NAME¶
Net::LDAP::Server - LDAP server side protocol handling
SYNOPSIS¶
package MyServer;
use Net::LDAP::Server;
use Net::LDAP::Constant qw(LDAP_SUCCESS);
use base 'Net::LDAP::Server';
sub search {
my $self = shift;
my ($reqData, $fullRequest) = @_;
print "Searching\n";
...
return {
'matchedDN' => '',
'errorMessage' => '',
'resultCode' => LDAP_SUCCESS
}, @entries;
}
package main;
my $handler = MyServer->new($socket);
$handler->handle;
ABSTRACT¶
This class provides the protocol handling for an LDAP server. You can subclass
it and implement the methods you need (see below). Then you just instantiate
your subclass and call its "handle" method to establish a connection
with the client.
SUBCLASSING¶
You can subclass Net::LDAP::Server with the following lines:
package MyServer;
use Net::LDAP::Server;
use base 'Net::LDAP::Server';
Then you can add your custom methods by just implementing a subroutine named
after the name of each method. These are supported methods:
- "bind"
- "unbind"
- "search"
- "add"
- "modify"
- "delete"
- "modifyDN"
- "compare"
- "abandon"
For any method that is not supplied, Net::LDAP::Server will return an
"LDAP_UNWILLING_TO_PERFORM".
new()
You can also subclass the "new" constructor to do something at
connection time:
sub new {
my ($class, $sock) = @_;
my $self = $class->SUPER::new($sock);
printf "Accepted connection from: %s\n", $sock->peerhost();
return $self;
}
Note that $self is constructed using the fields pragma, so if you want to add
data to it you should add a line like this in your subclass:
use fields qw(myCustomField1 myCustomField2);
Methods
When a method is invoked it will be obviously passed $self as generated by
"new", and two variables:
- * the Request datastructure that is specific for this
method (e.g. BindRequest);
- * the full request message (useful if you want to access
messageID or controls parts)
You can look at Net::LDAP::ASN or use Data::Dumper to find out what is presented
to your method:
use Data::Dumper;
sub search {
print Dumper \@_;
}
If anything goes wrong in the module you specify (e.g. it died or the result is
not a correct ldapresult structure) Net::LDAP::Server will return an
"LDAP_OPERATIONS_ERROR" where the errorMessage will specify what
went wrong.
All methods should return a LDAPresult hashref, for example:
return({
'matchedDN' => '',
'errorMessage' => '',
'resultCode' => LDAP_SUCCESS
});
"search" should return a LDAPresult hashref followed by a list of
entries (if applicable). Entries may be coded either as searchResEntry or
searchRefEntry structures or as Net::LDAP::Entry or Net::LDAP::Reference
objects.
CLIENT HANDLING¶
handle()
When you get a socket from a client you can instantiate the class and handle the
request:
my $handler = MyServer->new($socket);
$handler->handle;
See examples in
examples/ directory for sample servers, using IO::Select
or Net::Daemon.
DEPENDENCIES¶
Net::LDAP::ASN
Net::LDAP::Constant
SEE ALSO¶
- Net::LDAP
- Examples in examples directory.
BUGS AND FEEDBACK¶
There are no known bugs. You are very welcome to write mail to the maintainer
(aar@cpan.org) with your contributions, comments, suggestions, bug reports or
complaints.
COPYRIGHT¶
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR¶
Alessandro Ranellucci <aar@cpan.org> The original author of a
Net::LDAP::Daemon module is Hans Klunder
<hans.klunder@bigfoot.com>