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SLAPD-SQL(5)		      File Formats Manual		  SLAPD-SQL(5)

NAME
       slapd-sql - SQL backend to slapd

SYNOPSIS
       /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.conf

DESCRIPTION
       The  primary purpose of this slapd(8) backend is	to PRESENT information
       stored in some RDBMS as an LDAP subtree without any  programming	 (some
       SQL and maybe stored procedures can't be	considered programming,	anyway
       ;).

       That  is, for example, when you (some ISP) have account information you
       use in an RDBMS,	and want to use	modern solutions that expect such  in-
       formation in LDAP (to authenticate users, make email lookups etc.).  Or
       you  want  to  synchronize  or distribute information between different
       sites/applications that use RDBMSes and/or LDAP.	 Or whatever else...

       It is NOT designed as a general-purpose backend that uses RDBMS instead
       of LMDB (as the standard	MDB backend does), though it can  be  used  as
       such   with   several   limitations.    You   can   take	  a   look  at
       http://www.openldap.org/faq/index.cgi?file=378		     (OpenLDAP
       FAQ-O-Matic/General LDAP	FAQ/Directories	vs. conventional databases) to
       find out	more on	this point.

       The  idea (detailed below) is to	use some meta-information to translate
       LDAP queries to SQL queries, leaving relational	schema	untouched,  so
       that  old applications can continue using it without any	modifications.
       This allows SQL and LDAP	applications to	inter-operate without replica-
       tion, and exchange data as needed.

       The SQL backend is designed to be tunable to virtually  any  relational
       schema  without	having to change source	(through that meta-information
       mentioned).  Also, it uses ODBC to connect to RDBMSes,  and  is	highly
       configurable  for  SQL  dialects	RDBMSes	may use, so it may be used for
       integration and distribution of data on different RDBMSes, OSes,	 hosts
       etc., in	other words, in	highly heterogeneous environment.

       This backend is experimental.

CONFIGURATION
       These slapd.conf	options	apply to the SQL backend database, which means
       that  they must follow a	"database sql" line and	come before any	subse-
       quent "backend" or "database" lines.  Other database options  not  spe-
       cific to	this backend are described in the slapd.conf(5)	manual page.

DATA SOURCE CONFIGURATION
       dbname <datasource name>
	      The name of the ODBC datasource to use.

       dbhost <hostname>
       dbpasswd	<password>
       dbuser <username>
	      The three	above options are generally unneeded, because this in-
	      formation	 is  taken from	the datasource specified by the	dbname
	      directive.  They allow to	override datasource  settings.	 Also,
	      several  RDBMS'  drivers	tend  to  require  explicit passing of
	      user/password, even if those are given in	datasource (Note:  db-
	      host is currently	ignored).

SCOPING	CONFIGURATION
       These options specify SQL query templates for scoping searches.

       subtree_cond <SQL expression>
	      Specifies	 a where-clause	template used to form a	subtree	search
	      condition	(dn="(.+,)?<dn>$").  It	may differ from	 one  SQL  di-
	      alect  to	 another (see samples).	 By default, it	is constructed
	      based on the knowledge about how to normalize  DN	 values	 (e.g.
	      "<upper_func>(ldap_entries.dn)  LIKE  CONCAT('%',?)");  see  up-
	      per_func,	upper_needs_cast, concat_pattern and  strcast_func  in
	      "HELPER CONFIGURATION" for details.

       children_cond <SQL expression>
	      Specifies	a where-clause template	used to	form a children	search
	      condition	 (dn=".+,<dn>$").   It may differ from one SQL dialect
	      to another (see samples).	 By default, it	is  constructed	 based
	      on  the  knowledge about how to normalize	DN values (e.g.	 "<up-
	      per_func>(ldap_entries.dn)  LIKE	 CONCAT('%,',?)");   see   up-
	      per_func,	 upper_needs_cast,  concat_pattern and strcast_func in
	      "HELPER CONFIGURATION" for details.

       use_subtree_shortcut { YES | no }
	      Do not use the subtree condition	when  the  searchBase  is  the
	      database	suffix,	 and  the scope	is subtree; rather collect all
	      entries.

