Codes & Standards - Purchase
CAN/CSA-ISO/IEC 9594-6-98 (R2002)
Information Technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The Directory: Selected Attribute Types (Adopted ISO/IEC 9594-6:1995)
SKU: 2410861
Published by CSA Group
Publication Year 1998
Reaffirmed in 2002
45 pages
Withdrawn
Product Details
Scope
This Recommendation / International Standard defines a number of attribute types and matching rules which may be found useful across a range of applications of the Directory.
Attribute types and matching rules fall into three categories, as described below.
Some attribute types and matching rules are used by a wide variety of ap plications or are understood and/or used by the Directory itself.
NOTE - It is recommended that an attribute type or matching rule defined in this document be used, in preference to the generation of a new one, whenever it is appropriate for the application.
Some attribute types and matching rules are internationally standardized, but are application-specific. These are defined in th e standards associated with the application concerned.
Any administrative authority can define its own attribute types and matching rules for any purpose. These are not internationally standardized, and are available to others beyond the administrative authority which created them only by bilateral agreement.
This Recommendation / International Standard defines a number of attribute types and matching rules which may be found useful across a range of applications of the Directory.
Attribute types and matching rules fall into three categories, as described below.
Some attribute types and matching rules are used by a wide variety of ap plications or are understood and/or used by the Directory itself.
NOTE - It is recommended that an attribute type or matching rule defined in this document be used, in preference to the generation of a new one, whenever it is appropriate for the application.
Some attribute types and matching rules are internationally standardized, but are application-specific. These are defined in th e standards associated with the application concerned.
Any administrative authority can define its own attribute types and matching rules for any purpose. These are not internationally standardized, and are available to others beyond the administrative authority which created them only by bilateral agreement.