12. Overlays
Overlays are software components that provide hooks to functions analogous to those provided by backends, which can be stacked on top of the backend calls and as callbacks on top of backend responses to alter their behavior.
Overlays may be compiled statically into slapd, or when module support is enabled, they may be dynamically loaded. Most of the overlays are only allowed to be configured on individual databases.
Some can be stacked on the frontend as well, for global use. This means that they can be executed after a request is parsed and validated, but right before the appropriate database is selected. The main purpose is to affect operations regardless of the database they will be handled by, and, in some cases, to influence the selection of the database by massaging the request DN.
Essentially, overlays represent a means to:
- customize the behavior of existing backends without changing the backend code and without requiring one to write a new custom backend with complete functionality
- write functionality of general usefulness that can be applied to different backend types
When using slapd.conf(5), overlays that are configured before any other databases are considered global, as mentioned above. In fact they are implicitly stacked on top of the frontend database. They can also be explicitly configured as such:
database frontend overlay <overlay name>
Overlays are usually documented by separate specific man pages in section 5; the naming convention is
slapo-<overlay name>
All distributed core overlays have a man page. Feel free to contribute to any, if you think there is anything missing in describing the behavior of the component and the implications of all the related configuration directives.
Official overlays are located in
servers/slapd/overlays/
That directory also contains the file slapover.txt, which describes the rationale of the overlay implementation, and may serve as a guideline for the development of custom overlays.
Contribware overlays are located in
contrib/slapd-modules/<overlay name>/
along with other types of run-time loadable components; they are officially distributed, but not maintained by the project.
All the current overlays in OpenLDAP are listed and described in detail in the following sections.
12.1. Access Logging
12.1.1. Overview
This overlay can record accesses to a given backend database on another database.
This allows all of the activity on a given database to be reviewed using arbitrary LDAP queries, instead of just logging to local flat text files. Configuration options are available for selecting a subset of operation types to log, and to automatically prune older log records from the logging database. Log records are stored with audit schema to assure their readability whether viewed as LDIF or in raw form.
It is also used for
Note: An accesslog database is unique to a given master. It should never be replicated.
12.1.2. Access Logging Configuration
The following is a basic example that implements Access Logging:
database mdb suffix dc=example,dc=com ... overlay accesslog logdb cn=log logops writes reads logold (objectclass=person) database mdb suffix cn=log ... index reqStart eq access to * by dn.base="cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com" read
The following is an example used for
database mdb suffix cn=accesslog directory /usr/local/var/openldap-accesslog rootdn cn=accesslog index default eq index entryCSN,objectClass,reqEnd,reqResult,reqStart,reqDN
Accesslog overlay definitions for the primary db
database mdb suffix dc=example,dc=com ... overlay accesslog logdb cn=accesslog logops writes logsuccess TRUE # scan the accesslog DB every day, and purge entries older than 7 days logpurge 07+00:00 01+00:00
An example search result against cn=accesslog might look like:
[ghenry@suretec ghenry]# ldapsearch -x -b cn=accesslog # extended LDIF # # LDAPv3 # base <cn=accesslog> with scope subtree # filter: (objectclass=*) # requesting: ALL # # accesslog dn: cn=accesslog objectClass: auditContainer cn: accesslog # 20080110163829.000004Z, accesslog dn: reqStart=20080110163829.000004Z,cn=accesslog objectClass: auditModify reqStart: 20080110163829.000004Z reqEnd: 20080110163829.000005Z reqType: modify reqSession: 196696 reqAuthzID: cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com reqDN: uid=suretec-46022f8$,ou=Users,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com reqResult: 0 reqMod: sambaPwdCanChange:- ###CENSORED### reqMod: sambaPwdCanChange:+ ###CENSORED### reqMod: sambaNTPassword:- ###CENSORED### reqMod: sambaNTPassword:+ ###CENSORED### reqMod: sambaPwdLastSet:- ###CENSORED### reqMod: sambaPwdLastSet:+ ###CENSORED### reqMod: entryCSN:= 20080110163829.095157Z#000000#000#000000 reqMod: modifiersName:= cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com reqMod: modifyTimestamp:= 20080110163829Z # search result search: 2 result: 0 Success # numResponses: 3 # numEntries: 2
12.1.3. Further Information
slapo-accesslog(5) and the
12.2. Audit Logging
The Audit Logging overlay can be used to record all changes on a given backend database to a specified log file.
12.2.1. Overview
If the need arises whereby changes need to be logged as standard LDIF, then the auditlog overlay slapo-auditlog (5) can be used. Full examples are available in the man page slapo-auditlog (5)
12.2.2. Audit Logging Configuration
If the directory is running vi slapd.d, then the following LDIF could be used to add the overlay to the overlay list in cn=config and set what file the
dn: olcOverlay=auditlog,olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config changetype: add objectClass: olcOverlayConfig objectClass: olcAuditLogConfig olcOverlay: auditlog olcAuditlogFile: /tmp/auditlog.ldif
In this example for testing, we are logging changes to /tmp/auditlog.ldif
A typical
# add 1196797576 dc=suretecsystems,dc=com cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com dn: dc=suretecsystems,dc=com changetype: add objectClass: dcObject objectClass: organization dc: suretecsystems o: Suretec Systems Ltd. structuralObjectClass: organization entryUUID: 1606f8f8-f06e-1029-8289-f0cc9d81e81a creatorsName: cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com modifiersName: cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com createTimestamp: 20051123130912Z modifyTimestamp: 20051123130912Z entryCSN: 20051123130912.000000Z#000001#000#000000 auditContext: cn=accesslog # end add 1196797576 # add 1196797577 dc=suretecsystems,dc=com cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com dn: ou=Groups,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com changetype: add objectClass: top objectClass: organizationalUnit ou: Groups structuralObjectClass: organizationalUnit entryUUID: 160aaa2a-f06e-1029-828a-f0cc9d81e81a creatorsName: cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com modifiersName: cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com createTimestamp: 20051123130912Z modifyTimestamp: 20051123130912Z entryCSN: 20051123130912.000000Z#000002#000#000000 # end add 1196797577
12.2.3. Further Information
slapo-auditlog(5)
12.3. Chaining
12.3.1. Overview
The chain overlay provides basic chaining capability to the underlying database.
