Configuring the Directory Server
Configuring Security in the Directory Server
Getting SSL Up and Running Quickly
To Accept SSL-Based Connections Using a Self-Signed Certificate
Enabling SSL and StartTLS in QuickSetup
Configuring Key Manager Providers
Using the JKS Key Manager Provider
To Sign the Certificate by Using an External Certificate Authority
To Configure the JKS Key Manager Provider
Using the PKCS #12 Key Manager Provider
Using the PKCS #11 Key Manager Provider
Configuring Trust Manager Providers
Overview of Certificate Trust Mechanisms
Using the Blind Trust Manager Provider
Using the JKS Trust Manager Provider
Using the PKCS #12 Trust Manager Provider
Configuring Certificate Mappers
Using the Subject Attribute to User Attribute Certificate Mapper
Using the Subject DN to User Attribute Certificate Mapper
Using the Fingerprint Certificate Mapper
Configuring SSL and StartTLS for LDAP and JMX
Configuring the LDAP and LDAPS Connection Handlers
To Enable a Connection Handler
To Specify a Connection Handler's Listening Port
To Specify a Connection Handler's Authorization Policy
To Specify a Nickname for a Connection Handler's Certificate
To Specify a Connection Handler's Key Manager Provider
To Specify a Connection Handler's Trust Manager Provider
To Enable SSL-Based Communication
Enabling SSL in the JMX Connection Handler
SASL Options for the ANONYMOUS Mechanism
SASL Options for the CRAM-MD5 Mechanism
SASL Options for the DIGEST-MD5 Mechanism
SASL Options for the EXTERNAL Mechanism
SASL Options for the GSSAPI Mechanism
SASL Options for the PLAIN Mechanism
Configuring SASL Authentication
Configuring SASL External Authentication
Configuring SASL DIGEST-MD5 Authentication
Configuring SASL GSSAPI Authentication
To Configure Kerberos V5 on a Host
To Specify SASL Options for Kerberos Authentication
Example Configuration of Kerberos Authentication Using GSSAPI With SASL
Troubleshooting Kerberos Configuration
Testing SSL, StartTLS, and SASL Authentication With ldapsearch
The Subject Equals DN certificate mapper is a simple certificate mapper that expects the subject of the client certificate to be exactly the same as the distinguished name (DN) of the corresponding user entry. Using this certificate mapper is easy because there are no configuration attributes associated with it. However, this mapper is not suitable for many environments because certificate subjects and user DNs are often not the same.
To enable or disable the Subject Equals DN certificate mapper, use dsconfig to set its enabled property to true or false. The following example uses dsconfig to configure the Subject Equals DN certificate mapper.
$ dsconfig -D "cn=directory manager" -w password -n set-certificate-mapper-prop \ --mapper-name "Subject Equals DN" --advanced