£Á°èZ¨Ä…–K§‚«“ô4“ÒÙ´dîfUÙÃÅ WKbyʦ•ꎅȮFÒ¿ÊÎóCozá¬S@6{Í:›œêZÌ:Š•_%:¢¾¾~;‘Ã~芩ÊǍí`ÔÑ©ú뙵'5I¿fš×WO%ø9¾«¾DK|€ùÍD”Ýs]nHÕ¶êםӼ㞪éUWŸÈË%DÒÕ¬ï‘]/Åcx ‰ï2ß]ä6G[]S£Ôϯrs{úëóµmÒï#UQxo·õÞCe]"±/aÙ&Eã4ú9Jé_ÞåëdãöKë)AÞ ¯¹ægƒÛowЍø^d™ý½ßB7áyMä9ÜÖUã !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! # # LDAP Defaults # # See ldap.conf(5) for details # This file should be world readable but not world writable. #BASE dc=example,dc=com #URI ldap://ldap.example.com ldap://ldap-master.example.com:666 #SIZELIMIT 12 #TIMELIMIT 15 #DEREF never # When no CA certificates are specified the Shared System Certificates # are in use. In order to have these available along with the ones specified # by TLS_CACERTDIR one has to include them explicitly: #TLS_CACERT /etc/pki/tls/cert.pem # System-wide Crypto Policies provide up to date cipher suite which should # be used unless one needs a finer grinded selection of ciphers. Hence, the # PROFILE=SYSTEM value represents the default behavior which is in place # when no explicit setting is used. (see openssl-ciphers(1) for more info) #TLS_CIPHER_SUITE PROFILE=SYSTEM # Turning this off breaks GSSAPI used with krb5 when rdns = false SASL_NOCANON on