What is chaining? It indicates the capability of a DSA to follow referrals on behalf of the client, so that distributed systems are viewed as a single virtual DSA by clients that are otherwise unable to "chase" (i.e. follow) referrals by themselves.
The chain overlay is built on top of the ldap backend; it is compiled by default when --enable-ldap.
12.3.2. Chaining Configuration
In order to demonstrate how this overlay works, we shall discuss a typical scenario which might be one master server and three Syncrepl slaves.
On each replica, add this near the top of the slapd.conf(5) file (global), before any database definitions:
overlay chain chain-uri "ldap://ldapmaster.example.com" chain-idassert-bind bindmethod="simple" binddn="cn=Manager,dc=example,dc=com" credentials="<secret>" mode="self" chain-tls start chain-return-error TRUE
Add this below your syncrepl statement:
updateref "ldap://ldapmaster.example.com/"
The chain-tls statement enables TLS from the slave to the ldap master. The DITs are exactly the same between these machines, therefore whatever user bound to the slave will also exist on the master. If that DN does not have update privileges on the master, nothing will happen.
You will need to restart the slave after these slapd.conf changes. Then, if you are using loglevel stats (256), you can monitor an ldapmodify on the slave and the master. (If you're using cn=config no restart is required.)
Now start an ldapmodify on the slave and watch the logs. You should expect something like:
Sep 6 09:27:25 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 fd=31 ACCEPT from IP=143.199.102.216:45181 (IP=143.199.102.216:389) Sep 6 09:27:25 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=0 STARTTLS Sep 6 09:27:25 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=0 RESULT oid= err=0 text= Sep 6 09:27:25 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 fd=31 TLS established tls_ssf=256 ssf=256 Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=1 BIND dn="uid=user1,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" method=128 Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=1 BIND dn="uid=user1,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com" mech=SIMPLE ssf=0 Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=1 RESULT tag=97 err=0 text= Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=2 MOD dn="uid=user1,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com" Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=2 MOD attr=mail Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=2 RESULT tag=103 err=0 text= Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 op=3 UNBIND Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: conn=11 fd=31 closed Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: syncrepl_entry: LDAP_RES_SEARCH_ENTRY(LDAP_SYNC_MODIFY) Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: syncrepl_entry: be_search (0) Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: syncrepl_entry: uid=user1,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com Sep 6 09:27:28 slave1 slapd[29274]: syncrepl_entry: be_modify (0)
And on the master you will see this:
Sep 6 09:23:57 ldapmaster slapd[2961]: conn=55902 op=3 PROXYAUTHZ dn="uid=user1,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" Sep 6 09:23:57 ldapmaster slapd[2961]: conn=55902 op=3 MOD dn="uid=user1,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com" Sep 6 09:23:57 ldapmaster slapd[2961]: conn=55902 op=3 MOD attr=mail Sep 6 09:23:57 ldapmaster slapd[2961]: conn=55902 op=3 RESULT tag=103 err=0 text=
Note: You can clearly see the PROXYAUTHZ line on the master, indicating the proper identity assertion for the update on the master. Also note the slave immediately receiving the Syncrepl update from the master.
12.3.3. Handling Chaining Errors
By default, if chaining fails, the original referral is returned to the client under the assumption that the client might want to try and follow the referral.
With the following directive however, if the chaining fails at the provider side, the actual error is returned to the client.
chain-return-error TRUE
12.3.4. Read-Back of Chained Modifications
Occasionally, applications want to read back the data that they just wrote. If a modification requested to a shadow server was silently chained to its provider, an immediate read could result in receiving data not yet synchronized. In those cases, clients should use the dontusecopy control to ensure they are directed to the authoritative source for that piece of data.
This control usually causes a referral to the actual source of the data to be returned. However, when the slapo-chain(5) overlay is used, it intercepts the referral being returned in response to the dontusecopy control, and tries to fetch the requested data.
12.3.5. Further Information
slapo-chain(5)
12.4. Constraints
12.4.1. Overview
This overlay enforces a regular expression constraint on all values of specified attributes during an LDAP modify request that contains add or modify commands. It is used to enforce a more rigorous syntax when the underlying attribute syntax is too general.
12.4.2. Constraint Configuration
Configuration via slapd.conf(5) would look like:
overlay constraint constraint_attribute mail regex ^[[:alnum:]]+@mydomain.com$ constraint_attribute title uri ldap:///dc=catalog,dc=example,dc=com?title?sub?(objectClass=titleCatalog)
A specification like the above would reject any mail attribute which did not look like <alpha-numeric string>@mydomain.com.
It would also reject any title attribute whose values were not listed in the title attribute of any titleCatalog entries in the given scope.