STATEMENT CONFIGURATION
       These options specify SQL query templates for  loading  schema  mapping
       meta-information,  adding  and  deleting	 entries to ldap_entries, etc.
       All these and subtree_cond should have the given	default	 values.   For
       the  current  value it is recommended to	look at	the sources, or	in the
       log output when slapd starts with "-d 5"	or greater.  Note that the pa-
       rameter number and order	must not be changed.

       oc_query	<SQL expression>
	      The query	that is	used to	collect	the objectClass	 mapping  data
	      from  table ldap_oc_mappings; see	"METAINFORMATION USED" for de-
	      tails.  The default is "SELECT id, name,	keytbl,	 keycol,  cre-
	      ate_proc,	delete_proc, expect_return FROM	ldap_oc_mappings".

       at_query	<SQL expression>
	      The query	that is	used to	collect	the attributeType mapping data
	      from  table  ldap_attr_mappings;	see "METAINFORMATION USED" for
	      details.	The default  is	 "SELECT  name,	 sel_expr,  from_tbls,
	      join_where,  add_proc,  delete_proc,  param_order, expect_return
	      FROM ldap_attr_mappings WHERE oc_map_id=?".

       id_query	<SQL expression>
	      The query	that is	used to	map a DN to an entry in	table ldap_en-
	      tries; see "METAINFORMATION USED"	for details.  The  default  is
	      "SELECT id,keyval,oc_map_id,dn FROM ldap_entries WHERE <DN match
	      expr>", where <DN	match expr> is constructed based on the	knowl-
	      edge  about  how to normalize DN values (e.g. "dn=?" if no means
	      to   uppercase   strings	 are   available;   typically,	 "<up-
	      per_func>(dn)=?"	is  used);  see	 upper_func, upper_needs_cast,
	      concat_pattern and strcast_func in  "HELPER  CONFIGURATION"  for
	      details.

       insentry_stmt <SQL expression>
	      The  statement  that  is	used  to  insert  a new	entry in table
	      ldap_entries; see	"METAINFORMATION USED" for details.   The  de-
	      fault  is	"INSERT	INTO ldap_entries (dn, oc_map_id, parent, key-
	      val) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)".

       delentry_stmt <SQL expression>
	      The statement that is used to delete an existing entry from  ta-
	      ble  ldap_entries;  see "METAINFORMATION USED" for details.  The
	      default is "DELETE FROM ldap_entries WHERE id=?".

       delobjclasses_stmt <SQL expression>
	      The statement that is used to delete an existing entry's ID from
	      table ldap_objclasses; see "METAINFORMATION USED"	 for  details.
	      The  default  is	"DELETE	 FROM  ldap_entry_objclasses WHERE en-
	      try_id=?".

HELPER CONFIGURATION
       These statements	are used to modify the default behavior	of the backend
       according to issues of the dialect of the RDBMS.	 The first options es-
       sentially refer to string and DN	normalization when  building  filters.
       LDAP  normalization  is	more than upper- (or lower-)casing everything;
       however,	as a reasonable	 trade-off,  for  case-sensitive  RDBMSes  the
       backend can be instructed to uppercase strings and DNs by providing the
       upper_func directive.  Some RDBMSes, to use functions on	arbitrary data
       types,  e.g.  string  constants,	requires a cast, which is triggered by
       the upper_needs_cast directive.	If required, a	string	cast  function
       can be provided as well,	by using the strcast_func directive.  Finally,
       a  custom  string concatenation pattern may be required;	it is provided
       by the concat_pattern directive.

