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

NAME
       slapd-config - configuration backend to slapd

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

DESCRIPTION
       The config backend manages all of the configuration information for the
       slapd(8)	 daemon.   This	 configuration information is also used	by the
       SLAPD tools slapacl(8), slapadd(8), slapauth(8),	slapcat(8), slapdn(8),
       slapindex(8), slapmodify(8), and	slaptest(8).

       The config backend is backward compatible with the older	 slapd.conf(5)
       file  but  provides the ability to change the configuration dynamically
       at runtime. If slapd is run with	only a slapd.conf file dynamic changes
       will be allowed but they	will not persist across	a server restart.  Dy-
       namic  changes are only saved when slapd	is running from	a slapd.d con-
       figuration directory.

       Unlike other backends, there can	only be	one  instance  of  the	config
       backend,	and most of its	structure is predefined. The root of the data-
       base is hardcoded to cn=config and this root entry contains global set-
       tings  for  slapd. Multiple child entries underneath the	root entry are
       used to carry various other settings:

	      cn=Module
		     dynamically loaded	modules

	      cn=Schema
		     schema definitions

	      olcBackend=xxx
		     backend-specific settings

	      olcDatabase=xxx
		     database-specific settings

       The cn=Module entries will only appear in  configurations  where	 slapd
       was  built  with	 support  for dynamically loaded modules. There	can be
       multiple	entries, one for each configured module	path. Within each  en-
       try  there  will	 be  values recorded for each module loaded on a given
       path. These entries have	no children.

       The cn=Schema entry contains all	of the hardcoded schema	elements.  The
       children	of this	entry contain all user-defined	schema	elements.   In
       schema  that  were  loaded  from	include	files, the child entry will be
       named after the include file from which the schema was  loaded.	 Typi-
       cally the first child in	this subtree will be cn=core,cn=schema,cn=con-
       fig.

       olcBackend  entries are for storing settings specific to	a single back-
       end type	(and thus global to all	database instances of that type).   At
       present,	 only  back-mdb	 implements  any options of this type, so this
       setting is not needed for any other backends.

       olcDatabase entries store settings specific to a	 single	 database  in-
       stance.	These  entries may have	olcOverlay child entries corresponding
       to any overlays configured on the database. The olcDatabase and	olcOv-
       erlay  entries may also have miscellaneous child	entries	for other set-
       tings as	needed.	There are two special database entries that are	prede-
       fined - one is an entry for the config database itself, and  the	 other
       is  for	the "frontend" database. Settings in the frontend database are
       inherited by the	other databases, unless	they are explicitly overridden
       in a specific database.

       The specific configuration options available are	discussed below	in the
       Global Configuration Options,  General  Backend	Options,  and  General
       Database	Options. Options are set by defining LDAP attributes with spe-
       cific values.  In general the names of the LDAP attributes are the same
       as the corresponding slapd.conf keyword,	with an	"olc" prefix added on.

       The parser for many of these attributes is the same as used for parsing
       the slapd.conf keywords.	As such, slapd.conf keywords that allow	multi-
       ple  items  to  be specified on one line, separated by whitespace, will
       allow multiple items to be specified in one attribute  value.  However,
       when  reading the attribute via LDAP, the items will be returned	as in-
       dividual	attribute values.

       Backend-specific	options	are discussed in the slapd-<backend>(5)	manual
       pages.  Refer to	the "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" for more  details
       on configuring slapd.

GLOBAL CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
       Options	described in this section apply	to the server as a whole.  Ar-
       guments that should be replaced by actual text are  shown  in  brackets
       <>.

       These  options may only be specified in the cn=config entry. This entry
       must have an objectClass	of olcGlobal.

       olcAllows: <features>
	      Specify a	set of features	to allow (default none).  bind_v2  al-
	      lows  acceptance	of  LDAPv2  bind requests.  Note that slapd(8)
	      does not truly implement LDAPv2 (RFC 1777),  now	Historic  (RFC
	      3494).   bind_anon_cred  allows  anonymous bind when credentials
	      are not empty (e.g.  when	DN  is	empty).	  bind_anon_dn	allows
	      unauthenticated  (anonymous)  bind  when	DN  is not empty.  up-
	      date_anon	allows unauthenticated (anonymous)  update  operations
	      to  be  processed	(subject to access controls and	other adminis-
	      trative  limits).	   proxy_authz_anon   allows   unauthenticated
	      (anonymous) proxy	authorization control to be processed (subject
	      to  access controls, authorization and other administrative lim-
	      its).

       olcArgsFile: <filename>
	      The (absolute) name of a file that will hold the slapd  server's
	      command line (program name and options).

       olcAttributeOptions: <option-name>...
	      Define  tagging  attribute options or option tag/range prefixes.
	      Options must not end with	`-', prefixes must end with `-'.   The
	      `lang-'  prefix  is  predefined.	If you use the olcAttributeOp-
	      tions directive, `lang-' will no longer be defined and you  must
	      specify it explicitly if you want	it defined.