An example for use with cn=config:
dn: olcOverlay=constraint,olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config changetype: add objectClass: olcOverlayConfig objectClass: olcConstraintConfig olcOverlay: constraint olcConstraintAttribute: mail regex ^[[:alnum:]]+@mydomain.com$ olcConstraintAttribute: title uri ldap:///dc=catalog,dc=example,dc=com?title?sub?(objectClass=titleCatalog)
12.4.3. Further Information
slapo-constraint(5)
12.5. Dynamic Directory Services
12.5.1. Overview
The dds overlay to slapd(8) implements dynamic objects as per RFC2589. The name dds stands for Dynamic Directory Services. It allows to define dynamic objects, characterized by the dynamicObject objectClass.
Dynamic objects have a limited lifetime, determined by a time-to-live (TTL) that can be refreshed by means of a specific refresh extended operation. This operation allows to set the Client Refresh Period (CRP), namely the period between refreshes that is required to preserve the dynamic object from expiration. The expiration time is computed by adding the requested TTL to the current time. When dynamic objects reach the end of their lifetime without being further refreshed, they are automatically deleted. There is no guarantee of immediate deletion, so clients should not count on it.
12.5.2. Dynamic Directory Service Configuration
A usage of dynamic objects might be to implement dynamic meetings; in this case, all the participants to the meeting are allowed to refresh the meeting object, but only the creator can delete it (otherwise it will be deleted when the TTL expires).
If we add the overlay to an example database, specifying a Max TTL of 1 day, a min of 10 seconds, with a default TTL of 1 hour. We'll also specify an interval of 120 (less than 60s might be too small) seconds between expiration checks and a tolerance of 5 second (lifetime of a dynamic object will be entryTtl + tolerance).
overlay dds dds-max-ttl 1d dds-min-ttl 10s dds-default-ttl 1h dds-interval 120s dds-tolerance 5s
and add an index:
entryExpireTimestamp
Creating a meeting is as simple as adding the following:
dn: cn=OpenLDAP Documentation Meeting,ou=Meetings,dc=example,dc=com objectClass: groupOfNames objectClass: dynamicObject cn: OpenLDAP Documentation Meeting member: uid=ghenry,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com member: uid=hyc,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
12.5.2.1. Dynamic Directory Service ACLs
Allow users to start a meeting and to join it; restrict refresh to the member; restrict delete to the creator:
access to attrs=userPassword by self write by * read access to dn.base="ou=Meetings,dc=example,dc=com" attrs=children by users write access to dn.onelevel="ou=Meetings,dc=example,dc=com" attrs=entry by dnattr=creatorsName write by * read access to dn.onelevel="ou=Meetings,dc=example,dc=com" attrs=participant by dnattr=creatorsName write by users selfwrite by * read access to dn.onelevel="ou=Meetings,dc=example,dc=com" attrs=entryTtl by dnattr=member manage by * read
In simple terms, the user who created the OpenLDAP Documentation Meeting can add new attendees, refresh the meeting using (basically complete control):
ldapexop -x -H ldap://ldaphost "refresh" "cn=OpenLDAP Documentation Meeting,ou=Meetings,dc=example,dc=com" "120" -D "uid=ghenry,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com" -W
Any user can join the meeting, but not add another attendee, but they can refresh the meeting. The ACLs above are quite straight forward to understand.
12.5.3. Further Information
slapo-dds(5)
12.6. Dynamic Groups
12.6.1. Overview
This overlay extends the Compare operation to detect members of a dynamic group. This overlay is now deprecated as all of its functions are available using the Dynamic Lists overlay.
12.6.2. Dynamic Group Configuration
12.7. Dynamic Lists
12.7.1. Overview
This overlay allows expansion of dynamic groups and lists. Instead of having the group members or list attributes hard coded, this overlay allows us to define an LDAP search whose results will make up the group or list.
12.7.2. Dynamic List Configuration
This module can behave both as a dynamic list and dynamic group, depending on the configuration. The syntax is as follows:
overlay dynlist dynlist-attrset <group-oc> <URL-ad> [member-ad]
The parameters to the dynlist-attrset directive have the following meaning:
- <group-oc>: specifies which object class triggers the subsequent LDAP search. Whenever an entry with this object class is retrieved, the search is performed.
- <URL-ad>: is the name of the attribute which holds the search URI. It has to be a subtype of labeledURI. The attributes and values present in the search result are added to the entry unless member-ad is used (see below).
- member-ad: if present, changes the overlay behavior into a dynamic group. Instead of inserting the results of the search in the entry, the distinguished name of the results are added as values of this attribute.
Here is an example which will allow us to have an email alias which automatically expands to all user's emails according to our LDAP filter:
In slapd.conf(5):
overlay dynlist dynlist-attrset nisMailAlias labeledURI
This means that whenever an entry which has the nisMailAlias object class is retrieved, the search specified in the labeledURI attribute is performed.
Let's say we have this entry in our directory:
cn=all,ou=aliases,dc=example,dc=com cn: all objectClass: nisMailAlias labeledURI: ldap:///ou=People,dc=example,dc=com?mail?one?(objectClass=inetOrgPerson)
If this entry is retrieved, the search specified in labeledURI will be performed and the results will be added to the entry just as if they have always been there. In this case, the search filter selects all entries directly under ou=People that have the inetOrgPerson object class and retrieves the mail attribute, if it exists.
This is what gets added to the entry when we have two users under ou=People that match the filter:
Figure X.Y: Dynamic List for all emails
The configuration for a dynamic group is similar. Let's see an example which would automatically populate an allusers group with all the user accounts in the directory.
