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To: DO$Kapital who wrote (11302)10/13/1998 8:49:00 AM
From: ToySoldier  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
Looks like Linux is getting more and more Corp. support...

Linux gets NDS boost
Novell doing directory deal with Caldera.

By Christine Burns
Network World, 10/12/98

Novell officials last week revealed the company is plotting to port its
directory services technology to Linux, giving the suddenly hot Unix
variant yet another surge of momentum.

The company is building a version of Novell Directory Services
(NDS) for Linux with Caldera Systems, a firm started four years
ago by none other than Novell founder Ray Noorda. The move is
part of Novell's strategy to expand the presence of NDS before
Microsoft's Active Directory Service hits the streets next year along
with NT 5.0, says Chris Stone, Novell's senior vice president of
strategy and corporate development.

The NDS for Linux development agreement, expected to be
finalized later this month, extends a 2-year-old Novell-Caldera deal.
Under the existing pact, Caldera has been licensing Novell's Cross
Platform Services to provide NetWare file and print services on top
of its Linux servers.

The new agreement would be the latest boost for Linux, a freeware
edition of Unix that is currently employed by seven million users and
positioned by some as an alternative to NT. Informix, Intel,
Netscape and Oracle are among the big-name companies that in
recent weeks have thrown their weight behind Linux through a
variety of product announcements and investments.

NDS running natively on Linux will give administrators the ability to
manage users, groups and access control rights across a network. It
will also enable authorized users to sign on to a corporate network
just once to access resources on machines running Linux and other
NDS-enabled operating systems, such as NetWare, NT and
Solaris. This will be the first commercially available directory service
for Linux.

For Caldera, the union could make Linux more credible as an
operating system for large corporate networks, according to
Ransom Love, Caldera's president and CEO. "As each vendor
embraces Linux and brings its respective strengths to the technology,
Linux as a whole becomes a more viable alternative. Novell has a lot
to add here in terms of the company's technology and distribution
channels," Love says.

NDS for Linux will go beyond the capabilities of NetWare for
Linux, a product Caldera began shipping in July. NetWare for Linux
has some directory ties that allow a Linux server to sit on a
NetWare network. But because no underlying integration exists with
Linux's security structure, customers cannot currently use NDS to
manage user access to any application running on a Linux server,
says Michael Simpson, director of marketing at Novell.

Additionally, any product resulting from this new agreement would
be completely IP-based and support Lightweight Directory Access
Protocol Version 3, Simpson says.

Who needs it?

User and analyst reactions to Novell's Linux plans were mixed. San
Carlos, Calif., vitamin maker Natural Alternatives International uses
Caldera's NetWare for Linux to tie a Linux e-mail server to a
NetWare LAN. But MIS director Alan Harnetiau says he would be
hesitant to deploy NDS natively on Linux.

"You wouldn't be able to convince me that a port to Linux is going
to work as well as NDS on NetWare does," Harnetiau says. "I
don't think I would pay extra to run my mission-critical directory
service on a platform that it wasn't originally built for."

But Andy McRory, a consultant with Tallahassee, Fla., Linux
reseller The PC Doctor, disagrees. "Linux users have been
screaming for more apps that natively support their systems. The
people who really need to mix and match Linux inside their Novell
networks will definitely pay for it," McRory says.

Others say cost could be the issue that will determine NDS for
Linux's success. "If, after adding the cost of these services, the
product on Linux turns out to cost more than on NT Server or
NetWare, then the product would have minimal adoption," says Neil
Macdonald, a senior analyst with Gartner Group, a Stamford,
Conn., market research firm. On the other hand, if the cost is too
low, "then an organization might consider replacing its NetWare
servers with Linux - a situation Novell desperately will try to avoid,"
he says.

Giga Group Senior Analyst Todd Chipman says it would be hard to
find Linux deployed on an enterprise scale at any of the 2,000
largest U.S. companies. "The directory solves the problem of
large-scale user administration," he says. "You don't need that in the
Linux deployments that are out there right now. It just seems to me
like Novell has to strike up a deal like this because the company
doesn't want to miss the Linux boat if by some chance it does take
off."


nwfusion.com

Toy