389 Directory Server

389 Directory Server
Developer(s) Red Hat
Initial release December 8, 2005 (2005-12-08)
Stable release 1.3.3.10 / June 17, 2015 (2015-06-17)
Development status Active
Written in C, Python, Java, Perl, shell script
Operating system Linux / Unix
Type Directory server
License GPL
Website port389.org

The 389 Directory Server (previously Fedora Directory Server) is an LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol) server developed by Red Hat, as part of Red Hat's community-supported Fedora Project. The name 389 is derived from the port number for LDAP. Red Hat offers a version of 389 called Red Hat Directory Server via an extra subscription on top of RHEL. Red Hat Directory Server differs from 389 in that the former is rebranded with the Red Hat branding, and includes certified stable builds, customer service, and technical support. Red Hat will rebase the Red Hat version with a stable upstream 389 branch from time to time, and backport new features and critical bug fixes as necessary. The goal of the 389 Project is to get new features out quickly, but the sometimes conflicting goal of the Red Hat product is to ensure stability and reliability. The 389 source code is generally available under the GPLv2 license. Some components have an exception for plugin code, while other components use LGPLv2 or APL. The same applies to the Red Hat product.

389 Directory Server is being built on top of Fedora, but supports many operating systems including Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 and later, Debian, Solaris 8 and later, and HP-UX 11i.

History

389 Directory Server is the newest incarnation of what was once the original University of Michigan slapd project. In 1996, the project's developers were hired by Netscape Communications Corporation and the project became known as the Netscape Directory Server (NDS). After acquiring Netscape, AOL sold ownership of the NDS intellectual property to Sun Microsystems, but retained rights akin to ownership. Sun sold and developed the Netscape Directory Server under the name JES/SunOne Directory Server, now Oracle Directory Server since the takeover of Sun by Oracle. AOL/Netscape's rights were acquired by Red Hat, and on June 1, 2005, much of the source code was released as free software under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).

As of 389 Directory Server version 1.0 (December 1, 2005), Red Hat released as free software all of the remaining source code for all components included in the release package (admin server, console, etc.) and continues to maintain them under their respective licenses.[1][2]

In May 2009 the Fedora Directory Server project changed its name to 389 to give the project a distribution and vendor neutral name and encourage porting or running the software on other operating systems.[3]

Features

389 Directory Server has multi-master capability.

389 Directory Server also has the ability to export parts of the directory to read-only servers. This is similar to the Read Only Domain Controller in Microsoft's Active Directory Domain Services.

See also

References

External links

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