clj-ldap is a thin layer on the unboundid sdk and allows clojure programs to talk to ldap servers. This library is available on clojars.org
:dependencies [[org.clojars.pntblnk/clj-ldap "0.0.16"]]
(ns example
(:require [clj-ldap.client :as ldap]))
(def ldap-server (ldap/connect {:host "ldap.example.com"}))
(ldap/get ldap-server "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com")
;; Returns a map such as
{:gidNumber "2000"
:loginShell "/bin/bash"
:objectClass #{"inetOrgPerson" "posixAccount" "shadowAccount"}
:mail "dude@example.com"
:sn "Dudeness"
:cn "dude"
:uid "dude"
:homeDirectory "/home/dude"}
Connects to an ldap server and returns a, thread safe, LDAPConnectionPool. Options is a map with the following entries:
:host Either a string in the form "address:port"
OR a map containing the keys,
:address defaults to localhost
:port defaults to 389 (or 636 for ldaps),
OR a collection containing multiple hosts used for load
balancing and failover. This entry is optional.
:bind-dn The DN to bind as, optional
:password The password to bind with, optional
:num-connections Establish a fixed size connection pool. Defaults to 1.
:initial-connections Establish a connection pool initially of this size with
capability to grow to :max-connections. Defaults to 1.
:max-connections Define maximum size of connection pool. It must be
greater than or equal to the initial number of
connections, defaults to value of :initial-connections.
:ssl? Boolean, connect over SSL (ldaps), defaults to false
:startTLS? Boolean, use startTLS over non-SSL port, defaults to false
:trust-store Only trust SSL certificates that are in this
JKS format file, optional, defaults to trusting all
certificates
:connect-timeout The timeout for making connections (milliseconds),
defaults to 1 minute
:timeout The timeout when waiting for a response from the server
(milliseconds), defaults to 5 minutes
Throws an LDAPException if an error occurs establishing the connection pool or authenticating to any of the servers. Some examples:
(ldap/connect {:host "ldap.example.com"
:num-connections 4
:bind-dn "cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com"
:password "password"})
(ldap/connect {:host [{:address "ldap1.example.com" :port 1389}
{:address "ldap3.example.com"}
"ldap2.example.com:1389"]
:startTLS? true
:initial-connections 9
:max-connections 18
:bind-dn "cn=directory manager"
:password "password"})
(ldap/connect {:host {:port 1389}
:bind-dn "cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com"
:password "password"})
The pool can then be used as a parameter to all the functions in the library where a connection is expected. Using a pool in this manner aleviates the caller from having to get and release connections. It will still be necessary to get and release a connection if a single connection is needed to process a sequence of operations. See the following bind? example.
Usage:
(ldap/bind? pool "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" "somepass")
(let [conn (ldap/get-connection pool)
user-dn "uid=user.1,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
user-password "password"]
(try
(when (ldap/bind? conn user-dn user-password)
(ldap/modify conn user-dn {:replace {:description "On sabatical"}}))
(finally (ldap/release-connection pool conn))))
Performs a bind operation using the provided connection, bindDN and password. Returns true if successful.
If an LDAPConnectionPool object is passed as the connection argument the bind attempt will have no side-effects, leaving the state of the underlying connections unchanged.
When an LDAP connection object is used as the connection argument the bind? function will attempt to change the identity of that connection to that of the provided DN. Subsequent operations on that connection will be done using the bound identity.
If successful, returns a map containing the entry for the given DN. Returns nil if the entry doesn't exist.
(ldap/get conn "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com")
Takes an optional collection that specifies which attributes will be returned from the server.
(ldap/get conn "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" [:cn :sn])
Throws a LDAPException on error.
Adds an entry to the connected ldap server. The entry is map of keywords to values which can be strings, sets or vectors.
(ldap/add conn "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
{:objectClass #{"top" "person"}
:cn "dude"
:sn "a"
:description "His dudeness"
:telephoneNumber ["1919191910" "4323324566"]})
Throws a LDAPException if there is an error with the request or the add failed.
Determines if the specified entry contains the given attribute and value.
