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X.500
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==X.500 protocols== The protocols defined by X.500 include: {| class="wikitable" |+ !Protocol Name !Description !Defining Specification* |- |[[Directory Access Protocol]] (DAP) |"Defines the exchange of requests and outcomes between a DUA and a DSA." This is how a client interacts with the directory system. |ITU Recommendation X.511 |- |Directory System Protocol (DSP) |"Defines the exchange of requests and outcomes between two DSAs." This is how two directory servers interact with each other. |ITU Recommendation X.518 |- |Directory Information Shadowing Protocol (DISP) |"Defines the exchange of replication information between two DSAs that have established shadowing agreements." This is how directory servers replicate information. |ITU Recommendation X.525 |- |Directory Operational Bindings Management Protocol (DOP) |"Defines the exchange of administrative information between two DSAs to administer operational bindings between them." This is how directories manage agreements, such as those relating to replication, between each other. |ITU Recommendation X.501 |- |Certificate Authority Subscription Protocol (CASP) | |ITU Recommendation X.509 |- |Authorization Validation Management Protocol (AVMP) | |ITU Recommendation X.509 |- |Trust Broker Protocol (TBP) | |ITU Recommendation X.510 |} <nowiki>*</nowiki> These protocols are typically defined piecemeal throughout multiple specifications and [[ASN.1]] modules. The "Defining Specification" column above indicates (subjectively) which specification contributes most specifically to a protocol. Because these protocols used the [[Open Systems Interconnection|OSI]] networking stack, a number of alternatives to DAP were developed to allow Internet clients to access the X.500 Directory using the [[Internet protocol suite|TCP/IP]] networking stack. The most well-known alternative to DAP is Lightweight Directory Access Protocol ([[Lightweight Directory Access Protocol|LDAP]]). While DAP and the other X.500 protocols can now use the TCP/IP networking stack, LDAP remains a popular directory access protocol.
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