Hi,
thank you for your
answer. I was toled by the project leader of our LDAP migration that the LDAP
clients are caching the authentication information and users like the oracle
user or apache won’t create new sessions for every operation. I also was toled
that the clients cache those information for 12 hours so we will never have any
hanging oracle databases due to a crash of our LDAP servers. Is that true?
Von:
Andris Eiduks [mailto:aeiduks@gmail.com]
Gesendet: 16 January 2008 08:20
An:
Cc:
openldap-technical@openldap.org
Betreff: Re: LDAP and oracle
I think that only mass
users must be authenticated using LDAP.
And heavy load on LDAP server shows that You create new session for every new
operation.
On Jan 7, 2008 3:33 PM, < florian.engelmann@bt.com>
wrote:
Hi,
We just migrated our unix/linux accounts to LDAP. We decided to migrate
every user account that can login (except root) to LDAP. Now we have
heavy load on our LDAP systems and I think this is because we also
migrated the oracle users that are running our oracle databases. This is
because the oracle admins log on the systems using the user the database
is running with. I do not know that much about oracle but is it
mandatory to administrate an oracle database with the same user? Does it
make sense to migrate systemusers to ldap?
Florian Engelmann