When a DSA, an LDAP client, or a DUA successfully binds to a DSA, the resulting relationship is called a binding. Because each binding corresponds to a user, the term user can be used to mean a binding.
A DSA numbers its bindings when it creates them, starting at zero and incrementing by one.
Each binding can have a number of concurrent operations.
You should monitor the type, number, and duration of bindings to DSAs. If a DSA's performance is suffering because it has too many bindings, or because the bindings have too many operations, consider configuring the DSA to limit the type, number, and duration of bindings.
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