Try using YaST => Network Services => LDAP Client

Then you won't have to much around in config files, rather, you should
just have to specify the LDAP server.

We did try that route when we began, but the Yast interface assumes that you
are using a Open-LDAP server, which we are not.  We are using Lotus Notes as
our LDAP server.  Notes has a facility where it can act as a LDAP server.
We have also added the approprate POSIX fields to the Notes addressbook
database to support authenticating Unix/Linux users.

We really did not want to have to hand-edit the LDAP client files, but that
is the only way we got anything to work.

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