	      An  attribute  description with a	tagging	option is a subtype of
	      that attribute description without the option.  Except for that,
	      options defined this way have no	special	 semantics.   Prefixes
	      defined  this  way  work like the	`lang-'	options: They define a
	      prefix for tagging options starting with the prefix.   That  is,
	      if  you  define  the  prefix  `x-foo-',  you  can	use the	option
	      `x-foo-bar'.  Furthermore, in a search or	compare, a  prefix  or
	      range  name  (with  a trailing `-') matches all options starting
	      with that	name, as well as the option with the range  name  sans
	      the trailing `-'.	 That is, `x-foo-bar-' matches `x-foo-bar' and
	      `x-foo-bar-baz'.

	      RFC 4520 reserves	options	beginning with `x-' for	private	exper-
	      iments.	Other  options should be registered with IANA, see RFC
	      4520 section 3.5.	 OpenLDAP also has the `binary'	 option	 built
	      in, but this is a	transfer option, not a tagging option.

       olcAuthIDRewrite: <rewrite-rule>
	      Used  by	the  authentication  framework	to convert simple user
	      names to an LDAP DN used for authorization purposes.   Its  pur-
	      pose  is	analogous  to that of olcAuthzRegexp (see below).  The
	      rewrite-rule is a	set of rules analogous to those	 described  in
	      slapo-rwm(5)  for	 data rewriting	(after stripping the rwm- pre-
	      fix).  olcAuthIDRewrite and olcAuthzRegexp should	not be	inter-
	      mixed.

       olcAuthzPolicy: <policy>
	      Used  to	specify	 which	rules  to use for Proxy	Authorization.
	      Proxy authorization allows  a  client  to	 authenticate  to  the
	      server  using  one  user's  credentials, but specify a different
	      identity to use for authorization	and access  control  purposes.
	      It  essentially allows user A to login as	user B,	using user A's
	      password.	 The none flag disables	proxy authorization.  This  is
	      the  default  setting.   The from	flag will use rules in the au-
	      thzFrom attribute	of the authorization DN.  The to flag will use
	      rules in the authzTo attribute of	the  authentication  DN.   The
	      any  flag, an alias for the deprecated value of both, will allow
	      any of the above,	whatever succeeds first	(checked in  to,  from
	      sequence.	 The all flag requires both authorizations to succeed.

	      The rules	are mechanisms to specify which	identities are allowed
	      to  perform  proxy authorization.	 The authzFrom attribute in an
	      entry specifies which other users	are allowed to proxy login  to
	      this  entry.  The	 authzTo attribute in an entry specifies which
	      other users this user can	authorize as.  Use  of	authzTo	 rules
	      can  be  easily  abused  if users	are allowed to write arbitrary
	      values to	this attribute.	 In general the	authzTo	attribute must
	      be protected with	ACLs such that only privileged users can  mod-
	      ify  it.	 The value of authzFrom	and authzTo describes an iden-
	      tity or a	set of identities; it can take five forms:

		     ldap:///<base>??[<scope>]?<filter>
		     dn[.<dnstyle>]:<pattern>
		     u[.<mech>[<realm>]]:<pattern>
		     group[/objectClass[/attributeType]]:<pattern>
		     <pattern>

		     <dnstyle>:={exact|onelevel|children|subtree|regex}

	      The first	form is	a valid	LDAP URI where the <host>:<port>,  the
	      <attrs>  and  the	 <extensions> portions must be absent, so that
	      the search occurs	locally	on either authzFrom or authzTo.

	      The second form is a DN, with the	optional style	modifiers  ex-
	      act,  onelevel, children,	and subtree for	exact, onelevel, chil-
	      dren and subtree matches,	which cause <pattern> to be normalized
	      according	to the DN normalization	rules, or  the	special	 regex
	      style,  which  causes  the  <pattern>  to	 be treated as a POSIX
	      (''extended'') regular  expression,  as  discussed  in  regex(7)
	      and/or re_format(7).  A pattern of * means any non-anonymous DN.

	      The third	form is	a SASL id, with	the optional fields <mech> and
	      <realm> that allow to specify a SASL mechanism, and eventually a
	      SASL  realm, for those mechanisms	that support one.  The need to
	      allow the	specification of a mechanism  is  still	 debated,  and
	      users are	strongly discouraged to	rely on	this possibility.

	      The  fourth  form	 is a group specification.  It consists	of the
	      keyword group, optionally	followed by the	specification  of  the
	      group  objectClass  and attributeType.  The objectClass defaults
	      to groupOfNames.	The attributeType  defaults  to	 member.   The
	      group with DN <pattern> is searched with base scope, filtered on
	      the  specified objectClass.  The values of the resulting attrib-
	      uteType are searched for the asserted DN.

	      The fifth	form is	provided for backwards compatibility.	If  no
	      identity	type  is  provided, i.e. only <pattern>	is present, an
	      exact DN is assumed; as a	consequence, <pattern> is subjected to
	      DN normalization.

