I'm sorry, but I've only been working with openldap for a few months,
and I'm not exactly a C expert neither...
However, I had the idea at the beginning to write my own bind() function
in SampleLDAP.pm, hoping it would somehow be called, but it wasn't :
I wrote :
sub bind {
print {*STDERR} "Here in bind\n";
return 0;
}
It's never called : when I start slapd I can see that new() and init()
are called, then when I do a search I can see that search() is called,
but apparently the bind() function I wrote in SampleLDAP.pm is never called
root@ldap:/# /usr/local/libexec/slapd -u openldap -g openldap -h
"ldap:/// ldapi:///" -d 0
Here in new
Here in init
Here in search
Le 16/05/2013 06:24, Pierangelo Masarati a écrit :
servers/slapd/back-perl/bind.c calls a method "bind" as much as
servers/slapd/back-perl/search.c calls a method "search". Apparently,
who wrote "SampleLDAP.pm" did not provide a "bind" example. Note that
I've been working for 15 years with OpenLDAP and I never used
back-perl; I discovered all of this last night by opening 2 files and
reading about 10 lines of code. You should probably try to do
something like this yourself.
p.
Le 15/05/2013 22:20, Pierangelo Masarati a écrit :
binddn and bindpw are the first two parameters of the perl function
called for binds.