User`s guide
Preface About This Guide 11
 Unified locking. Mac OS X Server unifies file locking across AFP and SMB/CIFS
protocols. This feature lets users working on multiple platforms simultaneously share
files without worrying about file corruption.
 Service access. You can specify which users and groups can use services hosted by a
server.
 Pervasive Kerberos support. The following services on Mac OS X Server now
support Kerberos authentication: AFP, mail, File Transfer Protocol (FTP), Secure Shell
(SSH), login window, LDAPv3, Virtual Private Network (VPN), screen saver, and Apache
(via the SPNEGO protocol).
 Network browsing. You can set up managed network views, which are custom
views that users see when they select the Network icon in the sidebar of a Finder
window. A managed network view is one or more network neighborhoods, which
appear in the Finder as folders. Each folder contains a list of resources that an
administrator has associated with the view. Managed network views offer a
meaningful way to present network resources. You can create multiple views for
different client computers. And because the views are stored using Open Directory,
a computer’s network view is automatically available when a user logs in.
 Site-to-site VPN. Site-to-site VPN connects two networks. It offers a secure
connection that’s easy to establish when it’s necessary to set up a network at another
site, as when a business expands. Site-to-site VPN makes both networks appear as
one to users working at either site.
 Mobility. Users with portable computers can use trusted binding to make sure that
servers accessed as they move around are trustworthy. Trusted binding offers a way
for a client computer to authenticate to an LDAP server and for the LDAP server to
authenticate to the client.