	      Since the	interpretation of authzFrom and	authzTo	can impact se-
	      curity, users are	strongly encouraged to explicitly set the type
	      of identity specification	that is	being used.  A subset of these
	      rules can	be used	as third arg in	the  olcAuthzRegexp  statement
	      (see  below); significantly, the URI, provided it	results	in ex-
	      actly one	entry, and the dn.exact:<dn> forms.

       olcAuthzRegexp: <match> <replace>
	      Used by the authentication  framework  to	 convert  simple  user
	      names,  such  as	provided  by SASL subsystem, or	extracted from
	      certificates in case of cert-based SASL  EXTERNAL,  or  provided
	      within  the RFC 4370 "proxied authorization" control, to an LDAP
	      DN used for authorization	purposes.  Note	that the resulting  DN
	      need  not	 refer	to  an	existing entry to be considered	valid.
	      When an authorization request is received	from the SASL  subsys-
	      tem,  the	 SASL  USERNAME,  REALM, and MECHANISM are taken, when
	      available, and combined into a name of the form

		     UID=<username>[[,CN=<realm>],CN=<mechanism>],CN=auth

	      This name	is  then  compared  against  the  match	 POSIX	(''ex-
	      tended'')	 regular  expression,  and if the match	is successful,
	      the name is replaced with	the  replace  string.	If  there  are
	      wildcard	strings	 in  the match regular expression that are en-
	      closed in	parenthesis, e.g.

		     UID=([^,]*),CN=.*

	      then the portion of the name that	matched	the wildcard  will  be
	      stored  in  the  numbered	 placeholder variable $1. If there are
	      other wildcard strings in	parenthesis, the matching strings will
	      be in $2,	$3, etc. up to $9. The placeholders can	then  be  used
	      in the replace string, e.g.

		     UID=$1,OU=Accounts,DC=example,DC=com

	      The  replaced name can be	either a DN, i.e. a string prefixed by
	      "dn:", or	an LDAP	URI.  If the latter, the server	will  use  the
	      URI to search its	own database(s)	and, if	the search returns ex-
	      actly  one  entry, the name is replaced by the DN	of that	entry.
	      The LDAP URI must	have no	hostport, attrs, or extensions	compo-
	      nents, but the filter is mandatory, e.g.

		     ldap:///OU=Accounts,DC=example,DC=com??one?(UID=$1)

	      The  protocol  portion  of  the URI must be strictly ldap.  Note
	      that this	search is subject to access  controls.	 Specifically,
	      the  authentication identity must	have "auth" access in the sub-
	      ject.

	      Multiple olcAuthzRegexp values can be  specified	to  allow  for
	      multiple	matching  and  replacement patterns. The matching pat-
	      terns are	checked	in the order they  appear  in  the  attribute,
	      stopping at the first successful match.

       olcConcurrency: <integer>
	      Specify  a desired level of concurrency.	Provided to the	under-
	      lying thread system as a hint.  The default is  not  to  provide
	      any  hint.  This	setting	 is  only meaningful on	some platforms
	      where there is not a one	to  one	 correspondence	 between  user
	      threads and kernel threads.

       olcConnMaxPending: <integer>
	      Specify  the maximum number of pending requests for an anonymous
	      session.	If requests are	submitted faster than the  server  can
	      process them, they will be queued	up to this limit. If the limit
	      is exceeded, the session is closed. The default is 100.

       olcConnMaxPendingAuth: <integer>
	      Specify  the maximum number of pending requests for an authenti-
	      cated session.  The default is 1000.

       olcDisallows: <features>
	      Specify a	set of features	to disallow (default none).  bind_anon
	      disables acceptance of anonymous bind requests.  Note that  this
	      setting  does  not prohibit anonymous directory access (See "re-
	      quire authc").  bind_simple disables simple  (bind)  authentica-
	      tion.   tls_2_anon  disables forcing session to anonymous	status
	      (see also	tls_authc) upon	StartTLS operation receipt.  tls_authc
	      disallows	the StartTLS  operation	 if  authenticated  (see  also
	      tls_2_anon).   proxy_authz_non_critical  disables	 acceptance of
	      the proxied authorization	control	(RFC4370) with criticality set
	      to FALSE.	 dontusecopy_non_critical disables acceptance  of  the
	      dontUseCopy control (a work in progress) with criticality	set to
	      FALSE.

       olcGentleHUP: { TRUE | FALSE }
	      A	 SIGHUP	 signal	 will  only cause a 'gentle' shutdown-attempt:
	      Slapd will stop listening	for  new  connections,	but  will  not
	      close  the connections to	the current clients.  Future write op-
	      erations return unwilling-to-perform, though.  Slapd  terminates
	      when  all	 clients  have	closed their connections (if they ever
	      do), or -	as before - if it receives a SIGTERM signal.  This can
	      be useful	if you wish to terminate the server and	 start	a  new
	      slapd  server with another database, without disrupting the cur-
	      rently active clients.  The default is FALSE.  You may  wish  to
	      use olcIdleTimeout along with this option.

