slapd-meta — metadirectory backend to slapd
ETCDIR/slapd.conf
The meta
backend
to slapd(8) performs basic
LDAP proxying with respect to a set of remote LDAP servers,
called "targets". The information contained in these servers
can be presented as belonging to a single Directory
Information Tree (DIT).
A basic knowledge of the functionality of the slapd−ldap(5) backend is
recommended. This backend has been designed as an enhancement
of the ldap backend. The two backends share many features
(actually they also share portions of code). While the
ldap backend is intended to proxy
operations directed to a single server, the meta
backend is mainly
intended for proxying of multiple servers and possibly naming
context masquerading. These features, although useful in many
scenarios, may result in excessive overhead for some
applications, so its use should be carefully considered. In
the examples section, some typical scenarios will be
discussed.
Note | |
---|---|
When looping back to the same instance of
slapd(8), each
connection requires a new thread; as a consequence,
slapd(8) must be
compiled with thread support, and the |
There are examples in various places in this document, as well as in the slapd/back-meta/data/ directory in the OpenLDAP source tree.
These slapd.conf
options apply to the META backend database. That is, they
must follow a "database meta" line and come before any
subsequent "backend" or "database" lines. Other database
options are described in the slapd.conf(5) manual
page.
Note | |
---|---|
In early versions of back-ldap and back-meta it was recommended to always set |
lastmod off
for ldap and meta
databases. This was
required because operational attributes related to entry
creation and modification should not be proxied, as they
could be mistakenly written to the target server(s),
generating an error. The current implementation automatically
sets lastmod to off
, so its use is redundant
and should be omitted.
Target configuration starts with the "uri" directive. All the configuration directives that are not specific to targets should be defined first for clarity, including those that are common to all backends. They are:
This directive causes a cached connection to be dropped an recreated after a given ttl, regardless of being idle or not.
This directive forces the backend to reject all those operations that must resolve to a single target in case none or multiple targets are selected. They include: add, delete, modify, modrdn; compare is not included, as well as bind since, as they don't alter entries, in case of multiple matches an attempt is made to perform the operation on any candidate target, with the constraint that at most one must succeed. This directive can also be used when processing targets to mark a specific target as default.
This directive sets the time-to-live of the DN
cache. This caches the target that holds a given DN to
speed up target selection in case multiple targets
would result from an uncached search; forever means
cache never expires; disabled means no DN caching;
otherwise a valid ( > 0 ) ttl is required, in the
format illustrated for the idle-timeout
directive.
This directive allows to select the behavior in case
an error is returned by one target during a search. The
default, continue
, consists in
continuing the operation, trying to return as much data
as possible. If the value is set to stop
, the search is
terminated as soon as an error is returned by one
target, and the error is immediately propagated to the
client. If the value is set to report
, the search is
continuated to the end but, in case at least one target
returned an error code, the first non-success error
code is returned.
This directive indicates what protocol version must
be used to contact the remote server. If set to 0 (the
default), the proxy uses the same protocol version used
by the client, otherwise the requested protocol is
used. The proxy returns unwillingToPerform
if
an operation that is incompatible with the requested
protocol is attempted. If set before any target
specification, it affects all targets, unless
overridden by any per-target directive.
This directive, when set to yes
, causes the
authentication to the remote servers with the
pseudo-root identity to be deferred until actually
needed by subsequent operations.
Turns on quarantine of URIs that returned
LDAP_UNAVAILABLE, so
that an attempt to reconnect only occurs at given
intervals instead of any time a client requests an
operation. The pattern is: retry only after at least
interval
seconds elapsed since last attempt, for exactly
num
times;
then use the next pattern. If num
for the last
pattern is "+
", it retries
forever; otherwise, no more retries occur. This
directive must appear before any target specification;
it affects all targets with the same pattern.
If this option is given, the client's bind
credentials are remembered for rebinds, when trying to
re-establish a broken connection, or when chasing a
referral, if chase-referrals
is set
to yes
.
Adds session tracking control for all requests. The
client's IP and hostname, and the identity associated
to each request, if known, are sent to the remote
server for informational purposes. This directive is
incompatible with setting protocol−version
to 2. If set before any target specification, it
affects all targets, unless overridden by any
per-target directive.
Discards current cached connection when the client rebinds.
when set to yes
, create a temporary
connection whenever competing with other threads for a
shared one; otherwise, wait until the shared connection
is available.
