
Callout Area on the screen Information or capability that the area provides
username typed at the control panel to form the Relative Distinguished Name
(RDN). Commonly used prefixes are "CN" (for common name) or "UID" (for
user identity).
8 Bind and Search Root The Bind and Search Root value is used to validate the user's credientials
with the LDAP server. This value is combined with the RDN to construct the
full Distinguished Name (DN) of the user.
The string consists of "attribute=value" pairs, separated by commas. For
example:
ou=engineering,o=Hewlett Packard,c=US
ou=marketing,o=Hewlett Packard,c=US
o=hp.com
ou=engineering,cn=users,dc=hp,dc=com
NOTE The Bind Prefix and Bind and Search Root settings are only
used if the LDAP Server Bind Method is set to Simple or Simple over
SSL, Use Device User Credentials is selected, and the user
authenticates to the device via Kerberos authentication.
9 LDAP Server Type the host name or TCP/IP address of the LDAP server whose database
contains the centralized address book.
NOTE Some products recognize only TCP/IP addresses. In such
cases, host names are converted to the equivalent TCP/IP address.
10 Port Type the TCP/IP port number on which the server is processing LDAP
requests. This is typically port 3268.
11 Find Server Click this button to search for available LDAP servers.
12 Find Settings Click this button to have the product attempt to determine the best settings
for the specified server when searching the LDAP database.
13 Search Root Type the Distinguished Name (DN) of the entry in the LDAP directory
structure where address searching is to begin. A DN is made up of
"attribute=value" pairs, separated by commas. For example:
ou=departmentname,o=companyname
ou=marketing,o=Hewlett Packard,c=US
o=hp.com
ou=engineering,cn=users,dc=hp,dc=com
NOTE For some LDAP servers, the search root can be left blank
(in which case its root node will be assumed).
Table 4-5 Addressing Settings (continued)
ENWW Addressing Settings 73
Digital Sending