       upper_func <SQL function	name>
	      Specifies	the name of a function that converts a given value  to
	      uppercase.   This	is used	for case insensitive matching when the
	      RDBMS is case sensitive.	It may differ from one SQL dialect  to
	      another  (e.g.  UCASE,  UPPER or whatever; see samples).	By de-
	      fault, none is used, i.e.	strings	are not	uppercased, so matches
	      may be case sensitive.

       upper_needs_cast	{ NO | yes }
	      Set this directive to yes	if upper_func needs an	explicit  cast
	      when applied to literal strings.	A cast in the form CAST	(<arg>
	      AS  VARCHAR(<max	DN length>)) is	used, where <max DN length> is
	      builtin in back-sql;  see	 macro	BACKSQL_MAX_DN_LEN  (currently
	      255;    note    that    slapd's	 builtin   limit,   in	 macro
	      SLAP_LDAPDN_MAXLEN, is set to 8192).  This is  experimental  and
	      may change in future releases.

       strcast_func <SQL function name>
	      Specifies	 the name of a function	that converts a	given value to
	      a	string for appropriate ordering.  This is used in "SELECT DIS-
	      TINCT" statements	for strongly typed  RDBMSes  with  little  im-
	      plicit casting (like PostgreSQL),	when a literal string is spec-
	      ified.  This is experimental and may change in future releases.

       concat_pattern <pattern>
	      This  statement  defines the pattern that	is used	to concatenate
	      strings.	The pattern MUST contain two question marks, '?', that
	      will be replaced by the two strings that must  be	 concatenated.
	      The  default  value  is  CONCAT(?,?); a form that	is known to be
	      highly portable (IBM db2,	PostgreSQL) is ?||?, but  an  explicit
	      cast   may  be  required	when  operating	 on  literal  strings:
	      CAST(?||?	AS VARCHAR(<length>)).	 On  some  RDBMSes  (IBM  db2,
	      MSSQL)  the form ?+?  is known to	work as	well.  Carefully check
	      the documentation	of your	RDBMS or stay with  the	 examples  for
	      supported	 ones.	 This is experimental and may change in	future
	      releases.

       aliasing_keyword	<string>
	      Define the aliasing keyword.  Some RDBMSes  use  the  word  "AS"
	      (the default), others don't use any.

       aliasing_quote <string>
	      Define  the  quoting char	of the aliasing	keyword.  Some RDBMSes
	      don't require any	(the default), others may  require  single  or
	      double quotes.

       has_ldapinfo_dn_ru { NO | yes }
	      Explicitly  inform  the  backend whether the dn_ru column	(DN in
	      reverse uppercased  form)	 is  present  in  table	 ldap_entries.
	      Overrides	 automatic  check  (this is required, for instance, by
	      PostgreSQL/unixODBC).  This is experimental and  may  change  in
	      future releases.

       fail_if_no_mapping { NO | yes }
	      When  set	to yes it forces attribute write operations to fail if
	      no appropriate mapping between LDAP attributes and SQL  data  is
	      available.  The default behavior is to ignore those changes that
	      cannot be	mapped.	 It has	no impact on objectClass mapping, i.e.
	      if the structuralObjectClass of an entry cannot be mapped	to SQL
	      by  looking  up  its  name in ldap_oc_mappings, an add operation
	      will fail	regardless of the fail_if_no_mapping switch; see  sec-
	      tion  "METAINFORMATION  USED" for	details.  This is experimental
	      and may change in	future releases.

       allow_orphans { NO | yes	}
	      When set to yes orphaned entries (i.e. without the parent	 entry
	      in  the database)	can be added.  This option should be used with
	      care, possibly in	conjunction with  some	special	 rule  on  the
	      RDBMS side that dynamically creates the missing parent.