Target specification starts with a "uri" directive:
The <protocol> part can be anything ldap_initialize(3)
accepts ({ldap|ldaps|ldapi} and variants); the
<host> may be omitted, defaulting to whatever is
set in ldap.conf(5). The
<naming context> part is mandatory
for the first
URI, but it must be
omitted for subsequent ones, if any. The
naming context part must be within the naming context
defined for the backend, e.g.:
suffix "dc=foo,dc=com
" uri "ldap://x.foo.com/dc=x,dc=foo,dc=com
"
The <naming context> part doesn't need to be unique across the targets; it may also match one of the values of the "suffix" directive. Multiple URIs may be defined in a single URI statement. The additional URIs must be separate arguments and must not have any <naming context> part. This causes the underlying library to contact the first server of the list that responds. For example, if
l1.foo.com
andl2.foo.com
are shadows of the same server, the directivesuffix "dc=foo,dc=com
" uri "ldap://l1.foo.com/dc=foo,dc=com
" "ldap://l2.foo.com/"
causes
l2.foo.com
to be contacted wheneverl1.foo.com
does not respond. In that case, the URI list is internally rearranged, by moving unavailable URIs to the end, so that further connection attempts occur with respect to the last URI that succeeded.
DN which is used to query the target server for acl checking, as in the LDAP backend; it is supposed to have read access on the target server to attributes used on the proxy for acl checking. There is no risk of giving away such values; they are only used to check permissions. The acl-authcDN identity is by no means implicitly used by the proxy when the client connects anonymously.
Password used with the acl-authcDN
above.
This directive defines the timeout, in microseconds,
used when polling for response after an asynchronous
bind connection. The initial call to ldap_result(3) is
performed with a trade-off timeout of 100000 us; if
that results in a timeout exceeded, subsequent calls
use the value provided with bind-timeout
. The
default value is used also for subsequent calls if
bind-timeout
is not specified. If set before any target
specification, it affects all targets, unless
overridden by any per-target directive.
enable/disable automatic referral chasing, which is
delegated to the underlying libldap, with rebinding
eventually performed if the rebind-as-user
directive is used. The default is to chase referrals.
If set before any target specification, it affects all
targets, unless overridden by any per-target
directive.
The "default-target" directive can also be used during target specification. With no arguments it marks the current target as the default. The optional number marks target <target> as the default one, starting from 1. Target <target> must be defined.
This directive causes a cached connection to be dropped an recreated after it has been idle for the specified time. The value can be specified as
[<d>d][<h>h][<m>m][<s>[s]]
where <d>, <h>, <m> and <s> are respectively treated as days, hours, minutes and seconds. If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless overridden by any per-target directive.
This maps object classes and attributes as in the LDAP backend. See slapd-ldap(5).
Sets the network timeout value after which poll(2)/select(2) following a
connect(2) returns in
case of no activity. The value is in seconds, and it
can be specified as for idle-timeout
. If set
before any target specification, it affects all
targets, unless overridden by any per-target
directive.
This directive defines how many times a bind should
be retried in case of temporary failure in contacting a
target. If defined before any target specification, it
applies to all targets (by default, 3
times); the global value can be
overridden by redefinitions inside each target
specification.
This directive, if present, sets the DN that will be substituted to the bind DN if a bind with the backend's "rootdn" succeeds. The true "rootdn" of the target server ought not be used; an arbitrary administrative DN should used instead.
This directive sets the credential that will be used in case a bind with the backend's "rootdn" succeeds, and the bind is propagated to the target using the "pseudorootdn" DN.
Note | |
---|---|
Cleartext credentials must be supplied here; as a consequence, using the pseudorootdn/pseudorootpw directives is inherently unsafe. |
The rewrite options are described in the "REWRITING" section.
This directive instructs back-meta to ignore the
current target for operations whose requestDN is
subordinate to DN
. There
may be multiple occurrences of the subtree-exclude
directive for each of the targets.
All the directives starting with "rewrite" refer to the rewrite engine that has been added to slapd. The "suffixmassage" directive was introduced in the LDAP backend to allow suffix massaging while proxying. It has been obsoleted by the rewriting tools. However, both for backward compatibility and for ease of configuration when simple suffix massage is required, it has been preserved. It wraps the basic rewriting instructions that perform suffix massaging. See the "REWRITING" section for a detailed list of the rewrite rules it implies.
enable if the remote server supports absolute
filters (see draft-zeilenga-ldap-t-f
for details). If set to discover
, support is
detected by reading the remote server's root DSE. If
set before any target specification, it affects all
targets, unless overridden by any per-target
directive.
