On 04/15/15 19:28, Michael Ströder wrote:
> dE wrote:
>> "An object or alias entry is characterized by precisely one
>> structural object class superclass chain which has a single
>> structural object class as the most subordinate object class.
>> This structural object class is referred to as the structural
>> object class of the entry."
>>
>> There's a bit of ambiguity with this
>>
>> "which has a single structural object class as the most subordinate object
>> class"
>>
>> What do you mean by 'most subordinate'? Is it that there must be no
parallel
>> entries at the same level in the hierarchy?
>
> It's always better to provide a reference to the full text of a quoted text.
>
> The hierarchy in this case is the the structural object classes hierarchy,
> not the directory information tree (DIT). Read in RFC 4512 about what SUP in
> object class description means:
>
>
http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4512#section-4.1.1
>
> Note that there's also an attribute type hierarchy defined with SUP.
Yes, I know that.
Actually the question was --
What do you mean by 'most subordinate'? Is it that there must be no parallel
structural object class at the same level in the class hierarchy?