       olcIdleTimeout: <integer>
	      Specify the number of seconds to wait before forcibly closing an
	      idle  client  connection.	 A setting of 0	disables this feature.
	      The default is 0.	You may	also want to set  the  olcWriteTimeout
	      option.

       olcIndexHash64: { TRUE |	FALSE }
	      Use  a  64  bit  hash for	indexing. The default is to use	32 bit
	      hashes.  These hashes are	used for equality and substring	index-
	      ing. The 64 bit version may be needed to avoid index  collisions
	      when  the	 number	 of  indexed values exceeds ~64	million. (Note
	      that substring indexing generates	multiple index values per  ac-
	      tual attribute value.)  Indices generated	with 32	bit hashes are
	      incompatible with	the 64 bit version, and	vice versa. Any	exist-
	      ing databases must be fully reloaded when	changing this setting.
	      This directive is	only supported on 64 bit CPUs.

       olcIndexIntLen: <integer>
	      Specify  the  key	 length	 for ordered integer indices. The most
	      significant bytes	of the binary integer will be used  for	 index
	      keys.  The default value is 4, which provides exact indexing for
	      31 bit values.  A	floating point representation is used to index
	      too large	values.

       olcIndexSubstrIfMaxlen: <integer>
	      Specify the maximum length for subinitial	and subfinal  indices.
	      Only  this  many	characters  of	an  attribute  value  will  be
	      processed	by the indexing	functions; any excess  characters  are
	      ignored. The default is 4.

       olcIndexSubstrIfMinlen: <integer>
	      Specify  the minimum length for subinitial and subfinal indices.
	      An attribute value must have at least this  many	characters  in
	      order  to	be processed by	the indexing functions.	The default is
	      2.

       olcIndexSubstrAnyLen: <integer>
	      Specify the length used for subany indices. An  attribute	 value
	      must  have  at  least  this  many	 characters  in	 order	to  be
	      processed. Attribute values longer  than	this  length  will  be
	      processed	in segments of this length. The	default	is 4. The sub-
	      any  index  will	also  be used in subinitial and	subfinal index
	      lookups when the filter string is	longer than  the  olcIndexSub-
	      strIfMaxlen value.

       olcIndexSubstrAnyStep: <integer>
	      Specify  the steps used in subany	index lookups. This value sets
	      the offset  for  the  segments  of  a  filter  string  that  are
	      processed	for a subany index lookup. The default is 2. For exam-
	      ple,  with  the  default	values,	 a  search  using  this	filter
	      "cn=*abcdefgh*" would generate index lookups for "abcd", "cdef",
	      and "efgh".

       Note: Indexing support depends on the particular	backend	in use.	 Also,
       changing	 these	settings  will	generally require deleting any indices
       that depend on these parameters and recreating them with	slapindex(8).

       olcListenerThreads: <integer>
	      Specify the number of threads to use for the connection manager.
	      The default is 1 and this	is typically adequate for up to	16 CPU
	      cores.  The value	should be set to a power of 2.

       olcLocalSSF: <SSF>
	      Specifies	the Security Strength Factor (SSF) to be  given	 local
	      LDAP  sessions,  such  as	those to the ldapi:// listener.	 For a
	      description of SSF values, see olcSaslSecProps's	minssf	option
	      description.  The	default	is 71.

       olcLogFile: <filename>
	      Specify  a  file	for recording slapd debug messages. These mes-
	      sages are	unrelated to messages exposed by the olcLogLevel  con-
	      figuration parameter. This setting only affects the slapd	daemon
	      and  has	no  effect on the command line tools. By default these
	      messages only go to stderr and are not recorded  anywhere	 else.
	      Specifying a logfile copies messages to both stderr and the log-
	      file.

       olcLogFileFormat: debug | syslog-utc | syslog-localtime
	      Specify  the  prefix format for messages written to the logfile.
	      The debug	format is the normal format used for slapd debug  mes-
	      sages, with a timestamp in hexadecimal, followed by a thread ID.
	      The  other  options  are	to  use	syslog(3) style	prefixes, with
	      timestamps either	in UTC or in the local timezone.  The  default
	      is debug format.

       olcLogFileOnly: TRUE | FALSE
	      Specify  that  debug  messages  should only go to	the configured
	      logfile, and not to stderr.

       olcLogFileRotate: <max> <Mbytes>	<hours>
	      Specify automatic	rotation for the  configured  logfile  as  the
	      maximum  number  of  old	logfiles  to retain, a maximum size in
	      megabytes	to allow a logfile to grow before rotation, and	a max-
	      imum age in hours	for a logfile to be used before	rotation.  The
	      maximum  number  must  be	 in the	range 1-99.  Setting Mbytes or
	      hours to zero disables the size or age check, respectively.   At
	      least one	of Mbytes or hours must	be non-zero. By	default	no au-
	      tomatic rotation will be performed.

