|
slapd — Stand-alone LDAP Daemon
LIBEXECDIR/slapd
[
−4
| −6
] [ −T
acl | a [dd] | auth | c [at] | d
[n] | i [ndex] | p [asswd] | s [chema] | t [est] ] [
−d
debug−level ] [
−f
slapd−config−file ] [ −F
slapd−config−directory
] [ −h
URLs ] [
−n
service−name ] [
−s
syslog−level ] [
−l
syslog−local−user ] [ −o
option[= value] ] [ −r
directory ] [ −u
user ] [ −g
group ] [ −c
cookie ]
Slapd
is the
stand-alone LDAP daemon. It listens for LDAP connections on
any number of ports (default 389
), responding to the LDAP operations it
receives over these connections. slapd is typically invoked
at boot time, usually out of /etc/rc.local
. Upon startup, slapd normally forks and
disassociates itself from the invoking tty. If configured in
the config file (or config directory), the slapd process will print
its process ID (see getpid(2)) to a .pid
file, as well as the
command line options during invocation to an .args
file (see slapd.conf(5)). If the
−d
flag is given, even with
a zero argument, slapd will not fork and
disassociate from the invoking tty.
See the "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" for more details on slapd.
−4
Listen on IPv4 addresses only.
−6
Listen on IPv6 addresses only.
−T
tool
Run in Tool mode. The tool
argument selects
whether to run as slapadd, slapcat, slapdn, slapindex,
slappasswd,
slapschema, or
slaptest
(slapacl
and slapauth need the
entire acl
and
auth
option
value to be spelled out, as a
is reserved to
slapadd).
This option should be the first option specified when
it is used; any remaining options will be interpreted
by the corresponding slap tool program, according to
the respective man pages. Note that these tool programs
will usually be symbolic links to slapd. This option is
provided for situations where symbolic links are not
provided or not usable.
−d
debug−level
Turn on debugging as defined by debug-level
. If this
option is specified, even with a zero argument,
slapd
will not fork or disassociate from the invoking
terminal. Some general operation and status messages
are printed for any value of debug-level
. debug-level
is taken as a
bit string, with each bit corresponding to a different
kind of debugging information. See <ldap_log.h>
for details. Comma-separated arrays of friendly names
can be specified to select debugging output of the
corresponding debugging information. All the names
recognized by the loglevel
directive
described in slapd.conf(5) are
supported. If debug-level
is
?
, a list of installed
debug-levels is printed, and slapd exits.
Remember that if you turn on packet logging, packets containing bind passwords will be output, so if you redirect the log to a logfile, that file should be read-protected.
−s
syslog−level
This option tells slapd at what
debug-level debugging statements should be logged to
the syslog(8) facility. The
value syslog-level
can be set
to any value or combination allowed by the −d
switch. Slapd logs all
messages selected by syslog-leveli
at the
syslog(3) severity
debug-level DEBUG
, on the
unit specified with −l
.
−n
service−name
Specifies the service name for logging and other purposes. Defaults to basename of argv[0], i.e.: "slapd".
−l
syslog−local−user
Selects the local user of the syslog(8) facility. Value
can be LOCAL0
, through
LOCAL7
, as well as
USER
and DAEMON
. The default is LOCAL4
. However, this option is only
permitted on systems that support local users with the
syslog(8) facility.
Logging to syslog(8) occurs at the "DEBUG" severity
debug-level.
−f
slapd−config−file
Specifies the slapd configuration file. The default
is ETCDIR/slapd.conf
.
−F
slapd−config−directory
Specifies the slapd configuration directory. The
default is ETCDIR/slapd.d
. If both
−f
and −F
are specified, the config file
will be read and converted to config directory format
and written to the specified directory. If neither
option is specified, slapd will attempt to read the
default config directory before trying to use the
default config file. If a valid config directory exists
then the default config file is ignored. All of the
slap tools that use the config options observe this
same behavior.
−h
URLlist
slapd
will by default serve ldap:///
(LDAP over TCP
on all interfaces on default LDAP port). That is, it
will bind using INADDR_ANY and port 389
. The −h
option may be used to specify
LDAP (and other scheme) URLs to serve. For example, if
slapd is given −h
"ldap://127.0.0.1:9009/ ldaps:/// ldapi:///"
, it
will listen on 127.0.0.1:9009 for LDAP, 0.0.0.0:636 for
LDAP over TLS, and LDAP over IPC (Unix domain sockets).
