Preface

Welcome to the Oracle Fusion Middleware Administrator's Guide for Oracle Internet Directory. This Preface contains the following topics:

Audience

This document is intended for anyone who performs administration tasks for the Oracle Internet Directory. You should be familiar with either the UNIX operating system or the Microsoft Windows operating system to understand the line-mode commands and examples. You can perform all of the tasks through the command line utilities, and you can perform most of the tasks through Oracle Directory Services Manager and Oracle Enterprise Manager Fusion Middleware Control, which are operating system-independent.

To use this document, you need some familiarity with the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP).

Documentation Accessibility

For information about Oracle's commitment to accessibility, visit the Oracle Accessibility Program website at http://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=acc&id=docacc.

Access to Oracle Support

Oracle customers that have purchased support have access to electronic support through My Oracle Support. For information, visit http://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=acc&id=info or visit http://www.oracle.com/pls/topic/lookup?ctx=acc&id=trs if you are hearing impaired.

Related Documents

For more information, see the following documents:

For additional information, see:

  • Chadwick, David. Understanding X.500—The Directory. Thomson Computer Press, 1996.

  • Howes, Tim and Mark Smith. LDAP: Programming Directory-enabled Applications with Lightweight Directory Access Protocol. Macmillan Technical Publishing, 1997.

  • Howes, Tim, Mark Smith and Gordon Good, Understanding and Deploying LDAP Directory Services. Macmillan Technical Publishing, 1999.

  • Internet Assigned Numbers Authority home page, http://www.iana.org for information about object identifiers

  • Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) documentation available at: http://www.ietf.org, especially:

    • The LDAPEXT charter and LDAP drafts

    • The LDAP charter and drafts

    • RFC 2254, "The String Representation of LDAP Search Filters"

    • RFC 1823, "The LDAP Application Program Interface"

  • The OpenLDAP Community, http://www.openldap.org

Conventions

The following text conventions are used in this document:

Convention Meaning
boldface Boldface type indicates graphical user interface elements associated with an action, or terms defined in text or the glossary.
italic Italic type indicates book titles, emphasis, or placeholder variables for which you supply particular values.
monospace Monospace type indicates commands within a paragraph, URLs, code in examples, text that appears on the screen, or text that you enter.