Apple Mac OS X Server Version 10.3 or Later Specifiche Pagina 182

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182 Glossary
owner The person who created a file or folder and who therefore has the ability to
assign access privileges for other users. The owner of an item automatically has read/
write privileges for that item. An owner can also transfer ownership of an item to
another user.
parent A computer whose shared directory domain provides configuration
information to another computer.
primary group A user’s default group. The file system uses the ID of the primary group
when a user accesses a file he or she doesn’t own.
primary group ID A unique number that identifies a primary group.
protocol A set of rules that determines how data is sent back and forth between two
applications.
Rendezvous A protocol developed by Apple for automatic discovery of computers,
devices, and services on IP networks. This proposed Internet standard protocol is
sometimes referred to as ā€œZeroConfā€ or ā€œmulticast DNS.ā€ For more information, visit
www.apple.com or www.zeroconf.org.
schema The collection of attributes and record types or classes that provide a
blueprint for the information in a directory domain.
search path See search policy.
search policy A list of directory domains searched by a Mac OS X computer when it
needs configuration information; also the order in which domains are searched.
Sometimes called a search path.
share point A folder, hard disk (or hard disk partition), or CD that is accessible over the
network. A share point is the point of access at the top level of a group of shared items.
Share points can be shared using AFP, Windows SMB, NFS (an ā€œexportā€), or FTP protocols.
short name An abbreviated name for a user. The short name is used by Mac OS X for
home directories, authentication, and email addresses.
single signon An authentication strategy that relieves users from entering a name and
password separately for every network service. Mac OS X Server uses Kerberos to
enable single signon.
SLP (Service Location Protocol) DA (Directory Agent) A protocol that registers
services available on a network and gives users easy access to them. When a service is
added to the network, the service uses SLP to register itself on the network. SLP/DA
uses a centralized repository for registered network services.
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