Host 0.0.0.0 represents INADDR_ANY (any interface). A
space separated list of URLs is expected. The URLs
should be of the LDAP, LDAPS, or LDAPI schemes, and
generally without a DN or other optional parameters
(excepting as discussed below). Support for the latter
two schemes depends on selected configuration options.
Hosts may be specified by name or IPv4 and IPv6 address
formats. Ports, if specified, must be numeric. The
default ldap:// port is 389
and the default ldaps:// port is
636
.
For LDAP over IPC, name
is the name of the
socket, and no port
is required, nor
allowed; note that directory separators must be
URL-encoded, like any other characters that are special
to URLs; so the socket
/usr/local/var/ldapi
must be specified as
ldapi://%2Fusr%2Flocal%2Fvar%2Fldapi
The default location for the IPC socket is LOCALSTATEDIR/run/ldapi
The listener permissions are indicated by "x−mod=−rwxrwxrwx", "x−mod=0777" or "x−mod=777", where any of the "rwx" can be "−" to suppress the related permission, while any of the "7" can be any legal octal digit, according to chmod(1). The listeners can take advantage of the "x−mod" extension to apply rough limitations to operations, e.g. allow read operations ("r", which applies to search and compare), write operations ("w", which applies to add, delete, modify and modrdn), and execute operations ("x", which means bind is required). "User" permissions apply to authenticated users, while "other" apply to anonymous users; "group" permissions are ignored. For example, "ldap:///????x−mod=−rw−−−−−−−" means that read and write is only allowed for authenticated connections, and bind is required for all operations. This feature is experimental, and requires to be manually enabled at configure time.
−r
directory
Specifies a directory to become the root directory.
slapd will change the current working directory to this
directory and then chroot(2) to this
directory. This is done after opening listeners but
before reading any configuration file or initializing
any backend. When used as a security mechanism, it
should be used in conjunction with −u
and −g
options.
−u
user
slapd
will run slapd with the specified user name or id, and
that user's supplementary group access list as set with
initgroups(3). The group ID is also changed to this
user's gid, unless the −g
option is used to override.
Note when used with −r
, slapd will use the user
database in the change root environment.
Note that on some systems, running as a non-privileged user will prevent passwd back-ends from accessing the encrypted passwords. Note also that any shell back-ends will run as the specified non-privileged user.
−g
group
slapd
will run with the specified group name or id. Note when
used with −r
, slapd
will use the group database in the change root
environment.
−c
cookie
This option provides a cookie for the syncrepl
replication consumer. The cookie is a comma separated
list of name=value
pairs.
Currently supported syncrepl cookie fields are
rid,
sid, and
csn.
rid
identifies a replication thread within the consumer
server and is used to find the syncrepl specification
in slapd.conf(5) or
slapd-config(5)
having the matching replication identifier in its
definition. The rid
must be provided in
order for any other specified values to be used.
sid
is the
server id in a multi-master/mirror-mode configuration.
csn
is the
commit sequence number received by a previous
synchronization and represents the state of the
consumer replica content which the syncrepl engine will
synchronize to the current provider content. In case of
mirror-mode
or multi-master
replication agreement, multiple csn
values, semicolon
separated, can appear. Use only the rid
part to force a
full reload.
−o
option[=value]
This option provides a generic means to specify options without the need to reserve a separate letter for them.
It supports the following options:
slp=
{on|off|}
slp-attrs
When SLP support is compiled into slapd, disable it (off), enable it by registering at SLP DAs without specific SLP attributes (on), or with specific SLP attributes
slp-attrs
that must be an SLP attribute list definition according to the SLP standard.For example,
"slp=(tree=production),(server-type=OpenLDAP),(server−version=2.4.15)"
registers at SLP DAs with the three SLP attributes tree, server-type and server-version that have the values given above. This allows to specifically query the SLP DAs for LDAP servers holding theproduction
tree in case multiple trees are available.
To start slapd and have it fork and detach from the terminal and start serving the LDAP databases defined in the default config file, just type:
LIBEXECDIR/slapd
To start slapd with an alternate configuration file, and turn on voluminous debugging which will be printed on standard error, type:
LIBEXECDIR/slapd −f /var/tmp/slapd.conf −d 255
To test whether the configuration file is correct or not, type:
LIBEXECDIR/slapd −Tt
ldap(3), slapd.conf(5), slapd-config(5), slapd.access(5), slapacl(8), slapadd(8), slapauth(8), slapcat(8), slapdn(8), slapindex(8), slappasswd(8), slapschema(8), slaptest(8).
"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
OpenLDAP Software is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP Project <http://www.openldap.org/>. OpenLDAP Software is derived from University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release.