In slapd.conf(5):
include /path/to/dyngroup.schema ... overlay dynlist dynlist-attrset groupOfURLs labeledURI member
- Note: We must include the dyngroup.schema file that defines the
- groupOfURLs objectClass used in this example.
Let's apply it to the following entry:
cn=allusers,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com cn: all objectClass: groupOfURLs labeledURI: ldap:///ou=people,dc=example,dc=com??one?(objectClass=inetOrgPerson)
The behavior is similar to the dynamic list configuration we had before: whenever an entry with the groupOfURLs object class is retrieved, the search specified in the labeledURI attribute is performed. But this time, only the distinguished names of the results are added, and as values of the member attribute.
This is what we get:
Figure X.Y: Dynamic Group for all users
Note that a side effect of this scheme of dynamic groups is that the members need to be specified as full DNs. So, if you are planning in using this for posixGroups, be sure to use RFC2307bis and some attribute which can hold distinguished names. The memberUid attribute used in the posixGroup object class can hold only names, not DNs, and is therefore not suitable for dynamic groups.
12.7.3. Further Information
slapo-dynlist(5)
12.8. Reverse Group Membership Maintenance
12.8.1. Overview
In some scenarios, it may be desirable for a client to be able to determine which groups an entry is a member of, without performing an additional search. Examples of this are applications using the
The memberof overlay updates an attribute (by default memberOf) whenever changes occur to the membership attribute (by default member) of entries of the objectclass (by default groupOfNames) configured to trigger updates.
Thus, it provides maintenance of the list of groups an entry is a member of, when usual maintenance of groups is done by modifying the members on the group entry.
12.8.2. Member Of Configuration
The typical use of this overlay requires just enabling the overlay for a specific database. For example, with the following minimal slapd.conf:
include /usr/share/openldap/schema/core.schema include /usr/share/openldap/schema/cosine.schema authz-regexp "gidNumber=0\\\+uidNumber=0,cn=peercred,cn=external,cn=auth" "cn=Manager,dc=example,dc=com" database mdb suffix "dc=example,dc=com" rootdn "cn=Manager,dc=example,dc=com" rootpw secret directory /var/lib/ldap2.5 checkpoint 256 5 index objectClass eq index uid eq,sub overlay memberof
adding the following ldif:
cat memberof.ldif dn: dc=example,dc=com objectclass: domain dc: example dn: ou=Group,dc=example,dc=com objectclass: organizationalUnit ou: Group dn: ou=People,dc=example,dc=com objectclass: organizationalUnit ou: People dn: uid=test1,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com objectclass: account uid: test1 dn: cn=testgroup,ou=Group,dc=example,dc=com objectclass: groupOfNames cn: testgroup member: uid=test1,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
Results in the following output from a search on the test1 user:
# ldapsearch -LL -Y EXTERNAL -H ldapi:/// "(uid=test1)" -b dc=example,dc=com memberOf SASL/EXTERNAL authentication started SASL username: gidNumber=0+uidNumber=0,cn=peercred,cn=external,cn=auth SASL SSF: 0 version: 1 dn: uid=test1,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com memberOf: cn=testgroup,ou=Group,dc=example,dc=com
Note that the memberOf attribute is an operational attribute, so it must be requested explicitly.
12.8.3. Further Information
slapo-memberof(5)
12.9. The Proxy Cache Engine
12.9.1. Overview
The proxy cache extension of slapd is designed to improve the responsiveness of the ldap and meta backends. It handles a search request (query) by first determining whether it is contained in any cached search filter. Contained requests are answered from the proxy cache's local database. Other requests are passed on to the underlying ldap or meta backend and processed as usual.
E.g. (shoesize>=9) is contained in (shoesize>=8) and (sn=Richardson) is contained in (sn=Richards*)
Correct matching rules and syntaxes are used while comparing assertions for query containment. To simplify the query containment problem, a list of cacheable "templates" (defined below) is specified at configuration time. A query is cached or answered only if it belongs to one of these templates. The entries corresponding to cached queries are stored in the proxy cache local database while its associated meta information (filter, scope, base, attributes) is stored in main memory.
A template is a prototype for generating LDAP search requests. Templates are described by a prototype search filter and a list of attributes which are required in queries generated from the template. The representation for prototype filter is similar to RFC4515, except that the assertion values are missing. Examples of prototype filters are: (sn=),(&(sn=)(givenname=)) which are instantiated by search filters (sn=Doe) and (&(sn=Doe)(givenname=John)) respectively.
The cache replacement policy removes the least recently used (LRU) query and entries belonging to only that query. Queries are allowed a maximum time to live (TTL) in the cache thus providing weak consistency. A background task periodically checks the cache for expired queries and removes them.
The Proxy Cache paper (http://www.openldap.org/pub/kapurva/proxycaching.pdf) provides design and implementation details.
12.9.2. Proxy Cache Configuration
The cache configuration specific directives described below must appear after a overlay pcache directive within a "database meta" or "database ldap" section of the server's slapd.conf(5) file.
12.9.2.1. Setting cache parameters
pcache <DB> <maxentries> <nattrsets> <entrylimit> <period>
This directive enables proxy caching and sets general cache parameters. The <DB> parameter specifies which underlying database is to be used to hold cached entries. It should be set to mdb. The <maxentries> parameter specifies the total number of entries which may be held in the cache. The <nattrsets> parameter specifies the total number of attribute sets (as specified by the pcacheAttrset directive) that may be defined. The <entrylimit> parameter specifies the maximum number of entries in a cacheable query. The <period> specifies the consistency check period (in seconds). In each period, queries with expired TTLs are removed.
