Hello,
is there any another solution for this then patching the source like here:
http://www.openldap.org/lists/openldap-technical/201001/msg00078.html
Lada
On Fri, Dec 11, 2009 at 1:31 PM, Edward Capriolo edlinuxguru@gmail.com wrote:
We use openldap as a back end for many things. One of the thing, it can be used for is an address book for outlook. Recently we upgrade to 2.4.16->2.4.20 from 2.(who knows how old).
Outlook 2003 clients stopped working:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/555536
So I followed the instructions here to enable server side sorting:
http://bacedifo.blogspot.com/2009/09/server-side-sort-with-openldap2418.html
I was able to add the ordering to the sn attribute.
attributetype ( 2.5.4.4 NAME ( 'sn' 'surname' ) DESC 'RFC2256: last (family) name(s) for which the entity is known by' ORDERING caseIgnoreOrderingMatch SUP name )
Unfortunately outlook is looking at the cn attribute
@400000004b21316a0e808064 sssvlv: no ordering rule specified and no default ordering rule for attribute cn @400000004b21316a0e808834 <= get_ctrls: n=1 rc=18 err="serverSort control: No ordering rule"
That unfortunately is not defined in the core.schema # system schema #attributetype ( 2.5.4.3 NAME ( 'cn' 'commonName' ) # DESC 'RFC2256: common name(s) for which the entity is known by' # SUP name )
I am sure there is a good reason why cn does not have an ordering, but I am guessing it used to have this in the distant past since this previously worked. So how would I go about changing the system schema? Or does anyone have a better way to deal with this.
(I know I could play with client registry (kb) article but I would like to handle this server side)
Thank you for your insights.
To follow up, does anyone know why CN does not have any ordering rule? Is their a way to add an ordering rule?