549 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
549 lines
15 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Server API | ldapjs
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markdown2extras: wiki-tables
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logo-color: green
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logo-font-family: google:Aldrich, Verdana, sans-serif
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header-font-family: google:Aldrich, Verdana, sans-serif
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---
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# ldapjs Server API
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This document covers the ldapjs server API and assumes that you are familiar
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with LDAP. If you're not, read the [guide](http://ldapjs.org/guide.html) first.
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# Create a server
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The code to create a new server looks like:
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var server = ldap.createServer();
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The full list of options is:
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||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.||
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||certificate||A PEM-encoded X.509 certificate; will cause this server to run in TLS mode.||
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||key||A PEM-encoded private key that corresponds to _certificate_ for SSL.||
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## Properties on the server object
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### maxConnections
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Set this property to reject connections when the server's connection count gets
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high.
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### connections (getter only)
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The number of concurrent connections on the server.
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### url
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Returns the fully qualified URL this server is listening on. For example:
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`ldaps://10.1.2.3:1636`. If you haven't yet called `listen`, it will always
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return `ldap://localhost:389`.
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### Event: 'close'
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`function() {}`
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Emitted when the server closes.
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## Listening for requests
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The LDAP server API wraps up and mirrors the node
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[listen](http://nodejs.org/docs/v0.4.11/api/net.html#server.listen) family of
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APIs.
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After calling `listen`, the property `url` on the server object itself will be
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available.
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Example:
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server.listen(389, '127.0.0.1', function() {
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console.log(LDAP server listening at: ' + server.url);
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});
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### Port and Host
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`listen(port, [host], [callback])`
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Begin accepting connections on the specified port and host. If the host is
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omitted, the server will accept connections directed to any IPv4 address
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(INADDR_ANY).
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This function is asynchronous. The last parameter callback will be called when
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the server has been bound.
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### Unix Domain Socket
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`listen(path, [callback])`
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Start a UNIX socket server listening for connections on the given path.
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This function is asynchronous. The last parameter callback will be called when
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the server has been bound.
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### File descriptor
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`listenFD(fd)`
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Start a server listening for connections on the given file descriptor.
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This file descriptor must have already had the `bind(2)` and `listen(2)` system
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calls invoked on it. Additionally, it must be set non-blocking; try
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`fcntl(fd, F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK)`.
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# Routes
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The LDAP server API is meant to be the LDAP-equivalent of the express/sinatra
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paradigm of programming. Essentially every method is of the form
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`OP(req, res, next)` where OP is one of bind, add, del, etc. You can chain
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handlers together by calling `next()` and ordering your functions in the
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definition of the route. For example:
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function authorize(req, res, next) {
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if (!req.connection.ldap.bindDN.equals('cn=root'))
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return next(new ldap.InsufficientAccessRightsError());
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return next();
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}
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server.search('o=example', authorize, function(req, res, next) { ... });
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Note that ldapjs is also slightly different, since it's often going to be backed
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to a DB-like entity, in that it also has an API where you can pass in a
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'backend' object. This is necessary if there are persistent connection pools,
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caching, etc. that need to be placed in an object.
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For example [ldapjs-riak](https://github.com/mcavage/node-ldapjs-riak) is a
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complete implementation of the LDAP protocol over
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[Riak](http://www.basho.com/products_riak_overview.php). Getting an LDAP
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server up with riak looks like:
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var ldap = require('ldapjs');
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var ldapRiak = require('ldapjs-riak');
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var server = ldap.createServer();
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var backend = ldapRiak.createBackend({
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"host": "localhost",
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"port": 8098,
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"bucket": "example",
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"indexes": ["l", "cn"],
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"uniqueIndexes": ["uid"],
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"numConnections": 5
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});
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server.add("o=example",
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backend,
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backend.add());
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...
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The first parameter to an ldapjs route is always the point in the
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tree to mount the handler chain at. The second argument is _optionally_ a
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backend object. After that you can pass in an arbitrary combination of
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functions in the form `f(req, res, next)` or arrays of functions of the same
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signature (ldapjs will unroll them).
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Unlike HTTP, LDAP operations do not have a heterogeneous wire format, so each
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operation requires specific methods/fields on the request/response objects.
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## Common Request Elements
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All request objects have the `dn` getter on it, which is "context-sensitive"
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and returns the point in the tree that the operation wants to operate on. The
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LDAP protocol itself sadly doesn't define operations this way, and has a unique
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name for just about every op. So, ldapjs calls it `dn`. The DN object itself
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is documented at [DN](/dn.html).
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All requests have an optional array of `Control` objects. `Control` will have
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the properties `type` (string), `criticality` (boolean), and optionally, a
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string `value`.
