node-ldapjs/docs/server.md

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Overview

This document covers the ldapjs server API and assumes that you are familiar with LDAP. If you're not, read the guide first.

Create a server

The code to create a new server looks like:

var server = ldap.createServer();

The full list of options is:

||log4js||You can optionally pass in a log4js instance the client will use to acquire a logger. You'll need to set the level to TRACE to get any output from the client.|| ||certificate||A PEM-encoded X.509 certificate; will cause this server to run in TLS mode.|| ||key||A PEM-encoded private key that corresponds to certificate for SSL.||

Properties on the server object

maxConnections

Set this property to reject connections when the server's connection count gets high.

connections (getter only)

The number of concurrent connections on the server.

url

Returns the fully qualified URL this server is listening on. For example: ldaps://10.1.2.3:1636. If you haven't yet called listen, it will always return ldap://localhost:389.

Event: 'close'

function() {}

Emitted when the server closes.

Listening for requests

The LDAP server API wraps up and mirrors the node listen family of APIs.

After calling listen, the property url on the server object itself will be available.

Example:

 server.listen(389, '127.0.0.1', function() {
   console.log(LDAP server listening at: ' + server.url);
 });

Port and Host

listen(port, [host], [callback])

Begin accepting connections on the specified port and host. If the host is omitted, the server will accept connections directed to any IPv4 address (INADDR_ANY).

This function is asynchronous. The last parameter callback will be called when the server has been bound.

Unix Domain Socket

listen(path, [callback])

Start a UNIX socket server listening for connections on the given path.

This function is asynchronous. The last parameter callback will be called when the server has been bound.

File descriptor

listenFD(fd)

Start a server listening for connections on the given file descriptor.

This file descriptor must have already had the bind(2) and listen(2) system calls invoked on it. Additionally, it must be set non-blocking; try fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK).

Routes

The LDAP server API is meant to be the LDAP-equivalent of the express/sinatra paradigm of programming. Essentially every method is of the form OP(req, res, next) where OP is one of bind, add, del, etc. You can chain handlers together by calling next() and ordering your functions in the definition of the route. For example:

function authorize(req, res, next) {
  if (!req.connection.ldap.bindDN.equals('cn=root'))
    return next(new ldap.InsufficientAccessRightsError());

  return next();
}

server.search('o=example', authorize, function(req, res, next) { ... });

Note that ldapjs is also slightly different, since it's often going to be backed to a DB-like entity, in that it also has an API where you can pass in a 'backend' object. This is necessary if there are persistent connection pools, caching, etc. that need to be placed in an object.

For example ldapjs-riak is a complete implementation of the LDAP protocol over Riak. Getting an LDAP server up with riak looks like:

var ldap = require('ldapjs');
var ldapRiak = require('ldapjs-riak');

var server = ldap.createServer();
var backend = ldapRiak.createBackend({
  "host": "localhost",
  "port": 8098,
  "bucket": "example",
  "indexes": ["l", "cn"],
  "uniqueIndexes": ["uid"],
  "numConnections": 5
});

server.add("o=example",
           backend,
           backend.add());
...

The first parameter to an ldapjs route is always the point in the tree to mount the handler chain at. The second argument is optionally a backend object. After that you can pass in an arbitrary combination of functions in the form f(req, res, next) or arrays of functions of the same signature (ldapjs will unroll them).

Unlike HTTP, LDAP operations do not have a heterogeneous wire format, so each operation requires specific methods/fields on the request/response objects.

Common Request Elements

All request objects have the dn getter on it, which is "context-sensitive" and returns the point in the tree that the operation wants to operate on. The LDAP protocol itself sadly doesn't define operations this way, and has a unique name for just about every op. So, ldapjs calls it dn. The DN object itself is documented at DN.

All requests have an optional array of Control objects. Control will have the properties type (string), criticality (boolean), and optionally, a string value.

All request objects will have a connection object, which is the net.Socket associated to this request. Off the connection object is an ldap object. The most important property to pay attention to is the bindDN property which will be an instance of an ldap.DN object. This is what the client authenticated as on this connection. If the client didn't bind, then a DN object will be there defaulted to cn=anonymous.

