One of Samba's cofounders has praised Novell's decision to submit the eDirectory APIs to two open source projects - a decision that will allow you to authenticate network access using the program.

Novell said on Monday that it will submit the programming interfaces for eDirectory to two open source projects, allowing developers to use Novell's directory program to authenticate network access. Novell also detailed a partnership with Linux security company Astaro to create a security appliance that runs Novell's SuSE Linux operating system.

The announcements were made in conjunction with this week's RSA security show in San Francisco and LinuxWorld conference in Boston.

The submitted code is required to use security-related services in Novell's eDirectory, which forms the basis for Novell's suite of identity management software. The contributed software will be managed by the FreeRadius and Samba open source projects.

Novell has a well-established portfolio of network security-related products, which it sells under the Nsure brand. In 2003, it acquired open source companies SuSE Linux and Ximian in an effort to tap into growing interest in open source software.

With access to the APIs for eDirectory, you can build applications that tap into Novell's authentication system, which supports LDAP.

This contribution "allows us to integrate secure, single sign-on authentication for Windows clients using Samba domain controllers with the award-winning Novell eDirectory," Jeremy Allison, co-author of Samba, said in a statement. Samba enables Windows files and printers to be shared by Unix and Linux systems.

Novell also released a new security product on Monday, which it developed with Linux security software company Astaro.

The device provides features to prevent an unwanted intrusion into company networks. It includes six applications, including a firewall, virtual private network access, intrusion detection and virus scans. Called Novell Security Manager powered by Astaro, the appliance starts at US$315.

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