If the object was in ou=otherusers,dc=domain,dc=tld, then the rdn would still be cn=object, but then it would have a different dn: cn=object,ou=otherusers,dc=domain,dc=tld. So the rdn is relative to its parent. And the canonicalname cn is just an attribute. Sometimes the cn and the rdn have the same value.

What is the difference between an RDN, a DN, and a CN in rdn is in the example cn=object, because it is relative to ou=users,dc=domain,dc=tld. If the object was in ou=otherusers,dc=domain,dc=tld, then the rdn would still be cn=object, but then it would have a different dn: cn=object,ou=otherusers,dc=domain,dc=tld. So the rdn is relative to its parent. And the canonicalname cn is just an attribute. Configuring LDAP connection For Bind DN, the following values are invalid: cn=Administrator,cn=Users,dc=mycompany,dc=com because CN and DC are lowercase alphabets. CN=Administrator,DC=mycompany,DC=com because CN=Users parameter is missing. CN=Administrator,CN=Users, DC=mycompany,DC=com because there is a space between the parameters. CN - Transportation Services - Rail Shipping, Intermodal

Headquarter Room 16A, 168 Zhen-ning Road, Jing-an District, Shanghai , China Give Us a Call +86 21-5230 0315 service@dn.cn

[SOLVED] Filtering OU in DistinguishedName - PowerShell Dec 21, 2017

Access is restricted to staff and students of the University of Sydney . UniKey credentials are required. Non university access may be obtained by visiting the University of Sydney Library.

Dec 21, 2017