12.9.2.2. Defining attribute sets
pcacheAttrset <index> <attrs...>
Used to associate a set of attributes to an index. Each attribute set is associated with an index number from 0 to <numattrsets>-1. These indices are used by the pcacheTemplate directive to define cacheable templates.
12.9.2.3. Specifying cacheable templates
pcacheTemplate <prototype_string> <attrset_index> <TTL>
Specifies a cacheable template and the "time to live" (in sec) <TTL> for queries belonging to the template. A template is described by its prototype filter string and set of required attributes identified by <attrset_index>.
12.9.2.4. Example for slapd.conf
An example slapd.conf(5) database section for a caching server which proxies for the "dc=example,dc=com" subtree held at server ldap.example.com.
database ldap suffix "dc=example,dc=com" rootdn "dc=example,dc=com" uri ldap://ldap.example.com/ overlay pcache pcache mdb 100000 1 1000 100 pcacheAttrset 0 mail postaladdress telephonenumber pcacheTemplate (sn=) 0 3600 pcacheTemplate (&(sn=)(givenName=)) 0 3600 pcacheTemplate (&(departmentNumber=)(secretary=*)) 0 3600 cachesize 20 directory ./testrun/db.2.a index objectClass eq index cn,sn,uid,mail pres,eq,sub
12.9.2.5. Example for slapd-config
The same example as a LDIF file for back-config for a caching server which proxies for the "dc=example,dc=com" subtree held at server ldap.example.com.
dn: olcDatabase={2}ldap,cn=config objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig objectClass: olcLDAPConfig olcDatabase: {2}ldap olcSuffix: dc=example,dc=com olcRootDN: dc=example,dc=com olcDbURI: "ldap://ldap.example.com" dn: olcOverlay={0}pcache,olcDatabase={2}ldap,cn=config objectClass: olcOverlayConfig objectClass: olcPcacheConfig olcOverlay: {0}pcache olcPcache: mdb 100000 1 1000 100 olcPcacheAttrset: 0 mail postalAddress telephoneNumber olcPcacheTemplate: "(sn=)" 0 3600 0 0 0 olcPcacheTemplate: "(&(sn=)(givenName=))" 0 3600 0 0 0 olcPcacheTemplate: "(&(departmentNumber=)(secretary=))" 0 3600 dn: olcDatabase={0}mdb,olcOverlay={0}pcache,olcDatabase={2}ldap,cn=config objectClass: olcMdbConfig objectClass: olcPcacheDatabase olcDatabase: {0}mdb olcDbDirectory: ./testrun/db.2.a olcDbCacheSize: 20 olcDbIndex: objectClass eq olcDbIndex: cn,sn,uid,mail pres,eq,sub
12.9.2.5.1. Cacheable Queries
A LDAP search query is cacheable when its filter matches one of the templates as defined in the "pcacheTemplate" statements and when it references only the attributes specified in the corresponding attribute set. In the example above the attribute set number 0 defines that only the attributes: mail postaladdress telephonenumber are cached for the following pcacheTemplates.
12.9.2.5.2. Examples:
Filter: (&(sn=Richard*)(givenName=jack)) Attrs: mail telephoneNumber
is cacheable, because it matches the template (&(sn=)(givenName=)) and its attributes are contained in pcacheAttrset 0.
Filter: (&(sn=Richard*)(telephoneNumber)) Attrs: givenName
is not cacheable, because the filter does not match the template, nor is the attribute givenName stored in the cache
Filter: (|(sn=Richard*)(givenName=jack)) Attrs: mail telephoneNumber
is not cacheable, because the filter does not match the template ( logical OR "|" condition instead of logical AND "&" )
12.9.3. Further Information
slapo-pcache(5)
12.10. Password Policies
12.10.1. Overview
This overlay follows the specifications contained in the draft RFC titled draft-behera-ldap-password-policy-09. While the draft itself is expired, it has been implemented in several directory servers, including slapd. Nonetheless, it is important to note that it is a draft, meaning that it is subject to change and is a work-in-progress.
The key abilities of the password policy overlay are as follows:
- Enforce a minimum length for new passwords
- Make sure passwords are not changed too frequently
- Cause passwords to expire, provide warnings before they need to be changed, and allow a fixed number of 'grace' logins to allow them to be changed after they have expired
- Maintain a history of passwords to prevent password re-use
- Prevent password guessing by locking a password for a specified period of time after repeated authentication failures
- Force a password to be changed at the next authentication
- Set an administrative lock on an account
- Support multiple password policies on a default or a per-object basis.
- Perform arbitrary quality checks using an external loadable module. This is a non-standard extension of the draft RFC.
12.10.2. Password Policy Configuration
Instantiate the module in the database where it will be used, after adding the new ppolicy schema and loading the ppolicy module. The following example shows the ppolicy module being added to the database that handles the naming context "dc=example,dc=com". In this example we are also specifying the DN of a policy object to use if none other is specified in a user's object.
database mdb suffix "dc=example,dc=com" [...additional database configuration directives go here...] overlay ppolicy ppolicy_default "cn=default,ou=policies,dc=example,dc=com"
Now we need a container for the policy objects. In our example the password policy objects are going to be placed in a section of the tree called "ou=policies,dc=example,dc=com":
dn: ou=policies,dc=example,dc=com objectClass: organizationalUnit objectClass: top ou: policies
The default policy object that we are creating defines the following policies:
- The user is allowed to change his own password. Note that the directory ACLs for this attribute can also affect this ability (pwdAllowUserChange: TRUE).
