NIS servers and clients
Three kinds of machine have NIS databases in an SCO OpenServer system:
master servers, slave servers, and
copy-only servers. NIS clients
do not maintain an NIS database; they obtain
NIS information by making requests to remote master
or slave servers.
The master server updates the databases of slave and copy-only servers.
Copy-only servers, slave servers, and clients differ in the following ways:
-
Slave servers can satisfy requests to transfer maps if the
master server becomes unavailable; copy-only servers cannot.
-
In a heterogeneous
environment, slave servers can accept NIS requests from any
client, even from those not running SCO OpenServer systems; copy-only
servers cannot accept NIS requests.
-
Copy-only servers must poll a master server or slave server
to update their maps, while slave servers' maps are
updated by the master server when the master server changes its maps.
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Copy-only servers only keep stripped maps and
ASCII versions of NIS maps.
Slave servers keep full copies of both NIS maps and
their ASCII versions. Clients keep neither
NIS maps nor their ASCII versions.
-
Clients can request NIS maps over the network;
copy-only servers cannot make NIS requests but must
obtain their information locally.
NOTE:
NIS clients running on other than SCO OpenServer systems can make
requests of SCO NIS master and slave servers.
Database changes in an NIS domain are propagated from the master
server to other servers.
If you create or change NIS databases on slave or copy-only
servers instead of on the master server,
all modifications you make are temporary
and are overwritten when the master server updates them.
Therefore, make all database creations and modifications
on the master server machine only.
Next topic:
NIS binding
Previous topic:
Using yppush on the master server to propagate maps
© 2003 Caldera International, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 -- 11 February 2003