Hi, I have a question regarding ACLs and their use in an interesting circumstance.
I have a group, lets call it g, and it contains users a and b. I also have users a, b, c and d. Now, I want user d to be able to have access to write to the members of group g, and unable to access non members of group g. Now lets say i add user e, and e becomes a member of g, i want d to be able to write to these 3 members (a,b,e) without needing to rewrite or insert ACLs etc.
I have been looking alot at the ACL page on the openldap site, and as much as i think the group and regex rules are fantastic, I cant think of how to implement them for this situation. Any help would be greatly appreciated
Thanks for your time and help, yet again.
William
On 18/06/2010 11:15, Indexer wrote:
Hi, I have a question regarding ACLs and their use in an interesting circumstance.
I have a group, lets call it g, and it contains users a and b. I also have users a, b, c and d. Now, I want user d to be able to have access to write to the members of group g, and unable to access non members of group g. Now lets say i add user e, and e becomes a member of g, i want d to be able to write to these 3 members (a,b,e) without needing to rewrite or insert ACLs etc.
I have been looking alot at the ACL page on the openldap site, and as much as i think the group and regex rules are fantastic, I cant think of how to implement them for this situation. Any help would be greatly appreciated
Thanks for your time and help, yet again.
You can achieve this using sets. See: http://www.openldap.org/faq/data/cache/1133.html
Jonathan
openldap-technical@openldap.org