Quantum 3.5.2 Marine Sanitation System User Manual


 
Configuring LDAP
StorNext User’s Guide 332
* transfer buffer size)
For example, consider a Linux Distributed LAN Server that has two
NICs used for Distributed LAN traffic, serves four file systems, and
uses the default eight server buffers and 256K per buffer. (See the
dpserver and sndpscfg man pages for information about viewing and
modifying Distributed LAN buffer settings on Linux.) For this case:
Required memory = 1GB + (4 * 2 * 8 * 256K) = 1040MB
Configuring LDAP 1
This sections describes how to configure the StorNext LDAP functionality
and describes related features in the Windows configuration utilities.
Using LDAP 1 StorNext 2.7 introduced support for Light Directory Access Protocol, or
LDAP (RFC 2307). This feature allows customers to use Active Directory/
LDAP for mapping Windows User IDs (SIDs) to UNIX User ID/Group
IDs.
Changes to “Nobody” mapping
1
If a Windows user cannot be mapped to a UNIX ID, the user is mapped to
Nobody. StorNext allows administrators to change the value of Nobody
by using the file system configuration parameters:
UnixNobodyUidOnWindows 60001
UnixNobodyGidOnWindows 60001
These parameters are located in the file system configuration file on the
server and can be manually modified by the Windows or StorNext Web
GUI.
Note: This example results in a memory requirement of less than
2GB. However, Quantum recommends that all Distributed
LAN Servers contain a minimum of 2GB of RAM.