Sites that were using the old (pre-1.9.5) info provider should ensure that there are no remnants of this old info-provider on their machine. Although the old info-provider has been removed from dCache, it relied on static LDIF files, which might still exist. If so, then BDII will obtain some information from the current info-provider and some out-of-date information from the static LDIF files. BDII will then attempt to merge the two sources of information. The merged information may provide a confusing description of your dCache instance, which may prevent clients from working correctly.
The old info provider had two static LDIF files and a symbolic link for BDII. These are:
The file
lcg-info-static-SE.ldif,The file:
lcg-info-static-dSE.ldif,The symbolic link
/opt/glite/etc/gip/plugin, which points to/opt/d-cache/jobs/infoDynamicSE-plugin-dcache.
      The two files (lcg-info-static-SE.ldif and
      lcg-info-static-dSE.ldif) appear in the
      /opt/lcg/var/gip/ldif
      directory; however, it is possible to alter the location BDII
      will use.  In BDII v4, the directory is controlled by the
      static_dir variable (see
      /opt/glite/etc/gip/glite-info-generic.conf
      or /opt/lcg/etc/lcg-info-generic.conf).
      For BDII v5, the BDII_LDIF_DIR variable
      (defined in /opt/bdii/etc/bdii.conf)
      controls this behaviour.
    
      You must delete the above three entries:
      lcg-info-static-SE.ldif,
      lcg-info-static-dSE.ldif and the plugin symbolic link.
    
      The directory with the static LDIF, /opt/lcg/var/gip/ldif or /opt/glite/etc/gip/ldif by default,
      may contain other static LDIF entries that are relics of
      previous info-providers.  These may have filenames like
      static-file-SE.ldif.
    
      Delete any static LDIF file that contain information about
      dCache.  With the info-provider, all LDIF information comes
      from the info-provider; there should be no static LDIF files.
      Be careful not to delete any static LDIF files that come as
      part of BDII; for example, the
      default.ldif file, if present.