rh0dium wrote: > Hi all, > > I believe I am having a fundamental problem with my class and I can't > seem to figure out what I am doing wrong. Basically I want a class > which can do several specific ldap queries. So in my code I would have > multiple searches. But I can't figure out how to do it without it > barfing.. > > The error is straightforward .. > > LDAP Version 2.0.8 > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "./ldap-nsc.py", line 62, in ? > l.search() > File "./ldap-nsc.py", line 40, in search > ldap_result_id = l.search_s(baseDN, searchScope, searchAttrs, > retrieveAttrs) > AttributeError: NSCLdap instance has no attribute 'search_s' > > > The code is also I believe straight forward.. > > import ldap > > class NSCLdap: > > def __init__(self,server="sc-ldap.nsc.com"): > who=""; cred="" > self.server=server > try: > print "LDAP Version", ldap.__version__ > l=ldap.open(server) > l.simple_bind_s(who, cred) > l.protocol_version=ldap.VERSION3 > except ldap.LDAPError, error_message: > print "Couldn't Connect to %s %s " % > (server,error_message) > > def search(self, baseDN="o=nsc.com", > retrieveAttrs=None,searchAttrs="cn=*klass*" ): > searchScope = ldap.SCOPE_SUBTREE > try:
If you had bothered to do some elementary debugging, like "print repr(l)" here, just before the exception-triggering statement, .... > ldap_result_id = l.search_s(baseDN, searchScope, > searchAttrs, retrieveAttrs) > result_set = [] > while 1: > result_type, result_data = l.result(ldap_result_id, 0) > if (result_data == []): > break > else: > ## here you don't have to append to a list > ## you could do whatever you want with the > individual entry > ## The appending to list is just for > illustration. > if result_type == ldap.RES_SEARCH_ENTRY: > result_set.append(result_data) > print result_set > except ldap.LDAPError, error_message: > print "Errors on Search %s " % error_message > > def setBaseDN(self, baseDN="o=nsc.com"): > return baseDN > > if __name__ == '__main__': > > l = NSCLdap() > l.search() > > > I would love some pointers - clearly my code thinks that search_s is an > attribute of my class but it's not.. You are confusing the bejaysus out of yourself and your audience by using "l" as a name (1) at all (2) to represent two *different* things, one in script-global scope -- l = NSCLdap() -- and one in the __init__ method of your class -- l=ldap.open(server). Use two different sensible names; then your real problem should become apparent -- unless of course in the meantime some wally thinks it a good idea to prevent your attaining a clue yourself by spoon-feeding you. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list