There was a time when Novell ruled the server…a time when CNE was a mark of technical excellence and server uptime was measured in years not weeks…a time and when Novell Directory Services (NDS) provided a single point of administration for every aspect of the enterprise environment, including the then evolving Active Directory!.
Yet just when everything was coming together for Novell the attraction of owning the desktop led them to acquire Ximian, the coolest Linux desktop on the block, before joining forces with IBM and acquiring SuSE – possibly the biggest competitor to RedHat at the time.
It was not long after the SuSE acquisition that Novell announced their intention to phase out NetWare, a move that saw many IT Managers faced with the decision of migrating their servers to the then largely untested OES (Open Enterprise Server) or crumbling under the ever increasing pressure of Active Directory and Exchange. Needless to say not many survived to log in via the Novell Client…
I personally focused my energy on FreeBSD and other OpenSource solutions, occasionally rolling out OES to companies that required enterprise support, secure file synchronisation (iFolder) or a rock solid collaboration platform (GroupWise). Novell have always had sensible license fees that were often based on the user model and not server providing massive cost savings.
It was cost savings that I was looking for recently while searching for a cross platform LDAP solution that was easy to manage, secure, reliable and had enterprise support to boot. It was exactly those requirements that led me back to Novell, back to eDirectory, which after all this time continue to offer the Full Service Directory promise that ruled the enterprise several years ago.
Installation of eDirectory on SuSE is seamless, RedHat however required a few dependencies (yum install) but still took under 10 minutes, and that included bolting on iManager the secure web interface to many Novell products (think Console One). Configuring the RedHat clients was just as easy, in fact using the authconfig tool you can configure the client to talk to eDirectory with a single command:
authconfig --enableldap --enableldapauth --enableldaptls --ldapserver=myserver --ldapbasedn=o=myorganisation --enablemkhomedir --updateall
As for adding a replica for resilience, well you only need to install eDirectory onto another server on your network (yes it runs on Windows too!), and as long as you select your existing tree during the install process you have a secure read/write replica – simple eh!.
So it seems Novell never gave up. They focused their energy into migrating all the great tools we took for granted with NetWare while combining the best of breed Linux tools into SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 – Novell’s latest enterprise server platform.
With features such as .NET support for System z mainframes, OCFS2 / cLVM2 and new fine-grained management of CPU, memory, storage and networking resources, it looks like Novell have a worthy contender to the enterprise Linux throne!.
Could Novell be ready to pick up where they left off with NetWare?, only time will tell….now if only eDirectory ran on FreeBSD.



















