List of Figures
- 1-1 Oracle Internet Directory Overview
- 3-1 A Typical Oracle Internet Directory Node
- 3-2 Oracle Directory Server Instance Architecture
- 3-3 A Directory Information Tree
- 3-4 Attributes of the Entry for Anne Smith
- 3-5 Correct and Incorrect Naming Contexts
- 3-6 A Partitioned Directory
- 3-7 Using Knowledge References to Point to Naming Contexts
- 3-8 Placement of Resource Access and Resource Type Information in the DIT
- 4-1 Oracle Internet Directory Process Control Architecture
- 5-1 Planning the Directory Information Tree
- 6-1 A Replicated Directory
- 6-2 Example of Partial Replication
- 6-3 Example of Single-Master Replication
- 6-4 Example of Multimaster Replication
- 6-5 Example of Fan-Out Replication
- 6-6 Example of Multimaster Replication with Fan-Out
- 8-1 DIT Showing Two Instance-Specific Configuration Entries
- 8-2 Oracle Internet Directory Oracle Internet Directory Process Control Architecture
- 18-1 Alias Entries Example
- 18-2 Resulting Tree when Creating the My_file.ldif
- 19-1 Example of a Directory Information Tree
- 21-1 Location of Schema Components in Entries of Type subSchemaSubentry
- 25-1 Architecture of Oracle Internet Directory Server Manageability
- 29-1 Location of Password Policy Entries
- 29-2 pwdPolicy subentry Attributes Populated with DN of Password Policy
- 31-1 Location of the Password Verifier Profile Entry
- 31-2 Authentication Model
- 31-3 How Password Verification Works
- 32-1 Delegation Flow in an Oracle Fusion Middleware Environment
- 33-1 Indirect Authentication
- 34-1 Example of an Identity Management Realm
- 34-2 Enterprise Use Case: Single Identity Management Realm
- 34-3 Enterprise Use Case: Multiple Identity Management Realms
- 34-4 Hosted Deployment Use Case
- 34-5 Default Identity Management Realm
- 36-1 Example: Garbage Collection of Change Log Entries
- 36-2 Garbage Collection Entries in the DIT
- 37-1 Using an LDIF File and Bulk Loader
- 37-2 Using syncProfileBootstrap Directly
- 37-3 Using an LDIF File and syncProfileBootstrap
- 37-4 Using syncProfileBootstrap, bulkload, and LDIF Files
- 37-5 Using the Oracle Directory Integration Server
- 37-6 Structure of the Intermediate User File
- 40-1 A Sample Naming Context
- 40-2 Naming Context Object #1
- 40-3 Naming Context Object #2
- 40-4 Result of Combining Naming Context Objects #1 and #2
- 40-5 Naming Context Object #3
- 40-6 Naming Context Object #4
- 40-7 Result of Combining Naming Context Objects #3 and #4
- 40-8 Naming Context Object #5
- 40-9 Naming Context Object #6
- 40-10 Naming Context Object #7
- 40-11 Example of Fan-Out Replication
- 41-1 Replication Failover Scenario
- 41-2 Consumer and New Supplier Connected to Old Supplier by LDAP
- 41-3 Old and New Suppliers in the Same Directory Replication Group
- 41-4 Failover Preserving Replica Type
- 41-5 Compare and Reconcile All Connected Replicas
- 42-1 Example: Multimaster Replication and Fan-Out Replication
- 42-2 Example: Replication Configuration Entries for Node C
- 42-3 Example: Replication Configuration Entries for Node D
- 45-1 Oracle Internet Directory Plug-in Framework
- A-1 A Component with Two Instances
- A-2 LDAP Replication Process
- A-3 Communication Between the Server and the Java Plug-in
- A-4 getPortableCredential Operation
- A-5 getPortableCredential Operation