       olcLogLevel: <integer> [...]
	      Specify  the  level  at which debugging statements and operation
	      statistics should	be syslogged (currently	 logged	 to  the  sys-
	      logd(8)  LOG_LOCAL4  facility).  They must be considered subsys-
	      tems rather than increasingly verbose log	levels.	 Some messages
	      with higher priority are logged  regardless  of  the  configured
	      loglevel	as  soon as any	logging	is configured.	Log levels are
	      additive,	and available levels are:
		     1	    (0x1 trace)	trace function calls
		     2	    (0x2 packets) debug	packet handling
		     4	    (0x4 args) heavy trace debugging (function args)
		     8	    (0x8 conns)	connection management
		     16	    (0x10 BER) print out packets sent and received
		     32	    (0x20 filter) search filter	processing
		     64	    (0x40 config) configuration	file processing
		     128    (0x80 ACL) access control list processing
		     256    (0x100 stats) connections,	LDAP  operations,  re-
			    sults (recommended)
		     512    (0x200 stats2) stats2 log entries sent
		     1024   (0x400 shell) print	communication with shell back-
			    ends
		     2048   (0x800 parse) entry	parsing

		     16384  (0x4000 sync) LDAPSync replication
		     32768  (0x8000  none) only	messages that get logged what-
			    ever log level is set
	      The desired log level can	be input as a single integer that com-
	      bines the	(ORed) desired levels, both in decimal or in hexadeci-
	      mal notation, as a list of integers (that	are ORed  internally),
	      or  as  a	 list of the names that	are shown between parenthesis,
	      such that

		  olcLogLevel: 129
		  olcLogLevel: 0x81
		  olcLogLevel: 128 1
		  olcLogLevel: 0x80 0x1
		  olcLogLevel: acl trace

	      are equivalent.  The keyword any can be used as  a  shortcut  to
	      enable  logging  at  all levels (equivalent to -1).  The keyword
	      none, or the equivalent  integer	representation,	 causes	 those
	      messages	that  are  logged  regardless  of  the	configured ol-
	      cLogLevel	to be logged.  In fact,	if  no	olcLogLevel  (or  a  0
	      level) is	defined, no logging occurs, so at least	the none level
	      is required to have high priority	messages logged.

	      Note  that the packets, BER, and parse levels are	only available
	      as debug output on stderr, and are not sent to syslog.

	      This setting defaults to stats.  This level should usually  also
	      be  included  when  using	 other	loglevels, to help analyze the
	      logs.

       olcMaxFilterDepth: <integer>
	      Specify the maximum depth	of nested filters in search  requests.
	      The default is 1000.

       olcPasswordCryptSaltFormat: <format>
	      Specify  the format of the salt passed to	crypt(3) when generat-
	      ing {CRYPT} passwords (see olcPasswordHash) during processing of
	      LDAP Password Modify Extended Operations (RFC 3062).

	      This string needs	to be in sprintf(3) format and may include one
	      (and only	one) %s	conversion.  This conversion will  be  substi-
	      tuted  with  a  string  of random	characters from	[A-Za-z0-9./].
	      For example, "%.2s" provides a two character salt	and  "$1$%.8s"
	      tells some versions of crypt(3) to use an	MD5 algorithm and pro-
	      vides  8	random characters of salt.  The	default	is "%s", which
	      provides 31 characters of	salt.

       olcPidFile: <filename>
	      The (absolute) name of a file that will hold the slapd  server's
	      process ID (see getpid(2)).

       olcPluginLogFile: <filename>
	      The  (  absolute ) name of a file	that will contain log messages
	      from SLAPI plugins. See slapd.plugin(5) for details.

       olcReferral: <url>
	      Specify the referral to pass back	when slapd(8)  cannot  find  a
	      local  database  to  handle  a  request.	If multiple values are
	      specified, each url is provided.

       olcReverseLookup: TRUE |	FALSE
	      Enable/disable client name unverified reverse lookup (default is
	      FALSE if compiled	with --enable-rlookups).

       olcRootDSE: <file>
	      Specify the name of an LDIF(5) file containing user defined  at-
	      tributes for the root DSE.  These	attributes are returned	in ad-
	      dition to	the attributes normally	produced by slapd.

