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- <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
- <!-- Reviewed: no -->
- <sect1 id="zend.ldap.introduction">
- <title>Introduction</title>
- <para>
- <classname>Zend_Ldap</classname> is a class for performing <acronym>LDAP</acronym>
- operations including but not limited to binding, searching and modifying entries
- in an <acronym>LDAP</acronym> directory.
- </para>
- <sect2 id="zend.ldap.introduction.theory-of-operations">
- <title>Theory of operation</title>
- <para>
- This component currently consists of the main <classname>Zend_Ldap</classname> class,
- that conceptually represents a binding to a single <acronym>LDAP</acronym> server
- and allows for executing operations against a <acronym>LDAP</acronym> server such
- as OpenLDAP or ActiveDirectory (AD) servers. The parameters for binding may be
- provided explicitly or in the form of an options array.
- <classname>Zend_Ldap_Node</classname> provides an object-oriented interface
- for single <acronym>LDAP</acronym> nodes and can be used to form a basis for an
- active-record-like interface for a <acronym>LDAP</acronym>-based domain model.
- </para>
- <para>
- The component provides several helper classes to perform operations on
- <acronym>LDAP</acronym> entries (<classname>Zend_Ldap_Attribute</classname>) such as
- setting and retrieving attributes (date values, passwords, boolean values, ...), to
- create and modify <acronym>LDAP</acronym> filter strings
- (<classname>Zend_Ldap_Filter</classname>) and to manipulate <acronym>LDAP</acronym>
- distinguished names (DN) (<classname>Zend_Ldap_Dn</classname>).
- </para>
- <para>
- Additionally the component abstracts <acronym>LDAP</acronym> schema browsing
- for OpenLDAP and ActiveDirectoy servers <classname>Zend_Ldap_Node_Schema</classname>
- and server information retrieval for OpenLDAP-, ActiveDirectory- and Novell
- eDirectory servers (<classname>Zend_Ldap_Node_RootDse</classname>).
- </para>
- <para>
- Using the <classname>Zend_Ldap</classname> class depends on the type of
- <acronym>LDAP</acronym> server and is best summarized with some simple examples.
- </para>
- <para>
- If you are using OpenLDAP, a simple example looks like the following
- (note that the <emphasis>bindRequiresDn</emphasis> option is important if you are
- <emphasis>not</emphasis> using AD):
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- $options = array(
- 'host' => '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";
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- If you are using Microsoft AD a simple example is:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- $options = array(
- 'host' => '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";
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- Note that we use the <methodname>getCanonicalAccountName()</methodname> 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.
- </para>
- <sect3 id="zend.ldap.introduction.theory-of-operations.automatic-username-canonicalization">
- <title>Automatic Username Canonicalization When Binding</title>
- <para>
- If <methodname>bind()</methodname> is called with a non-DN username but
- <emphasis>bindRequiresDN</emphasis> is <constant>TRUE</constant> 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, <classname>Zend_Ldap</classname> will
- first bind with that username, retrieve the account DN for the username
- supplied to <methodname>bind()</methodname> and then re-bind with that DN.
- </para>
- <para>
- This behavior is critical to <link
- linkend="zend.auth.adapter.ldap"><classname>Zend_Auth_Adapter_Ldap</classname></link>,
- which passes the username supplied by the user directly to
- <methodname>bind()</methodname>.
- </para>
- <para>
- The following example illustrates how the non-DN username
- '<emphasis>abaker</emphasis>' can be used with <methodname>bind()</methodname>:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- $options = array(
- 'host' => '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";
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- The <methodname>bind()</methodname> call in this example sees that
- the username '<emphasis>abaker</emphasis>' is not in DN form, finds
- <emphasis>bindRequiresDn</emphasis> is <constant>TRUE</constant>, uses
- '<command>CN=user1,DC=foo,DC=net</command>' and '<emphasis>pass1</emphasis>' to
- bind, retrieves the DN for '<emphasis>abaker</emphasis>', unbinds and then rebinds
- with the newly discovered
- '<command>CN=Alice Baker,OU=Sales,DC=foo,DC=net</command>'.
- </para>
- </sect3>
- <sect3 id="zend.ldap.introduction.theory-of-operations.account-name-canonicalization">
- <title>Account Name Canonicalization</title>
- <para>
- The <emphasis>accountDomainName</emphasis> and
- <emphasis>accountDomainNameShort</emphasis>
- 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 <emphasis>accountCanonicalForm</emphasis> option.