This directive allows to set per-operation timeouts. Operations can be
<op> ::= bind, add, delete, modrdn, modify, compare, search
The overall duration of the search
operation is
controlled either by the timelimit
parameter or
by server-side enforced time limits (see timelimit
and
limits
in
slapd.conf(5) for
details). This timeout
parameter
controls how long the target can be irresponsive before
the operation is aborted. Timeout is meaningless for
the remaining operations, unbind
and abandon
, which do not
imply any response, while it is not yet implemented in
currently supported extended
operations. If
no operation is specified, the timeout val
affects all
supported operations. If specified before any target
definition, it affects all targets unless overridden by
per-target directives.
Note | |
---|---|
If the timeout is exceeded, the operation is
cancelled (according to the |
execute the StartTLS extended operation when the
connection is initialized; only works if the URI
directive protocol scheme is not ldaps://
. propagate
issues the
StartTLS operation only if the original connection did.
The try-
prefix instructs the proxy to continue operations if
the StartTLS operation failed; its use is highly
deprecated. If set before any target specification, it
affects all targets, unless overridden by any
per-target directive.
A powerful (and in some sense dangerous) rewrite engine has been added to both the LDAP and Meta backends. While the former can gain limited beneficial effects from rewriting stuff, the latter can become an amazingly powerful tool.
Consider a couple of scenarios first.
1) Two directory servers share two levels of naming context; say "dc=a,dc=foo,dc=com" and "dc=b,dc=foo,dc=com". Then, an unambiguous Meta database can be configured as:
database meta suffix "dc=foo,dc=com
" uri "ldap://a.foo.com/dc=a,dc=foo,dc=com
" uri "ldap://b.foo.com/dc=b,dc=foo,dc=com
"
Operations directed to a specific target can be easily resolved because there are no ambiguities. The only operation that may resolve to multiple targets is a search with base "dc=foo,dc=com" and scope at least "one", which results in spawning two searches to the targets.
2a) Two directory servers don't share any portion of naming context, but they'd present as a single DIT [Caveat: uniqueness of (massaged) entries among the two servers is assumed; integrity checks risk to incur in excessive overhead and have not been implemented]. Say we have "dc=bar,dc=org" and "o=Foo,c=US", and we'd like them to appear as branches of "dc=foo,dc=com", say "dc=a,dc=foo,dc=com" and "dc=b,dc=foo,dc=com". Then we need to configure our Meta backend as:
database meta suffix "dc=foo,dc=com" uri "ldap://a.bar.com/dc=a,dc=foo,dc=com
" suffixmassage "dc=a,dc=foo,dc=com
" "dc=bar,dc=org" uri "ldap://b.foo.com/dc=b,dc=foo,dc=com
" suffixmassage "dc=b,dc=foo,dc=com
" "o=Foo,c=US"
Again, operations can be resolved without ambiguity, although some rewriting is required. Notice that the virtual naming context of each target is a branch of the database's naming context; it is rewritten back and forth when operations are performed towards the target servers. What "back and forth" means will be clarified later.
When a search with base "dc=foo,dc=com" is attempted, if the scope is "base" it fails with "no such object"; in fact, the common root of the two targets (prior to massaging) does not exist. If the scope is "one", both targets are contacted with the base replaced by each target's base; the scope is derated to "base". In general, a scope "one" search is honored, and the scope is derated, only when the incoming base is at most one level lower of a target's naming context (prior to massaging).
Finally, if the scope is "sub" the incoming base is replaced by each target's unmassaged naming context, and the scope is not altered.
2b) Consider the above reported scenario with the two servers sharing the same naming context:
database meta suffix "dc=foo,dc=com
" uri "ldap://a.bar.com/dc=foo,dc=com
" suffixmassage "dc=foo,dc=com
" "dc=bar,dc=org" uri "ldap://b.foo.com/dc=foo,dc=com
" suffixmassage "dc=foo,dc=com
" "o=Foo,c=US"
All the previous considerations hold, except that now there is no way to unambiguously resolve a DN. In this case, all the operations that require an unambiguous target selection will fail unless the DN is already cached or a default target has been set. Practical configurations may result as a combination of all the above scenarios.