	      The  root	 DSE is	an entry with information about	the server and
	      its capabilities,	in operational attributes.  It has  the	 empty
	      DN, and can be read with e.g.:
		  ldapsearch -x	-b "" -s base "+"
	      See RFC 4512 section 5.1 for details.

       olcSaslAuxprops:	<plugin> [...]
	      Specify which auxprop plugins to use for authentication lookups.
	      The  default is empty, which just	uses slapd's internal support.
	      Usually no other auxprop plugins are needed.

       olcSaslAuxpropsDontUseCopy: <attr> [...]
	      Specify which attribute(s) should	be subject to  the  don't  use
	      copy control. This is necessary for some SASL mechanisms such as
	      OTP   to	 work  in  a  replicated  environment.	The  attribute
	      "cmusaslsecretOTP" is the	default	value.

       olcSaslAuxpropsDontUseCopyIgnore	TRUE | FALSE
	      Used to disable replication of the attribute(s) defined by  olc-
	      SaslAuxpropsDontUseCopy  and  instead  use a local value for the
	      attribute. This allows the SASL mechanism	to continue to work if
	      the provider is offline. This can	 cause	replication  inconsis-
	      tency. Defaults to FALSE.

       olcSaslHost: <fqdn>
	      Used  to	specify	 the fully qualified domain name used for SASL
	      processing.

       olcSaslRealm: <realm>
	      Specify SASL realm.  Default is empty.

       olcSaslCbinding:	none | tls-unique | tls-endpoint
	      Specify	  the	  channel-binding     type,	 see	  also
	      LDAP_OPT_X_SASL_CBINDING.	 Default is none.

       olcSaslSecProps:	<properties>
	      Used  to	specify	Cyrus SASL security properties.	 The none flag
	      (without any other properties) causes the	 flag  properties  de-
	      fault,  "noanonymous,noplain",  to be cleared.  The noplain flag
	      disables mechanisms susceptible to simple	passive	attacks.   The
	      noactive flag disables mechanisms	susceptible to active attacks.
	      The  nodict flag disables	mechanisms susceptible to passive dic-
	      tionary attacks.	The noanonymous	flag disables mechanisms which
	      support anonymous	login.	The forwardsec	flag  require  forward
	      secrecy between sessions.	 The passcred require mechanisms which
	      pass  client  credentials	 (and  allow mechanisms	which can pass
	      credentials to do	so).  The minssf=<factor>  property  specifies
	      the  minimum  acceptable	security strength factor as an integer
	      approximate to effective key  length  used  for  encryption.   0
	      (zero)  implies  no  protection,	1 implies integrity protection
	      only, 128	allows RC4, Blowfish and other	similar	 ciphers,  256
	      will   require   modern	ciphers.    The	 default  is  0.   The
	      maxssf=<factor> property specifies the maximum acceptable	 secu-
	      rity  strength  factor  as  an integer (see minssf description).
	      The default is INT_MAX.  The maxbufsize=<size>  property	speci-
	      fies  the	maximum	security layer receive buffer size allowed.  0
	      disables security	layers.	 The default is	65536.

       olcServerID: <integer> [<URL>]
	      Specify an integer ID from 0 to 4095 for this server. The	ID may
	      also be specified	as a hexadecimal ID  by	 prefixing  the	 value
	      with  "0x".  Non-zero IDs	are required when using	multi-provider
	      replication and each provider must have a	 unique	 non-zero  ID.
	      Note  that  this	requirement also applies to separate providers
	      contributing to a	glued set of databases.	 If the	 URL  is  pro-
	      vided, this directive may	be specified multiple times, providing
	      a	 complete  list	 of  participating  servers and	their IDs. The
	      fully qualified hostname of each server should be	 used  in  the
	      supplied URLs. The IDs are used in the "replica id" field	of all
	      CSNs  generated  by  the	specified server. The default value is
	      zero, which is only valid	for single provider replication.   Ex-
	      ample:

	    olcServerID: 1 ldap://ldap1.example.com
	    olcServerID: 2 ldap://ldap2.example.com

       olcSockbufMaxIncoming: <integer>
	      Specify  the  maximum  incoming LDAP PDU size for	anonymous ses-
	      sions.  The default is 262143.

       olcSockbufMaxIncomingAuth: <integer>
	      Specify the maximum incoming LDAP	 PDU  size  for	 authenticated
	      sessions.	 The default is	4194303.

       olcTCPBuffer [listener=<URL>] [{read|write}=]<size>
	      Specify  the  size  of  the TCP buffer.  A global	value for both
	      read and write TCP buffers related to any	listener  is  defined,
	      unless  the listener is explicitly specified, or either the read
	      or write qualifiers are used.  See  tcp(7)  for  details.	  Note
	      that some	OS-es implement	automatic TCP buffer tuning.

       olcThreads: <integer>
	      Specify  the  maximum  size of the primary thread	pool.  The de-
	      fault is 16; the minimum value is	2.

       olcThreadQueues:	<integer>
	      Specify the number of work queues	to use for the primary	thread
	      pool.  The default is 1 and this is typically adequate for up to
	      8	 CPU cores.  The value should not exceed the number of CPUs in
	      the system.

       olcToolThreads: <integer>
	      Specify the maximum number of threads to use in tool mode.  This
	      should not be greater than the number of	CPUs  in  the  system.
	      The default is 1.

       olcWriteTimeout:	<integer>
	      Specify  the number of seconds to	wait before forcibly closing a
	      connection with an outstanding write.  This allows recovery from
	      various network hang conditions.	A setting of 0	disables  this
	      feature.	The default is 0.

