IntroductionZend_Ldap is a class for performing LDAP operations including but not limited to binding,
searching and modifying entries in an LDAP directory.
Theory of operation
This component currently consists of the main Zend_Ldap class, that conceptually represents a binding to a
single LDAP server and allows for executing operations against a LDAP server such as OpenLDAP or ActiveDirectory (AD) servers. The parameters for binding may be provided explicitly or in the form of an options array. Zend_Ldap_Node provides an object-oriented interface for single LDAP nodes and can be used to form a basis for an active-record-like interface for a LDAP-based domain model.
The component provides several helper classes to perform operations on LDAP entries (Zend_Ldap_Attribute) such as setting and retrieving attributes (date values, passwords, boolean values, ...), to create and modifiy LDAP filter strings (Zend_Ldap_Filter) and to manipulate LDAP distinguished names (DN) (Zend_Ldap_Dn).
Additionally the component abstracts LDAP schema browsing for OpenLDAP and ActiveDirectoy servers Zend_Ldap_Node_Schema and server information retrieval for OpenLDAP-, ActiveDirectory- and Novell eDirectory servers (Zend_Ldap_Node_RootDse).
Using the Zend_Ldap class depends on the type of LDAP server and is best summarized with some
simple examples.
If you are using OpenLDAP, a simple example looks like the following (note that the
bindRequiresDn option is important if you are not using AD):
's0.foo.net',
'username' => 'CN=user1,DC=foo,DC=net',
'password' => 'pass1',
'bindRequiresDn' => true,
'accountDomainName' => 'foo.net',
'baseDn' => 'OU=Sales,DC=foo,DC=net',
);
$ldap = new Zend_Ldap($options);
$acctname = $ldap->getCanonicalAccountName('abaker',
Zend_Ldap::ACCTNAME_FORM_DN);
echo "$acctname\n";
]]>
If you are using Microsoft AD a simple example is:
'dc1.w.net',
'useStartTls' => true,
'username' => 'user1@w.net',
'password' => 'pass1',
'accountDomainName' => 'w.net',
'accountDomainNameShort' => 'W',
'baseDn' => 'CN=Users,DC=w,DC=net',
);
$ldap = new Zend_Ldap($options);
$acctname = $ldap->getCanonicalAccountName('bcarter',
Zend_Ldap::ACCTNAME_FORM_DN);
echo "$acctname\n";
]]>
Note that we use the getCanonicalAccountName() method to retrieve the account DN here only
because that is what exercises the most of what little code is currently present in this class.
Automatic Username Canonicalization When Binding
If bind() is called with a non-DN username but bindRequiresDN is
true and no username in DN form was supplied as an option, the bind will fail. However, if
a username in DN form is supplied in the options array, Zend_Ldap will first bind with
that username, retrieve the account DN for the username supplied to bind() and then re-
bind with that DN.
This behavior is critical to
Zend_Auth_Adapter_Ldap
, which passes the username supplied by
the user directly to bind().
The following example illustrates how the non-DN username 'abaker' can be used with
bind():
's0.foo.net',
'username' => 'CN=user1,DC=foo,DC=net',
'password' => 'pass1',
'bindRequiresDn' => true,
'accountDomainName' => 'foo.net',
'baseDn' => 'OU=Sales,DC=foo,DC=net',
);
$ldap = new Zend_Ldap($options);
$ldap->bind('abaker', 'moonbike55');
$acctname = $ldap->getCanonicalAccountName('abaker',
Zend_Ldap::ACCTNAME_FORM_DN);
echo "$acctname\n";
]]>
The bind() call in this example sees that the username 'abaker' is not in DN
form, finds bindRequiresDn is true, uses
'CN=user1,DC=foo,DC=net' and 'pass1' to bind, retrieves the DN for
'abaker', unbinds and then rebinds with the newly discovered
'CN=Alice Baker,OU=Sales,DC=foo,DC=net'.