       baseObject [ <filename> ]
	      Instructs	the database to	create and manage an in-memory baseOb-
	      ject entry instead of looking for	one in the RDBMS.  If the (op-
	      tional)  <filename>  argument  is	 given,	the entry is read from
	      that file	in LDIF(5) format; otherwise, an  entry	 with  object-
	      Class  extensibleObject  is created based	on the contents	of the
	      RDN  of  the  baseObject.	  This	is  particularly  useful  when
	      ldap_entries  information	 is  stored in a view rather than in a
	      table, and union is not supported	for views, so  that  the  view
	      can only specify one rule	to compute the entry structure for one
	      objectClass.    This  topic  is  discussed  further  in  section
	      "METAINFORMATION USED".  This is experimental and	may change  in
	      future releases.

       create_needs_select { NO	| yes }
	      Instructs	 the  database	whether	or not entry creation in table
	      ldap_entries needs a subsequent select to	collect	the  automati-
	      cally  assigned ID, instead of being returned by a stored	proce-
	      dure.

       fetch_attrs <attrlist>
       fetch_all_attrs { NO | yes }
	      The first	statement allows one to	provide	a list	of  attributes
	      that  must  always  be fetched in	addition to those requested by
	      any specific operation, because they are required	for the	proper
	      usage of the backend.  For instance, all attributes used in ACLs
	      should be	listed here.  The second statement is  a  shortcut  to
	      require  all  attributes to be always loaded.  Note that the dy-
	      namically	generated attributes,  e.g.  hasSubordinates,  entryDN
	      and  other implementation	dependent attributes are NOT generated
	      at this point, for consistency with the rest of slapd.  This may
	      change in	the future.

       check_schema { YES | no }
	      Instructs	the database to	check schema adherence of entries  af-
	      ter modifications, and structural	objectClass chain when entries
	      are built.  By default it	is set to yes.

       sqllayer	<name> [...]
	      Loads  the layer <name> onto a stack of helpers that are used to
	      map DNs from LDAP	to SQL representation and vice-versa.	Subse-
	      quent  args are passed to	the layer configuration	routine.  This
	      is highly	experimental and should	be  used  with	extreme	 care.
	      The API of the layers is not frozen yet, so it is	unpublished.

       autocommit { NO | yes }
	      Activates	autocommit; by default,	it is off.

METAINFORMATION	USED
       Almost everything mentioned later is illustrated	in examples located in
       the  servers/slapd/back-sql/rdbms_depend/  directory  in	 the  OpenLDAP
       source tree, and	contains scripts for generating	 sample	 database  for
       Oracle,	MS  SQL	 Server,  mySQL	and more (including PostgreSQL and IBM
       db2).

       The first thing that one	must  arrange  is  what	 set  of  LDAP	object
       classes can present your	RDBMS information.

       The  easiest way	is to create an	objectClass for	each entity you	had in
       ER-diagram when	designing  your	 relational  schema.   Any  relational
       schema,	no  matter how normalized it is, was designed after some model
       of your application's domain (for instance, accounts, services etc.  in
       ISP),  and is used in terms of its entities, not	just tables of normal-
       ized schema.  It	means that for every attribute of every	such  instance
       there is	an effective SQL query that loads its values.

       Also you	might want your	object classes to conform to some of the stan-
       dard schemas like inetOrgPerson etc.

       Nevertheless,  when you think it	out, we	must define a way to translate
       LDAP operation requests to (a series of)	SQL queries.  Let us deal with
       the SEARCH operation.

       Example:	Let's suppose that we store information	about persons  working
       in our organization in two tables:

	 PERSONS	      PHONES
	 ----------	      -------------
	 id integer	      id integer
	 first_name varchar   pers_id integer references persons(id)
	 last_name varchar    phone
	 middle_name varchar
	 ...

       (PHONES	contains telephone numbers associated with persons).  A	person
       can have	several	numbers, then PHONES  contains	several	 records  with
       corresponding  pers_id,	or  no	numbers	(and no	records	in PHONES with
       such pers_id).  An LDAP objectclass to present such  information	 could
       look like this:

	 person
	 -------
	 MUST cn
	 MAY telephoneNumber $ firstName $ lastName
	 ...

