Once your calendar installation has been configured for hosted domains and the preparation work described in Chapter 11, Setting Up Hosted Domains has been performed, you can add new hosted domains.
Each domain has a set of attributes and preferences that you can set. These attributes are part of the icsCalendarDomain object class. The attributes include preferences such as access rights, access control lists (ACLs), domain searches, access rights for domain searches, user status, and proxy logins.
To administer Calendar Server hosted (or virtual) domains use one of the two following set of tools:
Delegated Administrator Console or Utility – For Schema 2 environments.
Delegated Administrator is a separately installable component in the Java Enterprise System installer. For more information on the Utility, see the Sun Java System Communications Services 6 2005Q4 Delegated Administrator Guide. For more information on the Console, use the Delegated Administrator Console online help.
Calendar Server Utility — (csdomain and csattribute) For Schema 1 environments.
Installed with Calendar Server. You can add or delete attributes with csdomain, but you there is no modify command. Use csattribute to modify the value of an existing attribute. In addition, should the need arise, use ldapmodify to add or delete object classes in domains created with csdomain.
For information about csdomain and csattribute, see Appendix D, Calendar Server Command-Line Utilities Reference.
For information about particular object classes and attributes, see theSun Java System Communications Services 6 2005Q4 Schema Reference.
For an overview of hosted domains and other introductory material, see Chapter 11, Setting Up Hosted Domains.
Calendar Server does not support using the Access Manager Console for domain administration.