Additionally, request will have a logId parameter you can use to uniquely identify the request/connection pair in logs (includes the LDAP messageID).

Common Response Elements

All response objects will have an end method on them. By default, calling res.end() with no arguments will return SUCCESS (0x00) to the client (with the exception of compare which will return COMPARE_TRUE (0x06)). You can pass in a status code to the end() method to return an alternate status code.

However, it's more common/easier to use the return next(new LDAPError()) pattern, since ldapjs will fill in the extra LDAPResult fields like matchedDN and error message for you.

Errors

ldapjs includes an exception hierarchy that directly corresponds to the RFC list of error codes. The complete list is documented in errors. But the paradigm is something defined like CONSTRAINT_VIOLATION in the RFC would be ConstraintViolationError in ldapjs. Upon calling next(new LDAPError()), ldapjs will stop calling your handler chain. For example:

server.search('o=example',
  function(req, res, next) { return next(); },
  function(req, res, next) { return next(new ldap.OperationsError()); },
  function(req, res, next) { res.end(); }
);

In the code snipped above, the third handler would never get invoked.

Bind

Adds a mount in the tree to perform LDAP binds with. Example:

server.bind('ou=people, o=example', function(req, res, next) {
  console.log('bind DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
  console.log('bind PW: ' + req.credentials);
  res.end();
});

BindRequest

BindRequest objects have the following properties:

version

The LDAP protocol version the client is requesting to run this connection on. Note that ldapjs only supports LDAP version 3.

name

The DN the client is attempting to bind as (note this is the same as the dn property).

authentication

The method of authentication. Right now only simple is supported.

credentials

The credentials to go with the name/authentication pair. For simple, this will be the plain-text password.

BindResponse

No extra methods above an LDAPResult API call.

Add

Adds a mount in the tree to perform LDAP adds with.

server.add('ou=people, o=example', function(req, res, next) {
  console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
  console.log('Entry attributes: ' + req.toObject().attributes);
  res.end();
});

AddRequest

AddRequest objects have the following properties:

entry

The DN the client is attempting to add (this is the same as the dn property).

attributes

The set of attributes in this entry. This will be an array of Attribute objects (which have a type and an array of values). This directly maps to how the request came in off the wire. It's likely you'll want to use toObject() and iterate that way, since that will transform an AddRequest into a standard JavaScript object.

toObject()

This operation will return a plain JavaScript object from the request that looks like:

{
  dn: 'cn=foo, o=example',  // string, not DN object
  attributes: {
    cn: ['foo'],
    sn: ['bar'],
    objectclass: ['person', 'top']
  }
}

AddResponse

No extra methods above an LDAPResult API call.

Search

Adds a handler for the LDAP search operation.

server.search('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
  console.log('base object: ' + req.dn.toString());
  console.log('scope: ' + req.scope);
  console.log('filter: ' + req.filter.toString());
  res.end();
});

SearchRequest

SearchRequest objects have the following properties:

baseObject

The DN the client is attempting to start the search at (equivalent to dn).

scope

(string) one of:

  • base
  • one
  • sub

derefAliases

An integer (defined in the LDAP protocol). Defaults to '0' (meaning never deref).

sizeLimit

The number of entries to return. Defaults to '0' (unlimited). ldapjs doesn't currently automatically enforce this, but probably will at some point.

timeLimit

Maximum amount of time the server should take in sending search entries. Defaults to '0' (unlimited).

typesOnly

Whether to return only the names of attributes, and not the values. Defaults to 'false'. ldapjs will take care of this for you.

filter

The filter object that the client requested. Notably this has a matches() method on it that you can leverage. For an example of introspecting a filter, take a look at the ldapjs-riak source.

attributes

An optional list of attributes to restrict the returned result sets to. ldapjs will automatically handle this for you.