       To  fetch all values for	cn attribute given person ID, we construct the
       query:

	 SELECT	CONCAT(persons.first_name,' ',persons.last_name)
	     AS	cn FROM	persons	WHERE persons.id=?

       for telephoneNumber we can use:

	 SELECT	phones.phone AS	telephoneNumber	FROM persons,phones
	     WHERE persons.id=phones.pers_id AND persons.id=?

       If we wanted to service LDAP requests with filters like	(telephoneNum-
       ber=123*), we would construct something like:

	 SELECT	... FROM persons,phones
	     WHERE persons.id=phones.pers_id
		 AND persons.id=?
		 AND phones.phone like '%1%2%3%'

       (note  how  the telephoneNumber match is	expanded in multiple wildcards
       to account for interspersed ininfluential chars like spaces, dashes and
       so; this	occurs by design because telephoneNumber is  defined  after  a
       specially recognized syntax).  So, if we	had information	about what ta-
       bles  contain  values  for each attribute, how to join these tables and
       arrange these values, we	 could	try  to	 automatically	generate  such
       statements, and translate search	filters	to SQL WHERE clauses.

       To  store  such information, we add three more tables to	our schema and
       fill it with data (see samples):

	 ldap_oc_mappings (some	columns	are not	listed for clarity)
	 ---------------
	 id=1
	 name="person"
	 keytbl="persons"
	 keycol="id"

       This table defines a mapping between objectclass	(its name held in  the
       "name"  column),	and a table that holds the primary key for correspond-
       ing entities.  For instance, in our example, the	person	entity,	 which
       we are trying to	present	as "person" objectclass, resides in two	tables
       (persons	 and phones), and is identified	by the persons.id column (that
       we will call the	primary	key for	this entity).  Keytbl and keycol  thus
       contain "persons" (name of the table), and "id" (name of	the column).

	 ldap_attr_mappings (some columns are not listed for clarity)
	 -----------
	 id=1
	 oc_map_id=1
	 name="cn"
	 sel_expr="CONCAT(persons.first_name,' ',persons.last_name)"
	 from_tbls="persons"
	 join_where=NULL
	 ************
	 id=<n>
	 oc_map_id=1
	 name="telephoneNumber"
	 sel_expr="phones.phone"
	 from_tbls="persons,phones"
	 join_where="phones.pers_id=persons.id"

       This  table  defines  mappings  between LDAP attributes and SQL queries
       that load their values.	Note that, unlike LDAP schema, these  are  not
       attribute  types	- the attribute	"cn" for "person" objectclass can have
       its values in different tables than "cn"	for some other objectclass, so
       attribute mappings depend on  objectclass  mappings  (unlike  attribute
       types  in  LDAP schema, which are indifferent to	objectclasses).	 Thus,
       we have oc_map_id column	with link to oc_mappings table.

       Now we cut the SQL query	that loads values for a	given attribute	into 3
       parts.  First goes into sel_expr	column - this is the expression	we had
       between SELECT and FROM keywords, which defines WHAT to load.  Next  is
       table  list  -  text  between  FROM and WHERE keywords.	It may contain
       aliases for convenience (see examples).	The last is part of the	 where
       clause, which (if it exists at all) expresses the condition for joining
       the  table  containing values with the table containing the primary key
       (foreign	key equality and such).	 If values are in the  same  table  as
       the  primary  key,  then	 this column is	left NULL (as for cn attribute
       above).

       Having this information in parts, we are	able  to  not  only  construct
       queries	that  load  attribute values by	id of entry (for this we could
       store SQL query as a whole), but	to construct queries that load id's of
       objects that correspond to a given search filter	(or at least  part  of
       it).  See below for examples.

	 ldap_entries
	 ------------
	 id=1
	 dn=<dn	you choose>
	 oc_map_id=...
	 parent=<parent	record id>
	 keyval=<value of primary key>

       This  table  defines mappings between DNs of entries in your LDAP tree,
       and values of primary keys for corresponding relational data.   It  has
       recursive structure (parent column references id	column of the same ta-
       ble),  which allows you to add any tree structure(s) to your flat rela-
       tional data.  Having id of objectclass mapping, we can determine	 table
       and  column for primary key, and	keyval stores value of it, thus	defin-
       ing the exact tuple corresponding to the	LDAP entry with	this DN.