Note on ACLs: at present you may add whatever ACL rule you desire to to the Meta (and LDAP) backends. However, the meaning of an ACL on a proxy may require some considerations. Two philosophies may be considered:
a) the remote server dictates the permissions; the proxy simply passes back what it gets from the remote server.
b) the remote server unveils "everything"; the proxy is responsible for protecting data from unauthorized access.
Of course the latter sounds unreasonable, but it is not. It is possible to imagine scenarios in which a remote host discloses data that can be considered "public" inside an intranet, and a proxy that connects it to the internet may impose additional constraints. To this purpose, the proxy should be able to comply with all the ACL matching criteria that the server supports. This has been achieved with regard to all the criteria supported by slapd except a special subtle case (please drop me a note if you can find other exceptions: <ando@openldap.org>). The rule
access to dn="<dn>" attrs=<attr> by dnattr=<dnattr> read by * none
cannot be matched iff the attribute that is being requested, <attr>, is NOT <dnattr>, and the attribute that determines membership, <dnattr>, has not been requested (e.g. in a search)
In fact this ACL is resolved by slapd using the portion of entry it retrieved from the remote server without requiring any further intervention of the backend, so, if the <dnattr> attribute has not been fetched, the match cannot be assessed because the attribute is not present, not because no value matches the requirement!
Note on ACLs and attribute mapping: ACLs are applied to the mapped attributes; for instance, if the attribute locally known as "foo" is mapped to "bar" on a remote server, then local ACLs apply to attribute "foo" and are totally unaware of its remote name. The remote server will check permissions for "bar", and the local server will possibly enforce additional restrictions to "foo".
A string is rewritten according to a set of rules, called a `rewrite context'. The rules are based on POSIX (''extended'') regular expressions (regex) with substring matching; basic variable substitution and map resolution of substrings is allowed by specific mechanisms detailed in the following. The behavior of pattern matching/substitution can be altered by a set of flags.
The underlying concept is to build a lightweight rewrite module for the slapd server (initially dedicated to the LDAP backend).
An incoming string is matched against a set of rules. Rules are made of a regex match pattern, a substitution pattern and a set of actions, described by a set of flags. In case of match a string rewriting is performed according to the substitution pattern that allows to refer to substrings matched in the incoming string. The actions, if any, are finally performed. The substitution pattern allows map resolution of substrings. A map is a generic object that maps a substitution pattern to a value. The flags are divided in "Pattern matching Flags" and "Action Flags"; the former alter the regex match pattern behavior while the latter alter the action that is taken after substitution.
`C'
honors case in matching (default is case insensitive)
`R'
use POSIX ''basic'' regular expressions (default is ''extended'')
allow no more than n
recursive passes for a specific rule; does not alter
the max total count of passes, so it can only enforce a
stricter limit for a specific rule.
apply the rule once only (default is recursive)
`@'
stop applying rules in case of match; the current rule is still applied recursively; combine with `:' to apply the current rule only once and then stop.
`#'
stop current operation if the rule matches, and issue an `unwilling to perform' error.
jump n
rules back and
forth (watch for loops!). Note that `G{1}' is implicit
in every rule.
`I'
ignores errors in rule; this means, in case of error, e.g. issued by a map, the error is treated as a missed match. The `unwilling to perform' is not overridden.
uses n
as return code
if the rule matches; the flag does not alter the
recursive behavior of the rule, so, to have it
performed only once, it must be used in combination
with `:', e.g. `:U{16}'
returns the
value `16' after exactly one execution of the rule, if
the pattern matches. As a consequence, its behavior is
equivalent to `@', with the return code set to
n
; or, in other words, `@'
is equivalent to `U{0}'. By convention, the freely
available codes are above 16 included; the others are
reserved.
The ordering of the flags can be significant. For instance: `IG{2}' means ignore errors and jump two lines ahead both in case of match and in case of error, while `G{2}I' means ignore errors, but jump two lines ahead only in case of match.
More flags (mainly Action Flags) will be added as needed.
Everything starting with `%' requires substitution;
the only obvious exception is `%%', which is left as is;
the basic substitution is `%d', where `d' is a digit; 0 means the whole string, while 1-9 is a submatch;
a `%' followed by a `{' invokes an advanced substitution. The pattern is:
`%' `{' [ <op> ] <name> `(' <substitution> `)' `}'
where <name> must be a legal name for the map, i.e.
<name> ::= [a-z][a-z0-9]* (case insensitive) <op> ::= `>' `|' `&' `&&' `*' `**' `$'
and <substitution> must be a legal substitution pattern, with no limits on the nesting level.
