Overview of the attribute and DN mapping
To achieve the merger of the two data sets, create proxy transformations that map the Sample Corporation’s source attributes to Example.com target attributes.
The Example.com schema already defines an attribute to contain the relative distinguished name (RDN) of user entries, called uid
. However, Example.com chooses to create two new attributes within its exampleAccount
object class to accommodate two attributes in the Sample Corporation schema for representing the region and the distinguished name (DN) of linked accounts.
During the merger, Example.com decides to re-parent the Sample Corporation’s customer entries, which are defined under two different subtrees, ou=east,o=sample
and ou=west,o=sample
, placing them under Example.com’s ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
subtree. Associated proxy transformations are described in the DN Mappings table below. In this process, Example.com collapses the Sample Corporation tree, moving entries from the east and west region under a single DN, dc=example,dc=com
. The DN proxy transformations assume that all the Sample Corporation users have been co-located under this single Example.com subtree.
Sample Attribute | Example.com Attribute | Description |
---|---|---|
|
|
RDN of user entries |
|
|
String value representing the region |
|
|
DN value |
Legacy Sample LDAP applications searching for entries in either the Sample Corporation base DN ou=east,o=sample
or ou=west,o=sample
will be successfully serviced, though there will be one or more differences in the user entries seen by the Sample Corporation legacy applications.
Because the Example.com directory server has no knowledge of the Sample Corporation user’s former ou=east
or ou=west
association, search results for client searching under o=sample
will return a DN that might differ from the original search base. For instance, a search for sampleID=abc123
under ou=west,o=sample
might return the user entry for abc123 with the DN of sampleID=abc123,ou=east,o=sample
.
The following table illustrates the mapping DNs.
Sample DN | Example.com DN |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|