       Note that such design (see exact	SQL table creation query) implies  one
       important constraint - the key must be an integer.  But all that	I know
       about well-designed schemas makes me think that it's not	very narrow ;)
       If  anyone  needs support for different types for keys -	he may want to
       write a patch, and submit it to OpenLDAP	ITS, then I'll include it.

       Also, several users complained that they	don't really need very	struc-
       tured  trees,  and  they	don't want to update one more table every time
       they add	or delete an instance in the relational	schema.	 Those	people
       can use a view instead of a real	table for ldap_entries,	something like
       this (by	Robin Elfrink):

	 CREATE	VIEW ldap_entries (id, dn, oc_map_id, parent, keyval)
	     AS
		 SELECT	0, UPPER('o=MyCompany,c=NL'),
		     3,	0, 'baseObject'	FROM unixusers WHERE userid='root'
	     UNION
		 SELECT	(1000000000+userid),
		     UPPER(CONCAT(CONCAT('cn=',gecos),',o=MyCompany,c=NL')),
		     1,	0, userid FROM unixusers
	     UNION
		 SELECT	(2000000000+groupnummer),
		     UPPER(CONCAT(CONCAT('cn=',groupname),',o=MyCompany,c=NL')),
		     2,	0, groupnummer FROM groups;

       If  your	 RDBMS	does not support unions	in views, only one objectClass
       can be mapped in	ldap_entries, and the baseObject cannot	be created; in
       this case, see the baseObject directive for a possible workaround.

TYPICAL	SQL BACKEND OPERATION
       Having meta-information loaded, the SQL backend uses  these  tables  to
       determine  a  set  of  primary  keys of candidates (depending on	search
       scope and filter).  It tries to do it for each  objectclass  registered
       in ldap_objclasses.

       Example:	 for our query with filter (telephoneNumber=123*) we would get
       the following query generated (which loads candidate IDs)

	 SELECT	ldap_entries.id,persons.id, 'person' AS	objectClass,
		ldap_entries.dn	AS dn
	   FROM	ldap_entries,persons,phones
	  WHERE	persons.id=ldap_entries.keyval
	    AND	ldap_entries.objclass=?
	    AND	ldap_entries.parent=?
	    AND	phones.pers_id=persons.id
	    AND	(phones.phone LIKE '%1%2%3%')

       (for ONELEVEL search) or	"... AND dn=?" (for BASE search) or  "...  AND
       dn LIKE '%?'" (for SUBTREE)

       Then,  for  each	candidate, we load the requested attributes using per-
       attribute queries like

	 SELECT	phones.phone AS	telephoneNumber
	   FROM	persons,phones
	  WHERE	persons.id=? AND phones.pers_id=persons.id

       Then, we	use test_filter() from the frontend API	to test	the entry  for
       a full LDAP search filter match (since we cannot	effectively make sense
       of SYNTAX of corresponding LDAP schema attribute, we translate the fil-
       ter into	the most relaxed SQL condition to filter candidates), and send
       it to the user.

       ADD, DELETE, MODIFY and MODRDN operations are also performed on per-at-
       tribute	meta-information  (add_proc  etc.).   In  those	fields one can
       specify an SQL statement	or stored procedure call  which	 can  add,  or
       delete  given values of a given attribute, using	the given entry	keyval
       (see examples --	mostly PostgreSQL, ORACLE and MSSQL - since as of this
       writing there are no stored procs in MySQL).