Account Name Canonicalization
The accountDomainName and accountDomainNameShort options are used for two
purposes: (1) they facilitate multi-domain authentication and failover capability, and (2) they are
also used to canonicalize usernames. Specifically, names are canonicalized to the form specified by the
accountCanonicalForm option. This option may one of the following values:
Options for accountCanonicalFormNameValueExampleACCTNAME_FORM_DN1CN=Alice Baker,CN=Users,DC=example,DC=comACCTNAME_FORM_USERNAME2abakerACCTNAME_FORM_BACKSLASH3EXAMPLE\abakerACCTNAME_FORM_PRINCIPAL4abaker@example.com
The default canonicalization depends on what account domain name options were supplied. If
accountDomainNameShort was supplied, the default accountCanonicalForm value
is ACCTNAME_FORM_BACKSLASH. Otherwise, if accountDomainName was supplied, the
default is ACCTNAME_FORM_PRINCIPAL.
Account name canonicalization ensures that the string used to identify an account is consistent
regardless of what was supplied to bind(). For example, if the user supplies an account
name of abaker@example.com or just abaker and the
accountCanonicalForm is set to 3, the resulting canonicalized name would be
EXAMPLE\abaker.
Multi-domain Authentication and Failover
The Zend_Ldap component by itself makes no attempt to authenticate with multiple servers.
However, Zend_Ldap is specifically designed to handle this scenario gracefully. The
required technique is to simply iterate over an array of arrays of server options and attempt to bind
with each server. As described above bind() will automatically canonicalize each name, so
it does not matter if the user passes abaker@foo.net or W\bcarter or
cdavis - the bind() method will only succeed if the credentials were
successfully used in the bind.
Consider the following example that illustrates the technique required to implement multi-domain
authentication and failover:
array(
'host' => 's0.foo.net',
'username' => 'CN=user1,DC=foo,DC=net',
'password' => 'pass1',
'bindRequiresDn' => true,
'accountDomainName' => 'foo.net',
'accountDomainNameShort' => 'FOO',
'accountCanonicalForm' => 4, // ACCT_FORM_PRINCIPAL
'baseDn' => 'OU=Sales,DC=foo,DC=net',
),
'server2' => array(
'host' => 'dc1.w.net',
'useSsl' => true,
'username' => 'user1@w.net',
'password' => 'pass1',
'accountDomainName' => 'w.net',
'accountDomainNameShort' => 'W',
'accountCanonicalForm' => 4, // ACCT_FORM_PRINCIPAL
'baseDn' => 'CN=Users,DC=w,DC=net',
),
);
$ldap = new Zend_Ldap();
foreach ($multiOptions as $name => $options) {
echo "Trying to bind using server options for '$name'\n";
$ldap->setOptions($options);
try {
$ldap->bind($acctname, $password);
$acctname = $ldap->getCanonicalAccountName($acctname);
echo "SUCCESS: authenticated $acctname\n";
return;
} catch (Zend_Ldap_Exception $zle) {
echo ' ' . $zle->getMessage() . "\n";
if ($zle->getCode() === Zend_Ldap_Exception::LDAP_X_DOMAIN_MISMATCH) {
continue;
}
}
}
]]>
If the bind fails for any reason, the next set of server options is tried.
The getCanonicalAccountName call gets the canonical account name that the application
would presumably use to associate data with such as preferences. The
accountCanonicalForm = 4 in all server options ensures that the canonical form is
consistent regardless of which server was ultimately used.
The special LDAP_X_DOMAIN_MISMATCH exception occurs when an account name with a domain
component was supplied (e.g., abaker@foo.net or FOO\abaker and not just
abaker) but the domain component did not match either domain in the currently selected
server options. This exception indicates that the server is not an authority for the account. In this
case, the bind will not be performed, thereby eliminating unnecessary communication with the server.
Note that the continue instruction has no effect in this example, but in practice for
error handling and debugging purposes, you will probably want to check for
LDAP_X_DOMAIN_MISMATCH as well as LDAP_NO_SUCH_OBJECT and
LDAP_INVALID_CREDENTIALS.
The above code is very similar to code used within
Zend_Auth_Adapter_Ldap
. In fact, we
recommend that you simply use that authentication adapter for multi-domain + failover LDAP based
authentication (or copy the code).