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All request objects will have a `connection` object, which is the `net.Socket`
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associated to this request. Off the `connection` object is an `ldap` object.
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The most important property to pay attention to is the `bindDN` property
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which will be an instance of an `ldap.DN` object. This is what the client
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authenticated as on this connection. If the client didn't bind, then a DN object
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will be there defaulted to `cn=anonymous`.
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Additionally, request will have a `logId` parameter you can use to uniquely
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identify the request/connection pair in logs (includes the LDAP messageID).
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## Common Response Elements
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All response objects will have an `end` method on them. By default, calling
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`res.end()` with no arguments will return SUCCESS (0x00) to the client
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(with the exception of `compare` which will return COMPARE_TRUE (0x06)). You
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can pass in a status code to the `end()` method to return an alternate status
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code.
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However, it's more common/easier to use the `return next(new LDAPError())`
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pattern, since ldapjs will fill in the extra LDAPResult fields like matchedDN
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and error message for you.
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## Errors
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ldapjs includes an exception hierarchy that directly corresponds to the RFC list
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of error codes. The complete list is documented in [errors](/errors.html). But
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the paradigm is something defined like CONSTRAINT_VIOLATION in the RFC would be
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`ConstraintViolationError` in ldapjs. Upon calling `next(new LDAPError())`,
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ldapjs will _stop_ calling your handler chain. For example:
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server.search('o=example',
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function(req, res, next) { return next(); },
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function(req, res, next) { return next(new ldap.OperationsError()); },
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function(req, res, next) { res.end(); }
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);
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In the code snipped above, the third handler would never get invoked.
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# Bind
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Adds a mount in the tree to perform LDAP binds with. Example:
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server.bind('ou=people, o=example', function(req, res, next) {
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console.log('bind DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
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console.log('bind PW: ' + req.credentials);
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res.end();
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});
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## BindRequest
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BindRequest objects have the following properties:
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### version
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The LDAP protocol version the client is requesting to run this connection on.
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Note that ldapjs only supports LDAP version 3.
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### name
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The DN the client is attempting to bind as (note this is the same as the `dn`
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property).
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### authentication
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The method of authentication. Right now only `simple` is supported.
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### credentials
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The credentials to go with the `name/authentication` pair. For `simple`, this
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will be the plain-text password.
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## BindResponse
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No extra methods above an `LDAPResult` API call.
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# Add
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Adds a mount in the tree to perform LDAP adds with.
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server.add('ou=people, o=example', function(req, res, next) {
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console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
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console.log('Entry attributes: ' + req.toObject().attributes);
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res.end();
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});
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## AddRequest
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AddRequest objects have the following properties:
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### entry
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The DN the client is attempting to add (this is the same as the `dn`
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property).
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### attributes
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The set of attributes in this entry. This will be an array of
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`Attribute` objects (which have a type and an array of values). This directly
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maps to how the request came in off the wire. It's likely you'll want to use
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`toObject()` and iterate that way, since that will transform an AddRequest into
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a standard JavaScript object.
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### toObject()
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This operation will return a plain JavaScript object from the request that looks
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like:
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{
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dn: 'cn=foo, o=example', // string, not DN object
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attributes: {
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cn: ['foo'],
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sn: ['bar'],
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objectclass: ['person', 'top']
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}
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}
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## AddResponse
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No extra methods above an `LDAPResult` API call.
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# Search
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Adds a handler for the LDAP search operation.
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server.search('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
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console.log('base object: ' + req.dn.toString());
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console.log('scope: ' + req.scope);
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console.log('filter: ' + req.filter.toString());
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res.end();
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});
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## SearchRequest
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SearchRequest objects have the following properties:
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### baseObject
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The DN the client is attempting to start the search at (equivalent to `dn`).
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### scope
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(string) one of:
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* base
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* one
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* sub
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### derefAliases
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An integer (defined in the LDAP protocol). Defaults to '0' (meaning
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never deref).
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### sizeLimit
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The number of entries to return. Defaults to '0' (unlimited). ldapjs doesn't
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currently automatically enforce this, but probably will at some point.
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### timeLimit
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Maximum amount of time the server should take in sending search entries.
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Defaults to '0' (unlimited).
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### typesOnly
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Whether to return only the names of attributes, and not the values. Defaults to
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'false'. ldapjs will take care of this for you.
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### filter
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The [filter](/filters.html) object that the client requested. Notably this has
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a `matches()` method on it that you can leverage. For an example of
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introspecting a filter, take a look at the ldapjs-riak source.
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### attributes
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An optional list of attributes to restrict the returned result sets to. ldapjs
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will automatically handle this for you.