       We just add more	columns	to  ldap_oc_mappings  and  ldap_attr_mappings,
       holding	statements  to	execute	 (like create_proc, add_proc, del_proc
       etc.), and flags	governing the order  of	 parameters  passed  to	 those
       statements.   Please  see  samples  to find out what are	the parameters
       passed, and other information on	this matter - they  are	 self-explana-
       tory for	those familiar with the	concepts expressed above.

COMMON TECHNIQUES
       First  of  all,	let's recall that among	other major differences	to the
       complete	LDAP data model, the above illustrated concept	does  not  di-
       rectly  support	such features as multiple objectclasses	per entry, and
       referrals.  Fortunately,	they are easy to adopt in  this	 scheme.   The
       SQL  backend  requires  that  one  more	table  is added	to the schema:
       ldap_entry_objectclasses(entry_id,oc_name).

       That table contains any number of objectclass names that	 corresponding
       entries	will  possess,	in addition to that mentioned in mapping.  The
       SQL backend automatically adds attribute	mapping	for the	 "objectclass"
       attribute  to  each objectclass mapping that loads values from this ta-
       ble.  So, you may, for instance,	have a mapping for inetOrgPerson,  and
       use it for queries for "person" objectclass...

       Referrals  used	to be implemented in a loose manner by adding an extra
       table that allowed any entry to host a "ref" attribute,	along  with  a
       "referral"  extra  objectClass  in table	ldap_entry_objclasses.	In the
       current implementation, referrals are treated like any  other  user-de-
       fined  schema,  since "referral"	is a structural	objectclass.  The sug-
       gested practice is to define a "referral"  entry	 in  ldap_oc_mappings,
       holding	a naming attribute, e.g. "ou" or "cn", a "ref" attribute, con-
       taining the url;	in case	multiple referrals per	entry  are  needed,  a
       separate	 table	for  urls can be created, where	urls are mapped	to the
       respective entries.  The	use of the naming attribute  usually  requires
       to add an "extensibleObject" value to ldap_entry_objclasses.

CAVEATS
       As  previously stated, this backend should not be considered a replace-
       ment of other data storage backends, but	rather a gateway  to  existing
       RDBMS storages that need	to be published	in LDAP	form.

       The  hasSubordinates  operational  attribute  is	honored	by back-sql in
       search results and in compare operations; it is partially honored  also
       in  filtering.	Owing to design	limitations, a (brain-dead?) filter of
       the form	(!(hasSubordinates=TRUE)) will give no results instead of  re-
       turning	all the	leaf entries, because it actually expands into ... AND
       NOT (1=1).  If you need to find all the leaf entries, please use	 (has-
       Subordinates=FALSE) instead.

       A  directoryString  value  of  the form "__First___Last_" (where	under-
       scores mean spaces, ASCII 0x20  char)  corresponds  to  its  prettified
       counterpart  "First_Last"; this is not currently	honored	by back-sql if
       non-prettified data is written via RDBMS; when non-prettified  data  is
       written	through	 back-sql, the prettified values are actually used in-
       stead.

BUGS
       When the	ldap_entry_objclasses table is empty, filters on  the  object-
       Class attribute erroneously result in no	candidates.  A workaround con-
       sists  in  adding at least one row to that table, no matter if valid or
       not.

PROXY CACHE OVERLAY
       The  proxy  cache  overlay  allows  caching  of	LDAP  search  requests
       (queries) in a local database.  See slapo-pcache(5) for details.

EXAMPLES
       There  are  example SQL modules in the slapd/back-sql/rdbms_depend/ di-
       rectory in the OpenLDAP source tree.

ACCESS CONTROL
       The sql	backend	 honors	 access	 control  semantics  as	 indicated  in
       slapd.access(5)	(including  the	disclose access	privilege when enabled
       at compile time).

FILES
       /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.conf
	      default slapd configuration file

SEE ALSO
       slapd.conf(5), slapd(8).

OpenLDAP 2.6.9			  2024/11/26			  SLAPD-SQL(5)

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