TLS OPTIONS
       If  slapd is built with support for Transport Layer Security, there are
       more options you	can specify.

       olcTLSCipherSuite: <cipher-suite-spec>
	      Permits configuring what ciphers will be accepted	and the	 pref-
	      erence order.  <cipher-suite-spec> should	be a cipher specifica-
	      tion for the TLS library in use (OpenSSL or GnuTLS).  Example:

		     OpenSSL:
			    olcTLSCipherSuite: HIGH:MEDIUM:+SSLv2

		     GnuTLS:
			    olcTLSCiphersuite: SECURE256:!AES-128-CBC

	      To check what ciphers a given spec selects in OpenSSL, use:

		   openssl ciphers -v <cipher-suite-spec>

	      With  GnuTLS the available specs can be found in the manual page
	      of gnutls-cli(1) (see the	description of the option --priority).

	      In older versions	of GnuTLS, where gnutls-cli does  not  support
	      the  option  --priority,	you  can obtain	the -- more limited --
	      list of ciphers by calling:

		   gnutls-cli -l

       olcTLSCACertificateFile:	<filename>
	      Specifies	the file that contains certificates  for  all  of  the
	      Certificate Authorities that slapd will recognize.  The certifi-
	      cate  for	 the CA	that signed the	server certificate must	be in-
	      cluded among these certificates. If the signing  CA  was	not  a
	      top-level	 (root)	 CA,  certificates  for	the entire sequence of
	      CA's from	the signing CA to the top-level	CA should be  present.
	      Multiple certificates are	simply appended	to the file; the order
	      is not significant.

       olcTLSCACertificatePath:	<path>
	      Specifies	 the  path of directories that contain Certificate Au-
	      thority certificates in separate individual files. Usually  only
	      one  of  this or the olcTLSCACertificateFile is defined. If both
	      are specified, both locations will be used. Multiple directories
	      may be specified,	separated by a semi-colon.

       olcTLSCertificateFile: <filename>
	      Specifies	the file that contains the slapd server	certificate.

	      When using OpenSSL that file may also contain any	number of  in-
	      termediate certificates after the	server certificate.

       olcTLSCertificateKeyFile: <filename>
	      Specifies	 the  file  that contains the slapd server private key
	      that matches the certificate stored in the olcTLSCertificateFile
	      file. If the private key is protected with a password, the pass-
	      word must	be manually typed in when slapd	starts.	  Usually  the
	      private  key is not protected with a password, to	allow slapd to
	      start without manual intervention, so it is of  critical	impor-
	      tance that the file is protected carefully.

       olcTLSDHParamFile: <filename>
	      This  directive  specifies the file that contains	parameters for
	      Diffie-Hellman ephemeral key exchange.  This is required in  or-
	      der  to  use a DSA certificate on	the server, or an RSA certifi-
	      cate missing the "key encipherment" key usage.  Note  that  set-
	      ting  this  option  may also enable Anonymous Diffie-Hellman key
	      exchanges	in certain non-default cipher suites.	Anonymous  key
	      exchanges	 should	generally be avoided since they	provide	no ac-
	      tual client or server authentication and provide	no  protection
	      against  man-in-the-middle attacks.  You should append "!ADH" to
	      your cipher suites to ensure that	these suites are not used.

       olcTLSECName: <name>
	      Specify the name of the  curve(s)	 to  use  for  Elliptic	 curve
	      Diffie-Hellman ephemeral key exchange.  This option is only used
	      for  OpenSSL.   This  option is not used with GnuTLS; the	curves
	      may be chosen in the GnuTLS ciphersuite specification.

       olcTLSProtocolMin: <major>[.<minor>]
	      Specifies	minimum	SSL/TLS	protocol version that will be  negoti-
	      ated.   If the server doesn't support at least that version, the
	      SSL handshake will fail.	To require TLS 1.x or higher, set this
	      option to	3.(x+1), e.g.,

		   olcTLSProtocolMin: 3.2

	      would require TLS	1.1.  Specifying a minimum that	is higher than
	      that supported by	the OpenLDAP implementation will result	in  it
	      requiring	 the  highest level that it does support.  This	direc-
	      tive is ignored with GnuTLS.

       olcTLSRandFile: <filename>
	      Specifies	the file to obtain random bits from when  /dev/[u]ran-
	      dom  is  not  available.	 Generally  set	 to  the  name	of the
	      EGD/PRNGD	socket.	 The environment variable RANDFILE can also be
	      used to specify the filename.  This directive  is	 ignored  with
	      GnuTLS.

       olcTLSVerifyClient: <level>
	      Specifies	 what  checks  to perform on client certificates in an
	      incoming TLS session, if any.  The <level> can be	 specified  as
	      one of the following keywords:

	      never  This is the default.  slapd will not ask the client for a
		     certificate.

	      allow  The  client  certificate is requested.  If	no certificate
		     is	provided, the session proceeds	normally.   If	a  bad
		     certificate  is provided, it will be ignored and the ses-
		     sion proceeds normally.

	      try    The client	certificate is requested.  If  no  certificate
		     is	 provided,  the	 session  proceeds normally.  If a bad
		     certificate is provided, the session is immediately  ter-
		     minated.

	      demand | hard | true
		     These keywords are	all equivalent,	for compatibility rea-
		     sons.   The  client certificate is	requested.  If no cer-
		     tificate is provided, or a	bad certificate	 is  provided,
		     the session is immediately	terminated.

