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Verify that the ESDEMO Server Starts

Go to an Enterprise Developer command prompt and try to start ESDEMO:

casstart /uES-admin /pES-password

where ES-admin and ES-password are the username and password of the user you edited in step 4 to grant ES administration permissions. (You can also start ESDEMO from MFDS and supply a username and password in the Use Enterprise Server credentials form, but this is easier to run again if you need to correct a typo or other problem.)

ESDEMO should start successfully. If it does not, here are some things to check:
  • ES-admin and ES-password are spelled correctly.
  • The ESDEMO console log (console.log) shows the MLDAP ESM module being loaded and initialized successfully. The location of the console log depends on your installation, but the default location is %USERPROFILE%\Documents\Micro Focus User\Enterprise Developer\WORKAREA\ESDEMO.
    • If the MLDAP ESM module fails to initialize because it can't connect to the server, check the Connection Path setting in the LDAP security manager in MFDS. Also check firewall configurations on both systems.
    • If the MLDAP ESM module cannot bind to the server, check the Authorized ID and Password settings in the LDAP security manager in MFDS.
    • If the MLDAP ESM module is logging other errors, check the text in the Configuration Information area in the LDAP security manager in MFDS, such as the DNs of the various containers. Errors here will prevent the ESM module from finding its data in AD.
  • The user's "common name" does not match the user's "logon name". A user in Active Directory has multiple names, which can be confusing. Users log on to Windows using the "logon name", which is normally a fairly short nickname (such as the user's initials). If you look at a user's properties in Active Directory, this name is shown on the Account tab.

    LDAP clients, such as the MLDAP ESM module, use a user's Distinguished Name (DN), which is formed using the user's Common Name (CN), and the Common Name is set by Windows when the user is created. By default, Windows sets the common name to the user's first name, middle initial, and last name.

    Since the MLDAP ESM only uses the common name, it doesn't matter if the logon name is different, but users might be confused if they can log on using their common name but not their logon name. Also, if the common name is longer than 8 characters or contains spaces, that may cause difficulties with the current version of ES. (Future ES versions will support long names better.)

    You can change a user's common name by renaming the user in Active Directory Users and Computers. After you rename the user, you can go back and reset the user's first and last name and display name (under the General tab of the Properties dialog), if you wish.

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