- This option may one of the following values:
- </para>
- <table id="zend.ldap.using.theory-of-operation.account-name-canonicalization.table">
- <title>Options for accountCanonicalForm</title>
- <tgroup cols="3">
- <thead>
- <row>
- <entry>Name</entry>
- <entry>Value</entry>
- <entry>Example</entry>
- </row>
- </thead>
- <tbody>
- <row>
- <entry><constant>ACCTNAME_FORM_DN</constant></entry>
- <entry>1</entry>
- <entry>CN=Alice Baker,CN=Users,DC=example,DC=com</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry><constant>ACCTNAME_FORM_USERNAME</constant></entry>
- <entry>2</entry>
- <entry>abaker</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry><constant>ACCTNAME_FORM_BACKSLASH</constant></entry>
- <entry>3</entry>
- <entry>EXAMPLE\abaker</entry>
- </row>
- <row>
- <entry><constant>ACCTNAME_FORM_PRINCIPAL</constant></entry>
- <entry>4</entry>
- <entry><filename>abaker@example.com</filename></entry>
- </row>
- </tbody>
- </tgroup>
- </table>
- <para>
- The default canonicalization depends on what account domain name options
- were supplied. If <emphasis>accountDomainNameShort</emphasis> was supplied, the
- default <emphasis>accountCanonicalForm</emphasis> value is
- <constant>ACCTNAME_FORM_BACKSLASH</constant>. Otherwise, if
- <emphasis>accountDomainName</emphasis> was supplied, the
- default is <constant>ACCTNAME_FORM_PRINCIPAL</constant>.
- </para>
- <para>
- Account name canonicalization ensures that the string used to identify
- an account is consistent regardless of what was supplied to
- <methodname>bind()</methodname>. For example, if the user supplies an account
- name of <filename>abaker@example.com</filename> or just
- <emphasis>abaker</emphasis> and the <emphasis>accountCanonicalForm</emphasis>
- is set to 3, the resulting canonicalized name would be
- <emphasis>EXAMPLE\abaker</emphasis>.
- </para>
- </sect3>
- <sect3 id="zend.ldap.introduction.theory-of-operations.multi-domain-failover">
- <title>Multi-domain Authentication and Failover</title>
- <para>
- The <classname>Zend_Ldap</classname> component by itself makes no attempt
- to authenticate with multiple servers. However, <classname>Zend_Ldap</classname>
- is specifically designed to handle this scenario gracefully. The
- required technique is to simply iterate over an array of arrays of serve
- options and attempt to bind with each server. As described above
- <methodname>bind()</methodname> will automatically canonicalize each name, so
- it does not matter if the user passes <filename>abaker@foo.net</filename> or
- <emphasis>W\bcarter</emphasis> or <emphasis>cdavis</emphasis> - the
- <methodname>bind()</methodname> method will only succeed if the credentials were
- successfully used in the bind.
- </para>
- <para>
- Consider the following example that illustrates the technique required to
- implement multi-domain authentication and failover:
- </para>
- <programlisting language="php"><![CDATA[
- $acctname = 'W\\user2';
- $password = 'pass2';
- $multiOptions = array(
- 'server1' => 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;
- }
- }
- }
- ]]></programlisting>
- <para>
- If the bind fails for any reason, the next set of server options is tried.
- </para>
- <para>
- The <methodname>getCanonicalAccountName()</methodname> call gets the canonical
- account name that the application would presumably use to associate data with such
- as preferences. The <emphasis>accountCanonicalForm = 4</emphasis> in all server
- options ensures that the canonical form is consistent regardless of which
- server was ultimately used.
- </para>
- <para>
- The special <constant>LDAP_X_DOMAIN_MISMATCH</constant> exception occurs when an
- account name with a domain component was supplied (e.g.,
- <filename>abaker@foo.net</filename> or <emphasis>FOO\abaker</emphasis> and not just
- <emphasis>abaker</emphasis>) 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 <emphasis>continue</emphasis>
- instruction has no effect in this example, but in practice for error handling and
- debugging purposes, you will probably want to check for
- <constant>LDAP_X_DOMAIN_MISMATCH</constant> as well as
- <constant>LDAP_NO_SUCH_OBJECT</constant> and
- <constant>LDAP_INVALID_CREDENTIALS</constant>.
- </para>
- <para>
- The above code is very similar to code used within <link
- linkend="zend.auth.adapter.ldap"><classname>Zend_Auth_Adapter_Ldap</classname></link>.
- In fact, we recommend that you simply use that authentication adapter for
- multi-domain + failover <acronym>LDAP</acronym> based authentication
- (or copy the code).
- </para>
- </sect3>
- </sect2>
- </sect1>
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