The operators are:
sub context invocation; <name> must be a legal, already defined rewrite context name
|
external command invocation; <name> must refer to a legal, already defined command name (NOT IMPL.)
variable assignment; <name> defines a variable
in the running operation structure which can be
dereferenced later; operator &
assigns a
variable in the rewrite context scope; operator
&&
assigns a variable that scopes the entire session, e.g.
its value can be dereferenced later by other rewrite
contexts
variable dereferencing; <name> must refer to a
variable that is defined and assigned for the running
operation; operator *
dereferences a variable scoping the rewrite context;
operator **
dereferences a variable scoping the whole session, e.g.
the value is passed across rewrite contexts
$
parameter dereferencing; <name> must refer to
an existing parameter; the idea is to make some
run-time parameters set by the system available to the
rewrite engine, as the client host name, the bind DN if
any, constant parameters initialized at config time,
and so on; no parameter is currently set by either
back−ldap
or
back−meta
, but
constant parameters can be defined in the configuration
file by using the rewriteParam
directive.
Substitution escaping has been delegated to the `%'
symbol, which is used instead of `\' in string substitution
patterns because `\' is already escaped by slapd's low level
parsing routines; as a consequence, regex escaping requires
two `\' symbols, e.g. `.*\.foo\.bar
' must be written
as `.*\\.foo\\.bar
'.
A rewrite context is a set of rules which are applied in sequence. The basic idea is to have an application initialize a rewrite engine (think of Apache's mod_rewrite ...) with a set of rewrite contexts; when string rewriting is required, one invokes the appropriate rewrite context with the input string and obtains the newly rewritten one if no errors occur.
Each basic server operation is associated to a rewrite context; they are divided in two main groups: client −> server and server −> client rewriting.
client -> server:
(default) if defined and no specific context is available bindDN bind searchBase search searchFilter search searchFilterAttrDN search compareDN compare compareAttrDN compare AVA addDN add addAttrDN add AVA modifyDN modify modifyAttrDN modify AVA modrDN modrdn newSuperiorDN modrdn deleteDN delete exopPasswdDN password modify extended operation DN if proxy
server -> client:
searchResult search (only if defined; no default; acts on DN and DN-syntax attributes of search results) searchAttrDN search AVA matchedDN all ops (only if applicable)
If `on', the requested rewriting is performed; if `off', no rewriting takes place (an easy way to stop rewriting without altering too much the configuration file).
<Context name> is the name that identifies the context, i.e. the name used by the application to refer to the set of rules it contains. It is used also to reference sub contexts in string rewriting. A context may alias another one. In this case the alias context contains no rule, and any reference to it will result in accessing the aliased one.
Determines how a string can be rewritten if a pattern is matched. Examples are reported below.
Allows to define a map that transforms substring rewriting into something else. The map is referenced inside the substitution pattern of a rule.
Sets a value with global scope, that can be dereferenced by the command `%{$paramName}'.
Sets the maximum number of total rewriting passes that can be performed in a single rewrite operation (to avoid loops). A safe default is set to 100; note that reaching this limit is still treated as a success; recursive invocation of rules is simply interrupted. The count applies to the rewriting operation as a whole, not to any single rule; an optional per-rule limit can be set. This limit is overridden by setting specific per-rule limits with the `M{n}' flag.