(ldap/compare? conn "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
:description "His dudeness")
Throws a LDAPException if there is an error with the request or the LDAP compare failed.
Modifies an entry in the connected ldap server. The modifications are a map in the form:
{:add
{:attribute-a some-value
:attribute-b [value1 value2]}
:delete
{:attribute-c :all
:attribute-d some-value
:attribute-e [value1 value2]}
:replace
{:attibute-d value
:attribute-e [value1 value2]}
:increment
{:attribute-f value}
:pre-read
#{:attribute-a :attribute-b}
:post-read
#{:attribute-c :attribute-d}}
Where :add adds an attribute value, :delete deletes an attribute value and :replace replaces the set of values for the attribute with the ones specified. The entries :pre-read and :post-read specify attributes that have be read and returned either before or after the modifications have taken place.
All the keys in the map are optional e.g:
(ldap/modify conn "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
{:add {:telephoneNumber "232546265"}})
The values in the map can also be set to :all when doing a delete e.g:
(ldap/modify conn "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
{:delete {:telephoneNumber :all}}
{:proxied-auth "dn:cn=app,dc=example,dc=com"})
The values of the attributes given in :pre-read and :post-read are available in the returned map and are part of an atomic ldap operation e.g
(ldap/modify conn "uid=maxuid,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
{:increment {:uidNumber 1}
:post-read #{:uidNumber}})
returns
{:code 0
:name "success"
:post-read {:uidNumber "2002"}}
The above technique can be used to maintain counters for unique ids as described by rfc4525.
Throws a LDAPException on error.
Runs a search on the connected ldap server, reads all the results into memory and returns the results as a sequence of maps. An introduction to ldap searching can be found in this article.
Options is a map with the following optional entries:
:scope The search scope, can be :base :one :sub or :subordinate,
defaults to :sub
:filter A string representing the search filter,
defaults to "(objectclass=*)"
:attributes A collection of the attributes to return,
defaults to all user attributes
:byte-valued A collection of attributes to return as byte arrays as
opposed to Strings.
:size-limit The maximum number of entries that the server should return
:time-limit The maximum length of time in seconds that the server should
spend processing this request
:types-only Return only attribute names instead of names and values
:server-sort Instruct the server to sort the results. The value of this
key is a map like the following:
{ :is-critical ( true | false )
:sort-keys [ :cn :ascending
:employeNumber :descending ... ] }
At least one sort key must be provided.
:proxied-auth The dn:<dn> or u:<uid> to be used as the authorization
identity when processing the request. Don't forget the dn:/u: prefix.
:controls Adds the provided controls for this request.
:respf Applies this function to the list of response controls present.
e.g
(ldap/search conn "ou=people,dc=example,dc=com")
(ldap/search conn "ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" {:attributes [:cn] :sizelimit 100
:proxied-auth "dn:cn=app,dc=example,dc=com"})
(ldap/search conn "dc=example,dc=com" {:filter "(uid=abc123)" :attributes [:cn :uid :userCertificate]
:byte-valued [:userCertificate]})
Throws a LDAPSearchException on error. This function will not throw the exception in the event of a size limit exceeded result, instead the entries are returned.
Runs a search on the connected ldap server and executes the given function (for side effects) on each result. Does not read all the results into memory. The options argument is a map similar to that of the search function defined above. e.g
(ldap/search! conn "ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" println)
(ldap/search! conn "ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
{:filter "sn=dud*"}
(fn [x]
(println "Hello " (:cn x))))
Throws a LDAPSearchException if an error occurs during search. Throws an EntrySourceException if there is an error obtaining search results.
Deletes the given entry in the connected ldap server.
Options is a map with the following optional entries:
:delete-subtree Use the Subtree Delete Control to delete entire subtree rooted at dn.
:pre-read A set of attributes that should be read before deletion (will only apply to base entry if used with :delete-subtree).
:proxied-auth The dn:<dn> or u:<uid> to be used as the authorization
identity when processing the request. Don't forget the dn:/u: prefix.
(ldap/delete conn "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com")
(ldap/delete conn "cn=dude,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
{:pre-read #{:telephoneNumber}})
Throws a LDAPException if the object does not exist or an error occurs.