but there isn't a way to import one. How am I supposed to read in my Thunderbird address book? (Or any other email client for that matter.) I can't find anything on the web. Isn't this a common thing to need to do? -Jim
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Dr Christopher Betts
Melbourne, Australia
pegacat.com
Wer mit Ungeheuern kämpft, mag zusehn,
dass er nicht dabei zum Ungeheuer wird.
- Nietzsche
(Who fights Monsters must beware,
lest in doing so they become one)


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