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## SearchResponse
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### send(entry)
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Allows you to send a `SearchEntry` object. You do not need to
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explicitly pass in a `SearchEntry` object, and can instead just send a plain
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JavaScript object that matches the format used from `AddRequest.toObject()`.
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server.search('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
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var obj = {
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dn: 'o=example',
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attributes: {
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objectclass: ['top', 'organization'],
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o: ['example']
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}
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};
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if (req.filter.matches(obj))
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res.send(obj)
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res.end();
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});
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# modify
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Allows you to handle an LDAP modify operation.
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server.modify('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
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console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
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console.log('changes:');
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req.changes.forEach(function(c) {
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console.log(' operation: ' + c.operation);
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console.log(' modification: ' + c.modification.toString());
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});
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res.end();
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});
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## ModifyRequest
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ModifyRequest objects have the following properties:
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### object
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The DN the client is attempting to update (this is the same as the `dn`
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property).
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### changes
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An array of `Change` objects the client is attempting to perform. See below for
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details on the `Change` object.
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## Change
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The `Change` object will have the following properties:
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### operation
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A string, and will be one of: 'add', 'delete', or 'replace'.
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### modification
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Will be an `Attribute` object, which will have a 'type' (string) field, and
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'vals', which will be an array of string values.
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## ModifyResponse
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No extra methods above an `LDAPResult` API call.
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# del
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Allows you to handle an LDAP delete operation.
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server.del('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
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console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
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res.end();
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});
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## DeleteRequest
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### entry
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The DN the client is attempting to delete (this is the same as the `dn`
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property).
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## DeleteResponse
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No extra methods above an `LDAPResult` API call.
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# compare
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Allows you to handle an LDAP compare operation.
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server.compare('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
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console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
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console.log('attribute name: ' + req.attribute);
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console.log('attribute value: ' + req.value);
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res.end(req.value === 'foo');
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});
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## CompareRequest
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### entry
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The DN the client is attempting to compare (this is the same as the `dn`
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property).
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### attribute
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The string name of the attribute to compare values of.
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### value
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The string value of the attribute to compare.
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## CompareResponse
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The `end()` method for compare takes a boolean, as opposed to a numeric code
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(you can still pass in a numeric LDAP status code if you want). Beyond
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that, there are no extra methods above an `LDAPResult` API call.
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# modifyDN
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Allows you to handle an LDAP modifyDN operation.
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server.modifyDN('o=example', function(req, res, next) {
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console.log('DN: ' + req.dn.toString());
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console.log('new RDN: ' + req.newRdn.toString());
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console.log('deleteOldRDN: ' + req.deleteOldRdn);
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console.log('new superior: ' +
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(req.newSuperior ? req.newSuperior.toString() : ''));
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res.end();
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});
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## ModifyDNRequest
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### entry
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The DN the client is attempting to rename (this is the same as the `dn`
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property).
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### newRdn
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The leaf RDN the client wants to rename this entry to. This will be a DN object.
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### deleteOldRdn
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Whether or not to delete the old RDN (i.e., rename vs copy). Defaults to 'true'.
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### newSuperior
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Optional (DN). If the modifyDN operation wishes to relocate the entry in the
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tree, the `newSuperior` field will contain the new parent.
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## ModifyDNResponse
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No extra methods above an `LDAPResult` API call.
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# exop
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Allows you to handle an LDAP extended operation. Extended operations are pretty
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much arbitrary extensions, by definition. Typically the extended 'name' is an
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OID, but ldapjs makes no such restrictions; it just needs to be a string.
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Unlike the other operations, extended operations don't map to any location in
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the tree, so routing here will be exact match, as opposed to subtree.
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// LDAP whoami
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server.exop('1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.1.11.3', function(req, res, next) {
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console.log('name: ' + req.name);
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console.log('value: ' + req.value);
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res.value = 'u:xxyyz@EXAMPLE.NET';
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res.end();
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return next();
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});
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## ExtendedRequest
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### name
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Will always be a match to the route-defined name. Clients must include this
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in their requests.
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### value
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Optional string. The arbitrary blob the client sends for this extended
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operation.
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## ExtendedResponse
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### name
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The name of the extended operation. ldapjs will automatically set this.
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### value
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The arbitrary (string) value to send back as part of the response.
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# unbind
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ldapjs by default provides an unbind handler that just disconnects the client
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and cleans up any internals (in ldapjs core). You can override this handler
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if you need to clean up any items in your backend, or perform any other cleanup
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tasks you need to.
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server.unbind(function(req, res, next) {
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res.end();
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});
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Note that the LDAP unbind operation actually doesn't send any response (by
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definition in the RFC), so the UnbindResponse is really just a stub that
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ultimately calls `net.Socket.end()` for you. There are no properties available
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on either the request or response objects, except, of course, for `end()` on the
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response.
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