# set to `off' to disable rewriting rewriteEngine on # the rules the "suffixmassage" directive implies rewriteEngine on # all dataflow from client to server referring to DNs rewriteContext default rewriteRule "(.*)<virtualnamingcontext>$" "%1<realnamingcontext>" ":" # empty filter rule rewriteContext searchFilter # all dataflow from server to client rewriteContext searchResult rewriteRule "(.*)<realnamingcontext>$" "%1<virtualnamingcontext>" ":" rewriteContext searchAttrDN alias searchResult rewriteContext matchedDN alias searchResult # Everything defined here goes into the `default' context. # This rule changes the naming context of anything sent # to `dc=home,dc=net' to `dc=OpenLDAP, dc=org' rewriteRule "(.*)dc=home,[ ]?dc=net" "%1dc=OpenLDAP, dc=org" ":" # since a pretty/normalized DN does not include spaces # after rdn separators, e.g. `,', this rule suffices: rewriteRule "(.*)dc=home,dc=net" "%1dc=OpenLDAP,dc=org" ":" # Start a new context (ends input of the previous one). # This rule adds blanks between DN parts if not present. rewriteContext addBlanks rewriteRule "(.*),([^ ].*)" "%1, %2" # This one eats blanks rewriteContext eatBlanks rewriteRule "(.*),[ ](.*)" "%1,%2" # Here control goes back to the default rewrite # context; rules are appended to the existing ones. # anything that gets here is piped into rule `addBlanks' rewriteContext default rewriteRule ".*" "%{>addBlanks(%0)}" ":" # Rewrite the search base according to `default' rules. rewriteContext searchBase alias default # Search results with OpenLDAP DN are rewritten back with # `dc=home,dc=net' naming context, with spaces eaten. rewriteContext searchResult rewriteRule "(.*[^ ]?)[ ]?dc=OpenLDAP,[ ]?dc=org" "%{>eatBlanks(%1)}dc=home,dc=net" ":" # Bind with email instead of full DN: we first need # an ldap map that turns attributes into a DN (the # argument used when invoking the map is appended to # the URI and acts as the filter portion) rewriteMap ldap attr2dn "ldap://host/dc=my,dc=org?dn?sub" # Then we need to detect DN made up of a single email, # e.g. `mail=someone@example.com'; note that the rule # in case of match stops rewriting; in case of error, # it is ignored. In case we are mapping virtual # to real naming contexts, we also need to rewrite # regular DNs, because the definition of a bindDn # rewrite context overrides the default definition. rewriteContext bindDN rewriteRule "^mail=[^,]+@[^,]+$" "%{attr2dn(%0)}" ":@I" # This is a rather sophisticated example. It massages a # search filter in case who performs the search has # administrative privileges. First we need to keep # track of the bind DN of the incoming request, which is # stored in a variable called `binddn' with session scope, # and left in place to allow regular binding: rewriteContext bindDN rewriteRule ".+" "%{&&binddn(%0)}%0" ":" # A search filter containing `uid=' is rewritten only # if an appropriate DN is bound. # To do this, in the first rule the bound DN is # dereferenced, while the filter is decomposed in a # prefix, in the value of the `uid=<arg>' AVA, and # in a suffix. A tag `<>' is appended to the DN. # If the DN refers to an entry in the `ou=admin' subtree, # the filter is rewritten OR-ing the `uid=<arg>' with # `cn=<arg>'; otherwise it is left as is. This could be # useful, for instance, to allow apache's auth_ldap-1.4 # module to authenticate users with both `uid' and # `cn', but only if the request comes from a possible # `cn=Web auth,ou=admin,dc=home,dc=net' user. rewriteContext searchFilter rewriteRule "(.*\\()uid=([a-z0-9_]+)(\\).*)" "%{**binddn}<>%{&prefix(%1)}%{&arg(%2)}%{&suffix(%3)}" ":I" rewriteRule "[^,]+,ou=admin,dc=home,dc=net" "%{*prefix}|(uid=%{*arg})(cn=%{*arg})%{*suffix}" ":@I" rewriteRule ".*<>" "%{*prefix}uid=%{*arg}%{*suffix}" ":" # This example shows how to strip unwanted DN-valued # attribute values from a search result; the first rule # matches DN values below "ou=People,dc=example,dc=com"; # in case of match the rewriting exits successfully. # The second rule matches everything else and causes # the value to be rejected. rewriteContext searchResult rewriteRule ".*,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com" "%0" ":@" rewriteRule ".*" "" "#"
In case the rewritten DN is an LDAP URI, the operation is initiated towards the host[:port] indicated in the uri, if it does not refer to the local server. E.g.:
rewriteRule '^cn=root,.*' '%0' 'G{3}' rewriteRule '^cn=[a-l].*' 'ldap://ldap1.my.org/%0' ':@' rewriteRule '^cn=[m-z].*' 'ldap://ldap2.my.org/%0' ':@' rewriteRule '.*' 'ldap://ldap3.my.org/%0' ':@'
(Rule 1 is simply there to illustrate the `G{n}' action; it could have been written:
rewriteRule '^cn=root,.*' 'ldap://ldap3.my.org/%0' ':@'
with the advantage of saving one rewrite pass ...)
The meta
backend
does not honor all ACL semantics as described in slapd.access(5). In
general, access checking is delegated to the remote
server(s). Only read
(=r) access to the entry
pseudo-attribute and to
the other attribute values of the entries returned by the
search
operation is
honored, which is performed by the frontend.
The proxy cache overlay allows caching of LDAP search requests (queries) in a local database. See slapo-pcache(5) for details.