Planning For Service Access - Novell OPEN ENTERPRISE SERVER - PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION GUIDE 12-2010 Implementation Manual

Planning and implementation guide
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Conversely, other network administrators are equally adamant that their users function better
without the added overhead of running an NCP client on each workstation.
We can't determine what is best for you or your network, but we do provide you with viable choices.
Differences between Linux and Windows
There are some differences between the Linux and Windows clients. These are documented in
"Understanding How the Novell Client for Linux Differs from the Novell Client for Windows 2000/
XP" in the
Novell Client 2.0 SP3 for Linux Administration
eDirectory User Access to OES 2 Servers
Some services that run on OES 2 servers require that the users accessing them be (or, at least, appear
to the Linux system to be) standard Linux users with Linux user credentials, such as a user ID (UID)
and primary group ID (GID).
So that eDirectory users can access these services, Novell provides the Linux User Management
(LUM) technology. The impact of this on you as the network administrator is that these users and
groups must be enabled for eDirectory LDAP authentication to the local server. For more
information, see
"Linux User Management: Access to Linux for eDirectory Users" on page

16.1.2 Planning for Service Access

After you understand the access options available to your network users, you can decide which will
work best on your network.
Planning tips for network services are contained in the following sections:
"Planning File Service Access" on page 167
"Planning Print Service Access" on page 168
"Matching Protocols and Services to Check Access Requirements" on page 169
Planning File Service Access
As you plan which file services to provide, be aware of the file service/volume and feature support
limitations outlined in the following sections.
"Service Access to Volume Type Limitations" on page 167
"Feature Support" on page 168
Service Access to Volume Type Limitations
Supported combinations are outlined in
Table 16-4
Service Access to Volume Types
File Service
AFP
CIFS
Guide.
Table
16-4.
Linux POSIX Volumes
No
Yes-Novell CIFS Novell Samba Yes-Novell CIFS Novell Samba
147.
NSS Volumes on Linux
Yes-Novell AFP
Access Control and Authentication 167

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