- The name of the password attribute is "userPassword" (pwdAttribute: userPassword). Note that this is the only value that is accepted by OpenLDAP for this attribute.
- The server will check the syntax of the password. If the server is unable to check the syntax (i.e., it was hashed or otherwise encoded by the client) it will return an error refusing the password (pwdCheckQuality: 2).
- When a client includes the Password Policy Request control with a bind request, the server will respond with a password expiration warning if it is going to expire in ten minutes or less (pwdExpireWarning: 600). The warnings themselves are returned in a Password Policy Response control.
- When the password for a DN has expired, the server will allow five additional "grace" logins (pwdGraceAuthNLimit: 5).
- The server will maintain a history of the last five passwords that were used for a DN (pwdInHistory: 5).
- The server will lock the account after the maximum number of failed bind attempts has been exceeded (pwdLockout: TRUE).
- When the server has locked an account, the server will keep it locked until an administrator unlocks it (pwdLockoutDuration: 0)
- The server will reset its failed bind count after a period of 30 seconds.
- Passwords will not expire (pwdMaxAge: 0).
- Passwords can be changed as often as desired (pwdMinAge: 0).
- Passwords must be at least 5 characters in length (pwdMinLength: 5).
- The password does not need to be changed at the first bind or when the administrator has reset the password (pwdMustChange: FALSE)
- The current password does not need to be included with password change requests (pwdSafeModify: FALSE)
- The server will only allow five failed binds in a row for a particular DN (pwdMaxFailure: 5).
The actual policy would be:
dn: cn=default,ou=policies,dc=example,dc=com cn: default objectClass: pwdPolicy objectClass: person objectClass: top pwdAllowUserChange: TRUE pwdAttribute: userPassword pwdCheckQuality: 2 pwdExpireWarning: 600 pwdFailureCountInterval: 30 pwdGraceAuthNLimit: 5 pwdInHistory: 5 pwdLockout: TRUE pwdLockoutDuration: 0 pwdMaxAge: 0 pwdMaxFailure: 5 pwdMinAge: 0 pwdMinLength: 5 pwdMustChange: FALSE pwdSafeModify: FALSE sn: dummy value
You can create additional policy objects as needed.
There are two ways password policy can be applied to individual objects:
1. The pwdPolicySubentry in a user's object - If a user's object has a pwdPolicySubEntry attribute specifying the DN of a policy object, then the policy defined by that object is applied.
2. Default password policy - If there is no specific pwdPolicySubentry set for an object, and the password policy module was configured with the DN of a default policy object and if that object exists, then the policy defined in that object is applied.
Please see slapo-ppolicy(5) for complete explanations of features and discussion of "Password Management Issues" at http://www.symas.com/blog/?page_id=66
12.10.3. Further Information
slapo-ppolicy(5)
12.11. Referential Integrity
12.11.1. Overview
This overlay can be used with a backend database such as slapd-mdb(5) to maintain the cohesiveness of a schema which utilizes reference attributes.
Whenever a modrdn or delete is performed, that is, when an entry's DN is renamed or an entry is removed, the server will search the directory for references to this DN (in selected attributes: see below) and update them accordingly. If it was a delete operation, the reference is deleted. If it was a modrdn operation, then the reference is updated with the new DN.
For example, a very common administration task is to maintain group membership lists, specially when users are removed from the directory. When an user account is deleted or renamed, all groups this user is a member of have to be updated. LDAP administrators usually have scripts for that. But we can use the refint overlay to automate this task. In this example, if the user is removed from the directory, the overlay will take care to remove the user from all the groups he/she was a member of. No more scripting for this.
12.11.2. Referential Integrity Configuration
The configuration for this overlay is as follows:
overlay refint refint_attributes <attribute [attribute ...]> refint_nothing <string>
- refint_attributes: this parameter specifies a space separated list of attributes which will have the referential integrity maintained. When an entry is removed or has its DN renamed, the server will do an internal search for any of the refint_attributes that point to the affected DN and update them accordingly. IMPORTANT: the attributes listed here must have the distinguishedName syntax, that is, hold DNs as values.
- refint_nothing: some times, while trying to maintain the referential integrity, the server has to remove the last attribute of its kind from an entry. This may be prohibited by the schema: for example, the groupOfNames object class requires at least one member. In these cases, the server will add the attribute value specified in refint_nothing to the entry.
To illustrate this overlay, we will use the group membership scenario.
In slapd.conf:
overlay refint refint_attributes member refint_nothing "cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com"
This configuration tells the overlay to maintain the referential integrity of the member attribute. This attribute is used in the groupOfNames object class which always needs a member, so we add the refint_nothing directive to fill in the group with a standard member should all the members vanish.
If we have the following group membership, the refint overlay will automatically remove john from the group if his entry is removed from the directory:
Figure X.Y: Maintaining referential integrity in groups
Notice that if we rename (modrdn) the john entry to, say, jsmith, the refint overlay will also rename the reference in the member attribute, so the group membership stays correct.
If we removed all users from the directory who are a member of this group, then the end result would be a single member in the group: cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com. This is the refint_nothing parameter kicking into action so that the schema is not violated.
The rootdn must be set for the database as refint runs as the rootdn to gain access to make its updates. The rootpw does not need to be set.
12.11.3. Further Information
slapo-refint(5)
12.12. Return Code
12.12.1. Overview
This overlay is useful to test the behavior of clients when server-generated erroneous and/or unusual responses occur, for example; error codes, referrals, excessive response times and so on.