SearchResponse

send(entry)

Allows you to send a SearchEntry object. You do not need to explicitly pass in a SearchEntry object, and can instead just send a plain JavaScript object that matches the format used from AddRequest.toObject().

server.search('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
  var obj = {
    dn: 'o=example',
    attributes: {
      objectclass: ['top', 'organization'],
      o: ['example']
    }
  };

  if (req.filter.matches(obj))
    res.send(obj)

  res.end();
});

modify

Allows you to handle an LDAP modify operation.

server.modify('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
  console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
  console.log('changes:');
  req.changes.forEach(function(c) {
    console.log('  operation: ' + c.operation);
    console.log('  modification: ' + c.modification.toString());
  });
  res.end();
});

ModifyRequest

ModifyRequest objects have the following properties:

object

The DN the client is attempting to update (this is the same as the dn property).

changes

An array of Change objects the client is attempting to perform. See below for details on the Change object.

Change

The Change object will have the following properties:

operation

A string, and will be one of: 'add', 'delete', or 'replace'.

modification

Will be an Attribute object, which will have a 'type' (string) field, and 'vals', which will be an array of string values.

ModifyResponse

No extra methods above an LDAPResult API call.

del

Allows you to handle an LDAP delete operation.

server.delete('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
  console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
  res.end();
});

DeleteRequest

entry

The DN the client is attempting to delete (this is the same as the dn property).

DeleteResponse

No extra methods above an LDAPResult API call.

compare

Allows you to handle an LDAP compare operation.

server.compare('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
  console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
  console.log('attribute name: ' + req.attribute);
  console.log('attribute value: ' + req.value);
  res.end(req.value === 'foo');
});

CompareRequest

entry

The DN the client is attempting to compare (this is the same as the dn property).

attribute

The string name of the attribute to compare values of.

value

The string value of the attribute to compare.

CompareResponse

The end() method for compare takes a boolean, as opposed to a numeric code (you can still pass in a numeric LDAP status code if you want). Beyond that, there are no extra methods above an LDAPResult API call.

modifyDN

Allows you to handle an LDAP modifyDN operation.

server.modifyDN('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
  console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
  console.log('new RDN: ' + req.newRdn.toString());
  console.log('deleteOldRDN: ' + req.deleteOldRdn);
  console.log('new superior: ' +
    (req.newSuperior ? req.newSuperior.toString() : ''));

  res.end();
});

ModifyDNRequest

entry

The DN the client is attempting to rename (this is the same as the dn property).

newRdn

The leaf RDN the client wants to rename this entry to. This will be a DN object.

deleteOldRdn

Whether or not to delete the old RDN (i.e., rename vs copy). Defaults to 'true'.

newSuperior

Optional (DN). If the modifyDN operation wishes to relocate the entry in the tree, the newSuperior field will contain the new parent.

ModifyDNResponse

No extra methods above an LDAPResult API call.

exop

Allows you to handle an LDAP extended operation. Extended operations are pretty much arbitrary extensions, by definition. Typically the extended 'name' is an OID, but ldapjs makes no such restrictions; it just needs to be a string. Unlike the other operations, extended operations don't map to any location in the tree, so routing here will be exact match, as opposed to subtree.

// LDAP whoami
server.exop('1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.1.11.3', function(req, res, next) {
  console.log('name: ' + req.name);
  console.log('value: ' + req.value);
  res.value = 'u:xxyyz@EXAMPLE.NET';
  res.end();
  return next();
});

ExtendedRequest

name

Will always be a match to the route-defined name. Clients must include this in their requests.

value

Optional string. The arbitrary blob the client sends for this extended operation.

ExtendedResponse

name

The name of the extended operation. ldapjs will automatically set this.

value

The arbitrary (string) value to send back as part of the response.

unbind

ldapjs by default provides an unbind handler that just disconnects the client and cleans up any internals (in ldapjs core). You can override this handler if you need to clean up any items in your backend, or perform any other cleanup tasks you need to.

server.unbind(function(req, res, next) {
  res.end();
});

Note that the LDAP unbind operation actually doesn't send any response (by definition in the RFC), so the UnbindResponse is really just a stub that ultimately calls net.Socket.end() for you. There are no properties available on either the request or response objects, except, of course, for end() on the response.