LDAP -- remain ignorant - or ride silicon valley - you choose. Mastering Lightweight Directory Access Protocol is much better than being Quickdraw McGraw. You could become a billionaire ... or you could just read about them. Key references and texts including discussions of Switched Networks, Multilayer Switching, QoS, IP Multicast, Network Policy, and Service-Level Agreements. Stay away at your own risk.
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(C) 1999 OmegaPoint Network Enterprises

Understanding and Deploying LDAP Directory Services (MacMillan Network Architecture and Development Series)
Tim Howes, et al / Hardcover / Published 1999 -- TOP RANKED BOOK

While early directory standards (such as X.500) offer some cross-platform functionality, none has the flexibility and widespread appeal of Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), which is fast becoming a standard part of networked computers. In Understanding and Deploying LDAP Directory Services, three experienced engineers share their knowledge of LDAP in theory and practice, effectively defining this fast-emerging technology. If you're planning to work with LDAP in any way--whether as a network manager, a software developer, or an information technology administrator--you need to read and pay attention to this book. It's the last word on LDAP as it stands today.

Since directory services aren't widely understood, this book begins by defining them and explaining what they can do for an organization. The guide then gets into the specifics of how LDAP organizes directories and handles queries. The authors go to great lengths to talk about what information to put in directories, how to validate and maintain it, and how to manage access to it. There's also lots of material on initiating LDAP services and on troubleshooting.

The aft part of this book holds special appeal for software developers, since it talks extensively about how to implement LDAP in both new and existing software. Throughout, the authors pay special attention to data redundancy, security, privacy, and the economic issues involved in an LDAP deployment. The book's real-world focus is cemented by case studies (both historical and semifictional). --David Wall, Amazon Reviewer  -- HEY  ... IF you don't have this book,  you won't accomplish as much as you could otherwise  ...and that's a long winded way of saying  you'll be $&^%$&^$.   

 
 
Designing Distributed Applications With Xml : Asp Ie5 LDAP and MSMQ
Stephen F. Mohr / Paperback / Published 1999 --- Using Stephen's 5 Principles of Cooperative Network Application Development, you can create applications that can promote themselves on the network, sharing data and logic with clients of varying levels of sophistication. Using XML to define data exchange in such a way that future applications will also be able to negotiate an exchange format - even in the face of minor programming errors or evolving data definitions. Using LDAP this can take place on a network where we query for the services without knowing their location. The result is a distributed computing environment that will remain robust while users and resources are in flux.
 
 

Implementing LDAP
Mark Wilcox / Mass Market Paperback / Published 1999  -- There is growing interest in a standard way of providing access to personal information (e.g. "white pages" data) and reducing the number of logon id's a user is required to remember or administer. The LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol) protocol is poised to be the solution to these problems. Since the IETF recently approved the version 3 of the LDAP protocol it is now really gaining steam as companies such as Sun, Novell and Microsoft are making their proprietary networks available as LDAP servers. Netscape has gone as far as to make LDAP (in the form of their Directory server) the linchpin of their overall enterprise strategy. Since the first release of Netscape Communicator and the version 3 of its servers, Netscape has provided the ability to access a LDAP server. Netscape's LDAP API's is derived from the original University of Michigan API and they have made the source public on their mozilla.org site. This means that their API can be used not only with Directory server, but any LDAP server.  -- HEY YOU'VE GOT TO GET THIS BOOK too ... nuff said ...
Ldap : Programming Directory-Enabled Applications With Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
Tim Howes, Mark Smith / Paperback / Published 1997---Tim Howes's LDAP: Programming Directory-Enabled Applications with Lightweight Directory Access Protocol is a very useful and (given the technical subject matter) surprisingly readable guide to the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP), the preferred protocol for providing directory services on today's Internet. The book provides a solid introduction to what LDAP is, including its history and architecture, and then proceeds to cover LDAP API programming via C and C++ in clear, discrete examples that range from simple searching to filtering, reading, and updating LDAP directories. More advanced topics include asynchronous LDAP programming with threads, as well as building a command-line LDAP search utility. For programmers, this text is useful because of its overall clarity, although it also covers some of the specifics of developing in LDAP on Windows 95/NT, Macintosh, and UNIX. Non-programmers will also find the chapters on using command-line versions of LDAP (available in Netscape's implementation) to be very useful. The authors even provide examples of programming LDAP utilities through scripting in Perl, as LDAP applications can be prototyped using scripting languages first, then coded in the actual API using C/C++. On the whole, this is an exceptionally clear book that covers this valuable protocol extremely well.
 

LDAP Programming : Directory Management and Integration
Clayton Donley / Paperback / Published 2000
LDAP Programming with Java Technology
Rob Weltman, Tony Dahbura / Hardcover / Published 2000

 

are u ready?  on to another topic  ...Switched Networks and Service Level Agreements

Building Switched Networks: Multilayer Switching, QoS, IP Multicast, Network Policy, and Service-Level Agreements
Darryl P. Black, Daryl Paul Black / Hardcover / Published 1999

Building Switched Networks provides a comprehensive, technical survey of the networking technologies that comprise the core of evolving LAN and WAN infrastructures. This book gives you essential background information, clear descriptions of relevant technologies, and an understanding of how those technologies will be employed throughout networks in the near future. In particular, the text focuses on developments that support our increasing demand for network bandwidth--multilayer switching, delivery guarantees, and multicasting--and examines performance issues, resource allocation, network policy, and network services.


Topics:
Virtual LANs and the 802.1Q and 802.1p standards Layer-2, Layer-3, and Layer-4 switching
The emerging Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) standard
Quality of Service (QoS), delivery guarantees based on specified parameters, and resource management
Class of Service (COS) priority queuing techniques
IP multicast--a key technology for enabling networks to scale Service Level Agreements (SLAs) that formalize service characteristics
Network Policy, with a discussion of Directory Enabled Networking (DEN) and the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP)
Emerging sophisticated network services made possible by the above technologies, including Virtual Private Networks (VPNs)and Voice over IP (VoIP)

 
Supporting Service Level Agreements on IP Networks
Dinesh Verma / Hardcover / Published 1999  ---

Service-Level Agreement definition and deployment is a key issue for Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and other network service providers as they construct a quality of service architecture for IP networks. An essential resource for network engineers and architects, Supporting Service-Level Agreements on IP Networks will help you build a core network capable of supporting a range of services, such as virtual private networks (VPNs), multicast traffic, and Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS). You'll also learn to create SLA solutions using off-the-shelf components in both best-effort and DiffServ/IntServ networks. See how to verify the performance of your SLA, as either a customer or network services provider, and use SLA's to support IPv6 networks.

  • Covers SLA support using network design, frame relay, and ATM technologies
  • Detailed discussion of the protocols and schemes being developed in the IETF Differentiated Services and Integrated Services working groups

 

 

Complete Guide to IT Service Level Agreements: Matching Service Quality to Business Needs (1999/2000 EDITION)
Andrew Hiles / Paperback / Published 1999

 

SLA Framework CD-ROM: Service Level Agreements Framework 
Andrew Hiles / CD-ROM / Published 1999 (costs a bunch but can save you a lot more... for established businesses and consultants only).

 

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