This would be classed as a debugging tool whilst developing client software or additional Overlays.
For detailed information, please see the slapo-retcode(5) man page.
12.12.2. Return Code Configuration
The retcode overlay utilizes the "return code" schema described in the man page. This schema is specifically designed for use with this overlay and is not intended to be used otherwise.
Note: The necessary schema is loaded automatically by the overlay.
An example configuration might be:
overlay retcode retcode-parent "ou=RetCodes,dc=example,dc=com" include ./retcode.conf retcode-item "cn=Unsolicited" 0x00 unsolicited="0" retcode-item "cn=Notice of Disconnect" 0x00 unsolicited="1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.20036" retcode-item "cn=Pre-disconnect" 0x34 flags="pre-disconnect" retcode-item "cn=Post-disconnect" 0x34 flags="post-disconnect"
Note: retcode.conf can be found in the openldap source at: tests/data/retcode.conf
An excerpt of a retcode.conf would be something like:
retcode-item "cn=success" 0x00 retcode-item "cn=success w/ delay" 0x00 sleeptime=2 retcode-item "cn=operationsError" 0x01 retcode-item "cn=protocolError" 0x02 retcode-item "cn=timeLimitExceeded" 0x03 op=search retcode-item "cn=sizeLimitExceeded" 0x04 op=search retcode-item "cn=compareFalse" 0x05 op=compare retcode-item "cn=compareTrue" 0x06 op=compare retcode-item "cn=authMethodNotSupported" 0x07 retcode-item "cn=strongAuthNotSupported" 0x07 text="same as authMethodNotSupported" retcode-item "cn=strongAuthRequired" 0x08 retcode-item "cn=strongerAuthRequired" 0x08 text="same as strongAuthRequired"
Please see tests/data/retcode.conf for a complete retcode.conf
12.12.3. Further Information
slapo-retcode(5)
12.13. Rewrite/Remap
12.13.1. Overview
It performs basic DN/data rewrite and objectClass/attributeType mapping. Its usage is mostly intended to provide virtual views of existing data either remotely, in conjunction with the proxy backend described in slapd-ldap(5), or locally, in conjunction with the relay backend described in slapd-relay(5).
This overlay is extremely configurable and advanced, therefore recommended reading is the slapo-rwm(5) man page.
12.13.2. Rewrite/Remap Configuration
12.13.3. Further Information
slapo-rwm(5)
12.14. Sync Provider
12.14.1. Overview
This overlay implements the provider-side support for the LDAP Content Synchronization (RFC4533) as well as syncrepl replication support, including persistent search functionality.
12.14.2. Sync Provider Configuration
There is very little configuration needed for this overlay, in fact for many situations merely loading the overlay will suffice.
However, because the overlay creates a contextCSN attribute in the root entry of the database which is updated for every write operation performed against the database and only updated in memory, it is recommended to configure a checkpoint so that the contextCSN is written into the underlying database to minimize recovery time after an unclean shutdown:
overlay syncprov syncprov-checkpoint 100 10
For every 100 operations or 10 minutes, which ever is sooner, the contextCSN will be checkpointed.
The four configuration directives available are syncprov-checkpoint, syncprov-sessionlog, syncprov-nopresent and syncprov-reloadhint which are covered in the man page discussing various other scenarios where this overlay can be used.
12.14.3. Further Information
The slapo-syncprov(5) man page and the Configuring the different replication types section
12.15. Translucent Proxy
12.15.1. Overview
This overlay can be used with a backend database such as slapd-mdb(5) to create a "translucent proxy".
Entries retrieved from a remote LDAP server may have some or all attributes overridden, or new attributes added, by entries in the local database before being presented to the client.
A search operation is first populated with entries from the remote LDAP server, the attributes of which are then overridden with any attributes defined in the local database. Local overrides may be populated with the add, modify, and modrdn operations, the use of which is restricted to the root user of the translucent local database.
A compare operation will perform a comparison with attributes defined in the local database record (if any) before any comparison is made with data in the remote database.
12.15.2. Translucent Proxy Configuration
There are various options available with this overlay, but for this example we will demonstrate adding new attributes to a remote entry and also searching against these newly added local attributes. For more information about overriding remote entries and search configuration, please see slapo-translucent(5)
Note: The Translucent Proxy overlay will disable schema checking in the local database, so that an entry consisting of overlay attributes need not adhere to the complete schema.
First we configure the overlay in the normal manner:
include /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/core.schema include /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/cosine.schema include /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/nis.schema include /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema pidfile ./slapd.pid argsfile ./slapd.args database mdb suffix "dc=suretecsystems,dc=com" rootdn "cn=trans,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com" rootpw secret directory ./openldap-data index objectClass eq overlay translucent translucent_local carLicense uri ldap://192.168.X.X:389 lastmod off acl-bind binddn="cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com" credentials="blahblah"
You will notice the overlay directive and a directive to say what attribute we want to be able to search against in the local database. We must also load the ldap backend which will connect to the remote directory server.
