Headcount, Nsdeletecount, Nsmodifycount – Red Hat 8.1 User Manual

Page 147: Nsrenamecount, Nssearchbasecount, Nssearchonelevelcount, Nssearchsubtreecount, Nsabandoncount, Nsbindcount, Nsunbindcount

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headcount

This attribute gives the number of add operations received.

nsDeleteCount

This attribute gives the number of delete operations received.

nsModifyCount

This attribute gives the number of modify operations received.

nsRenameCount

This attribute gives the number of rename operations received.

nsSearchBaseCount

This attribute gives the number of base level searches received.

nsSearchOneLevelCount

This attribute gives the number of one-level searches received.

nsSearchSubtreeCount

This attribute gives the number of subtree searches received.

nsAbandonCount

This attribute gives the number of abandon operations received.

nsBindCount

This attribute gives the number of bind requests received.

nsUnbindCount

This attribute gives the number of unbinds received.

nsCompareCount

This attribute gives the number of compare operations received.

nsOperationConnectionCount

This attribute gives the number of open connections for normal operations.

nsBindConnectionCount

This attribute gives the number of open connections for bind operations.

3.6. Retro Changelog Plug-in Attributes

Two different types of changelogs are maintained by Directory Server. The first type, referred to as
simply a changelog, is used by multi-master replication, and the second changelog, a plug-in referred to
as the retro changelog, is intended for use by LDAP clients for maintaining application compatibility with
Directory Server 4.x versions.

This Retro Changelog Plug-in is used to record modifications made to a supplier server. When the
supplier server's directory is modified, an entry is written to the Retro Changelog that contains both of
the following:

A number that uniquely identifies the modification. This number is sequential with respect to other
entries in the changelog.
The modification action; that is, exactly how the directory was modified.

It is through the Retro Changelog Plug-in that the changes performed to the Directory Server are
accessed using searches to cn=changelog suffix.

3.6.1. nsslapd-changelogdir

Red Hat Directory Server 8.1 Configuration and Command Reference

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