--On Thursday, July 01, 2010 8:48 AM -0700 Tim Gustafson <[email protected]> wrote:

If you mean a normal user which application-wise is granted
higher privileges by ACLs, you need to make use of the granular
"a" (add) and "z" (zap) privileges (their union is "w", write).

Pardon my thickness, but the documentation at
http://www.openldap.org/doc/admin24/access-control.html specifically
calls out the possible values of the "level" part of the ACL clause:

<level> ::= none | disclose | auth | compare | search | read | write |
manage

Is this an undocumented feature?  Should perhaps the documentation be
updated, or maybe an example of this sort of ACL included in the examples
section?

I suggest you refer to the man page, which is always the end authority on documentation.

<http://www.openldap.org/software/man.cgi?query=slapd.access&apropos=0&sektion=0&manpath=OpenLDAP+2.4-Release&format=html>

--Quanah

--

Quanah Gibson-Mount
Principal Software Engineer
Zimbra, Inc
--------------------
Zimbra ::  the leader in open source messaging and collaboration

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