On Mon, Jun 22, 2009 at 8:04 PM, Rich Megginson <rmeggins@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
My main what server? DS or Admin? As I understand that, that will register whatever server is listed as the ldapurl as the only instance in the Admin server on the box I'm running this on. Correct?
Am I being deluded about this? I'm expect to log in to an admin server with the idm console, and see a list of 8 different machines listed there, and be able to browse the ldap tree of any of those machines, including their o=NetscapeRoot and be able to manage ACI's, password policies and such... This is the model you recommend, no?
Thanks
Chris
Chris Phillips wrote:Change adm.conf back to point to which server you want to use as your main server, and then run setup-ds-admin.pl -u
Try editing /etc/dirsrv/admin-serv/adm.conf to point to the
correct server, then try register-ds-admin.pl
I'm afraid I'm still in the dark here. The adm.conf is used by the admin server to contact the DS instance to be managed? I thought the logic was the other way round, with the DS server "phoning home" to register itself to the Admin. Either way, the adm.conf then only lists one server in the ldapurl, and the other two attributes referencing the server, sie and isie both get changed to match the server in the ldapurl as part of the registration, removing all other references to the server that was in there. So whilst I thought my modifications to adm.conf (changing the ldapurl from server b to a) on server b and running register-ds-admin.pl on server b would add server b to the admin console on server a. Instead it *replaced* server b with server a on the admin console on server b, meaning both admin consoles were then registered to administer server a. Not anything like what I wanted!
Any pointers?
My main what server? DS or Admin? As I understand that, that will register whatever server is listed as the ldapurl as the only instance in the Admin server on the box I'm running this on. Correct?
Am I being deluded about this? I'm expect to log in to an admin server with the idm console, and see a list of 8 different machines listed there, and be able to browse the ldap tree of any of those machines, including their o=NetscapeRoot and be able to manage ACI's, password policies and such... This is the model you recommend, no?
Thanks
Chris
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