NAME¶
slapd-mdb - Memory-Mapped DB backend to slapd
SYNOPSIS¶
/etc/ldap/slapd.conf
DESCRIPTION¶
The
mdb backend to
slapd(8) uses OpenLDAP's Lightning
Memory-Mapped DB (LMDB) library to store data. It relies completely on the
underlying operating system for memory management and does no caching of its
own. It is the recommended primary database backend.
The
mdb backend is similar to the
hdb backend in that it uses a
hierarchical database layout which supports subtree renames. It is both more
space-efficient and more execution-efficient than the
bdb backend,
while being overall much simpler to manage.
CONFIGURATION¶
These
slapd.conf options apply to the
mdb backend database. That
is, they must follow a "database mdb" line and come before any
subsequent "backend" or "database" lines. Other database
options are described in the
slapd.conf(5) manual page.
- checkpoint <kbyte> <min>
- Specify the frequency for flushing the database disk
buffers. This setting is only needed if the dbnosync option is
used. The checkpoint will occur if either <kbyte> data has
been written or <min> minutes have passed since the last
checkpoint. Both arguments default to zero, in which case they are
ignored. When the <min> argument is non-zero, an internal
task will run every <min> minutes to perform the checkpoint.
Note: currently the <kbyte> setting is unimplemented.
- dbnosync
- Specify that on-disk database contents should not be
immediately synchronized with in memory changes. Enabling this option may
improve performance at the expense of data security. In particular, if the
operating system crashes before changes are flushed, some number of
transactions may be lost. By default, a full data flush/sync is performed
when each transaction is committed.
- directory <directory>
- Specify the directory where the LMDB files containing this
database and associated indexes live. A separate directory must be
specified for each database. The default is /var/lib/ldap.
- envflags
{nosync,nometasync,writemap,
mapasync,nordahead}
- Specify flags for finer-grained control of the LMDB
library's operation.
- nosync
- This is exactly the same as the dbnosync
directive.
- nometasync
- Flush the data on a commit, but skip the sync of the meta
page. This mode is slightly faster than doing a full sync, but can
potentially lose the last committed transaction if the operating system
crashes. If both nometasync and nosync are set, the
nosync flag takes precedence.
- writemap
- Use a writable memory map instead of just read-only. This
speeds up write operations but makes the database vulnerable to corruption
in case any bugs in slapd cause stray writes into the mmap region.
- mapasync
- When using a writable memory map and performing flushes on
each commit, use an asynchronous flush instead of a synchronous flush (the
default). This option has no effect if writemap has not been set.
It also has no effect if nosync is set.
- nordahead
- Turn off file readahead. Usually the OS performs readahead
on every read request. This usually boosts read performance but can be
harmful to random access read performance if the system's memory is full
and the DB is larger than RAM. This option is not implemented on
Windows.
- index {<attrlist>|default}
[pres,
eq,approx,sub,<special>]
- Specify the indexes to maintain for the given attribute (or
list of attributes). Some attributes only support a subset of indexes. If
only an <attr> is given, the indices specified for
default are maintained. Note that setting a default does not imply
that all attributes will be indexed. Also, for best performance, an
eq index should always be configured for the objectClass
attribute.
A number of special index parameters may be specified. The index type
sub can be decomposed into subinitial,
subany, and subfinal indices. The special type
nolang may be specified to disallow use of this index by language
subtypes. The special type nosubtypes may be specified to disallow
use of this index by named subtypes. Note: changing index settings
in slapd.conf(5) requires rebuilding indices, see
slapindex(8); changing index settings dynamically by
LDAPModifying "cn=config" automatically causes rebuilding of the
indices online in a background task.
- maxreaders <integer>
- Specify the maximum number of threads that may have
concurrent read access to the database. Tools such as slapcat count as a
single thread, in addition to threads in any active slapd processes. The
default is 126.
- maxsize <bytes>
- Specify the maximum size of the database in bytes. A memory
map of this size is allocated at startup time and the database will not be
allowed to grow beyond this size. The default is 10485760 bytes. This
setting may be changed upward if the configured limit needs to be
increased.
Note: It is important to set this to as large a value as possible, (relative
to anticipated growth of the actual data over time) since growing the size
later may not be practical when the system is under heavy load.
- mode <integer>
- Specify the file protection mode that newly created
database files should have. The default is 0600.
- searchstack <depth>
- Specify the depth of the stack used for search filter
evaluation. Search filters are evaluated on a stack to accommodate nested
AND / OR clauses. An individual stack is assigned to each server thread.
The depth of the stack determines how complex a filter can be evaluated
without requiring any additional memory allocation. Filters that are
nested deeper than the search stack depth will cause a separate stack to
be allocated for that particular search operation. These allocations can
have a major negative impact on server performance, but specifying too
much stack will also consume a great deal of memory. Each search stack
uses 512K bytes per level. The default stack depth is 16, thus 8MB per
thread is used.
ACCESS CONTROL¶
The
mdb backend honors access control semantics as indicated in
slapd.access(5).
FILES¶
- /etc/ldap/slapd.conf
- default slapd configuration file
SEE ALSO¶
slapd.conf(5),
slapd-config(5),
slapd(8),
slapadd(8),
slapcat(8),
slapindex(8), OpenLDAP LMDB
documentation.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS¶
OpenLDAP Software is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP Project
<
http://www.openldap.org/>.
OpenLDAP Software is derived from
University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release. Written by Howard Chu.