Creating a Trusted Extensions Proxy for an Existing Sun Java System Directory Server
First, you need to add the Trusted Extensions databases to the existing Directory
Server on a Solaris system. Second, to enable Trusted Extensions systems to access
the Directory Server, you then need to configure a Trusted Extensions system to
be the LDAP proxy server.
Create an LDAP Proxy Server
If an LDAP server already exists at your site, create a proxy
server on a Trusted Extensions system.
Before You Begin
You have added the databases that contain Trusted Extensions information to the LDAP
server. For details, see Populate the Sun Java System Directory Server.
- On a system that is configured with Trusted Extensions, create a proxy server.
For details, see Chapter 12, Setting Up LDAP Clients (Tasks), in System Administration Guide: Naming and Directory Services (DNS, NIS, and LDAP).
- Verify that the Trusted Extensions databases can be viewed by the proxy server.
# ldaplist -l database
Troubleshooting
For strategies to solve LDAP configuration problems, see Chapter 13, LDAP Troubleshooting (Reference), in System Administration Guide: Naming and Directory Services (DNS, NIS, and LDAP).