Now we take an example LDAP group:
# itsupport, Groups, suretecsystems.com dn: cn=itsupport,ou=Groups,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com objectClass: posixGroup objectClass: sambaGroupMapping cn: itsupport gidNumber: 1000 sambaSID: S-1-5-21-XXX sambaGroupType: 2 displayName: itsupport memberUid: ghenry memberUid: joebloggs
and create an LDIF file we can use to add our data to the local database, using some pretty strange choices of new attributes for demonstration purposes:
[ghenry@suretec test_configs]$ cat test-translucent-add.ldif dn: cn=itsupport,ou=Groups,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com businessCategory: frontend-override carLicense: LIVID employeeType: special departmentNumber: 9999999 roomNumber: 41L-535
Searching against the proxy gives:
[ghenry@suretec test_configs]$ ldapsearch -x -H ldap://127.0.0.1:9001 "(cn=itsupport)" # itsupport, Groups, OxObjects, suretecsystems.com dn: cn=itsupport,ou=Groups,ou=OxObjects,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com objectClass: posixGroup objectClass: sambaGroupMapping cn: itsupport gidNumber: 1003 SAMBASID: S-1-5-21-XXX SAMBAGROUPTYPE: 2 displayName: itsupport memberUid: ghenry memberUid: joebloggs roomNumber: 41L-535 departmentNumber: 9999999 employeeType: special carLicense: LIVID businessCategory: frontend-override
Here we can see that the 5 new attributes are added to the remote entry before being returned to the our client.
Because we have configured a local attribute to search against:
overlay translucent translucent_local carLicense
we can also search for that to return the completely fabricated entry:
ldapsearch -x -H ldap://127.0.0.1:9001 (carLicense=LIVID)
This is an extremely feature because you can then extend a remote directory server locally and also search against the local entries.
Note: Because the translucent overlay does not perform any DN rewrites, the local and remote database instances must have the same suffix. Other configurations will probably fail with No Such Object and other errors
12.15.3. Further Information
slapo-translucent(5)
12.16. Attribute Uniqueness
12.16.1. Overview
This overlay can be used with a backend database such as slapd-mdb(5) to enforce the uniqueness of some or all attributes within a subtree.
12.16.2. Attribute Uniqueness Configuration
This overlay is only effective on new data from the point the overlay is enabled. To check uniqueness for existing data, you can export and import your data again via the LDAP Add operation, which will not be suitable for large amounts of data, unlike slapcat.
For the following example, if uniqueness were enforced for the mail attribute, the subtree would be searched for any other records which also have a mail attribute containing the same value presented with an add, modify or modrdn operation which are unique within the configured scope. If any are found, the request is rejected.
Note: If no attributes are specified, for example ldap:///??sub?, then the URI applies to all non-operational attributes. However, the keyword ignore can be specified to exclude certain non-operational attributes.
To search at the base dn of the current backend database ensuring uniqueness of the mail attribute, we simply add the following configuration:
overlay unique unique_uri ldap:///?mail?sub?
For an existing entry of:
dn: cn=gavin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com objectClass: top objectClass: inetorgperson cn: gavin sn: henry mail: ghenry@suretecsystems.com
and we then try to add a new entry of:
dn: cn=robert,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com objectClass: top objectClass: inetorgperson cn: robert sn: jones mail: ghenry@suretecsystems.com
would result in an error like so:
adding new entry "cn=robert,dc=example,dc=com" ldap_add: Constraint violation (19) additional info: some attributes not unique
The overlay can have multiple URIs specified within a domain, allowing complex selections of objects and also have multiple unique_uri statements or olcUniqueURI attributes which will create independent domains.
For more information and details about the strict and ignore keywords, please see the slapo-unique(5) man page.
12.16.3. Further Information
slapo-unique(5)
12.17. Value Sorting
12.17.1. Overview
The Value Sorting overlay can be used with a backend database to sort the values of specific multi-valued attributes within a subtree. The sorting occurs whenever the attributes are returned in a search response.
12.17.2. Value Sorting Configuration
Sorting can be specified in ascending or descending order, using either numeric or alphanumeric sort methods. Additionally, a "weighted" sort can be specified, which uses a numeric weight prepended to the attribute values.
The weighted sort is always performed in ascending order, but may be combined with the other methods for values that all have equal weights. The weight is specified by prepending an integer weight {<weight>} in front of each value of the attribute for which weighted sorting is desired. This weighting factor is stripped off and never returned in search results.
Here are a few examples:
loglevel sync stats database mdb suffix "dc=suretecsystems,dc=com" directory /usr/local/var/openldap-data ...... overlay valsort valsort-attr memberUid ou=Groups,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com alpha-ascend
For example, ascend:
# sharedemail, Groups, suretecsystems.com dn: cn=sharedemail,ou=Groups,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com objectClass: posixGroup objectClass: top cn: sharedemail gidNumber: 517 memberUid: admin memberUid: dovecot memberUid: laura memberUid: suretec
For weighted, we change our data to:
# sharedemail, Groups, suretecsystems.com dn: cn=sharedemail,ou=Groups,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com objectClass: posixGroup objectClass: top cn: sharedemail gidNumber: 517 memberUid: {4}admin memberUid: {2}dovecot memberUid: {1}laura memberUid: {3}suretec
and change the config to:
overlay valsort valsort-attr memberUid ou=Groups,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com weighted
Searching now results in:
# sharedemail, Groups, OxObjects, suretecsystems.com dn: cn=sharedemail,ou=Groups,ou=OxObjects,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com objectClass: posixGroup objectClass: top cn: sharedemail gidNumber: 517 memberUid: laura memberUid: dovecot memberUid: suretec memberUid: admin
12.17.3. Further Information
slapo-valsort(5)
12.18. Overlay Stacking
12.18.1. Overview
Overlays can be stacked, which means that more than one overlay can be instantiated for each database, or for the frontend. As a consequence, each overlays function is called, if defined, when overlay execution is invoked. Multiple overlays are executed in reverse order (as a stack) with respect to their definition in slapd.conf (5), or with respect to their ordering in the config database, as documented in slapd-config (5).