Class: Net::LdapPdu
- Inherits:
-
Object
- Object
- Net::LdapPdu
- Defined in:
- lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb
Constant Summary collapse
- BindResult =
1
- SearchReturnedData =
4
- SearchResult =
5
- ModifyResponse =
7
- AddResponse =
9
- DeleteResponse =
11
- ModifyRDNResponse =
13
- SearchResultReferral =
19
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#app_tag ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute app_tag.
-
#msg_id ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute msg_id.
-
#search_attributes ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute search_attributes.
-
#search_dn ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute search_dn.
-
#search_entry ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute search_entry.
-
#search_referrals ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute search_referrals.
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#initialize(ber_object) ⇒ LdapPdu
constructor
initialize An LDAP PDU always looks like a BerSequence with at least two elements: an integer (message-id number), and an application-specific sequence.
-
#parse_search_referral(uris) ⇒ Object
A search referral is a sequence of one or more LDAP URIs.
-
#parse_search_return(sequence) ⇒ Object
parse_search_return Definition from RFC 1777 (we’re handling application-4 here).
-
#result_code(code = :resultCode) ⇒ Object
result_code This returns an LDAP result code taken from the PDU, but it will be nil if there wasn’t a result code.
-
#result_controls ⇒ Object
Return RFC-2251 Controls if any.
Constructor Details
#initialize(ber_object) ⇒ LdapPdu
initialize An LDAP PDU always looks like a BerSequence with at least two elements: an integer (message-id number), and an application-specific sequence. Some LDAPv3 packets also include an optional third element, which is a sequence of “controls” (See RFC 2251, section 4.1.12). The application-specific tag in the sequence tells us what kind of packet it is, and each kind has its own format, defined in RFC-1777. Observe that many clients (such as ldapsearch) do not necessarily enforce the expected application tags on received protocol packets. This implementation does interpret the RFC strictly in this regard, and it remains to be seen whether there are servers out there that will not work well with our approach.
Added a controls-processor to SearchResult. Didn’t add it everywhere because it just feels like it will need to be refactored.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 74 def initialize ber_object begin @msg_id = ber_object[0].to_i @app_tag = ber_object[1].ber_identifier - 0x60 rescue # any error becomes a data-format error raise LdapPduError.new( "ldap-pdu format error" ) end case @app_tag when BindResult parse_ldap_result ber_object[1] when SearchReturnedData parse_search_return ber_object[1] when SearchResultReferral parse_search_referral ber_object[1] when SearchResult parse_ldap_result ber_object[1] parse_controls(ber_object[2]) if ber_object[2] when ModifyResponse parse_ldap_result ber_object[1] when AddResponse parse_ldap_result ber_object[1] when DeleteResponse parse_ldap_result ber_object[1] when ModifyRDNResponse parse_ldap_result ber_object[1] else raise LdapPduError.new( "unknown pdu-type: #{@app_tag}" ) end end |
Instance Attribute Details
#app_tag ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute app_tag.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 48 def app_tag @app_tag end |
#msg_id ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute msg_id.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 48 def msg_id @msg_id end |
#search_attributes ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute search_attributes.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 49 def search_attributes @search_attributes end |
#search_dn ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute search_dn.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 49 def search_dn @search_dn end |
#search_entry ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute search_entry.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 49 def search_entry @search_entry end |
#search_referrals ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute search_referrals.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 50 def search_referrals @search_referrals end |
Instance Method Details
#parse_search_referral(uris) ⇒ Object
A search referral is a sequence of one or more LDAP URIs. Any number of search-referral replies can be returned by the server, interspersed with normal replies in any order. Until I can think of a better way to do this, we’ll return the referrals as an array. It’ll be up to higher-level handlers to expose something reasonable to the client.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 175 def parse_search_referral uris @search_referrals = uris end |
#parse_search_return(sequence) ⇒ Object
parse_search_return Definition from RFC 1777 (we’re handling application-4 here)
Search Response ::=
CHOICE {
entry [APPLICATION 4] SEQUENCE {
objectName LDAPDN,
attributes SEQUENCE OF SEQUENCE {
AttributeType,
SET OF AttributeValue
}
},
resultCode [APPLICATION 5] LDAPResult
}
We concoct a search response that is a hash of the returned attribute values. NOW OBSERVE CAREFULLY: WE ARE DOWNCASING THE RETURNED ATTRIBUTE NAMES. This is to make them more predictable for user programs, but it may not be a good idea. Maybe this should be configurable. ALTERNATE IMPLEMENTATION: In addition to @search_dn and @search_attributes, we also return @search_entry, which is an LDAP::Entry object. If that works out well, then we’ll remove the first two.
Provisionally removed obsolete search_attributes and search_dn, 04May06.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 158 def parse_search_return sequence sequence.length >= 2 or raise LdapPduError @search_entry = LDAP::Entry.new( sequence[0] ) #@search_dn = sequence[0] #@search_attributes = {} sequence[1].each {|seq| @search_entry[seq[0]] = seq[1] #@search_attributes[seq[0].downcase.intern] = seq[1] } end |
#result_code(code = :resultCode) ⇒ Object
result_code This returns an LDAP result code taken from the PDU, but it will be nil if there wasn’t a result code. That can easily happen depending on the type of packet.
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 112 def result_code code = :resultCode @ldap_result and @ldap_result[code] end |
#result_controls ⇒ Object
Return RFC-2251 Controls if any. Messy. Does this functionality belong somewhere else?
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# File 'lib/net/ldap/pdu.rb', line 118 def result_controls @ldap_controls || [] end |