		     Note that a valid client certificate is required in order
		     to	 use the SASL EXTERNAL authentication mechanism	with a
		     TLS session.  As such, a  non-default  olcTLSVerifyClient
		     setting  must be chosen to	enable SASL EXTERNAL authenti-
		     cation.

       olcTLSCRLCheck: <level>
	      Specifies	if the Certificate Revocation List  (CRL)  of  the  CA
	      should  be  used	to  verify if the client certificates have not
	      been revoked. This requires olcTLSCACertificatePath parameter to
	      be set. This parameter is	ignored	with GnuTLS.  <level>  can  be
	      specified	as one of the following	keywords:

	      none   No	CRL checks are performed

	      peer   Check the CRL of the peer certificate

	      all    Check the CRL for a whole certificate chain

       olcTLSCRLFile: <filename>
	      Specifies	 a file	containing a Certificate Revocation List to be
	      used for verifying that certificates have	not been revoked. This
	      parameter	is only	valid when using GnuTLS.

DYNAMIC	MODULE OPTIONS
       If slapd	is compiled with --enable-modules then the module-related  en-
       tries will be available.	These entries are named	cn=module{x},cn=config
       and  must  have the olcModuleList objectClass. One entry	should be cre-
       ated per	olcModulePath.	Normally the config engine generates the "{x}"
       index in	the RDN	automatically, so it can  be  omitted  when  initially
       loading these entries.

       olcModuleLoad: <filename> [<arguments>...]
	      Specify  the  name  of a dynamically loadable module to load and
	      any additional arguments if supported by the module.  The	 file-
	      name  may	be an absolute path name or a simple filename. Non-ab-
	      solute names are searched	for in the  directories	 specified  by
	      the olcModulePath	option.

       olcModulePath: <pathspec>
	      Specify  a  list	of directories to search for loadable modules.
	      Typically	the path is colon-separated but	this  depends  on  the
	      operating	 system.   The default is /usr/local/libexec/openldap,
	      which is where the standard OpenLDAP install will	place its mod-
	      ules.

SCHEMA OPTIONS
       Schema definitions are created as entries  in  the  cn=schema,cn=config
       subtree.	 These	entries	must have the olcSchemaConfig objectClass.  As
       noted above, the	actual cn=schema,cn=config entry is predefined and any
       values specified	for it are ignored.

       olcAttributetypes:    ( <oid>	[NAME <name>]	  [DESC	<description>]
	      [OBSOLETE]    [SUP <oid>]	   [EQUALITY <oid>]   [ORDERING	<oid>]
	      [SUBSTR <oid>]  [SYNTAX <oidlen>]	 [SINGLE-VALUE]	  [COLLECTIVE]
	      [NO-USER-MODIFICATION] [USAGE <attributeUsage>] )
	      Specify an attribute type	using the LDAPv3 syntax	defined	in RFC
	      4512.   The  slapd  parser  extends  the	RFC 4512 definition by
	      allowing string forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the
	      attribute	  OID	and   attribute	  syntax   OID.	   (See	   the
	      olcObjectIdentifier description.)

       olcDitContentRules:    (	<oid>	 [NAME <name>]	  [DESC	<description>]
	      [OBSOLETE]     [AUX <oids>]      [MUST <oids>]	  [MAY <oids>]
	      [NOT <oids>] )
	      Specify  an  DIT Content Rule using the LDAPv3 syntax defined in
	      RFC 4512.	 The slapd parser extends the RFC 4512	definition  by
	      allowing string forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the
	      attribute	   OID	 and   attribute   syntax   OID.    (See   the
	      olcObjectIdentifier description.)

       olcLdapSyntaxes	( <oid>	 [DESC <description>]  [X-SUBST	  <substitute-
	      syntax>] )
	      Specify  an  LDAP	 syntax	using the LDAPv3 syntax	defined	in RFC
	      4512.  The slapd parser  extends	the  RFC  4512	definition  by
	      allowing string forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the
	      syntax  OID.  (See the objectidentifier description.)  The slapd
	      parser also honors the X-SUBST extension	(an  OpenLDAP-specific
	      extension),   which   allows  one	 to  use  the  olcLdapSyntaxes
	      attribute	to define a non-implemented syntax along with  another
	      syntax,  the extension value substitute-syntax, as its temporary
	      replacement.   The  substitute-syntax  must  be  defined.	  This
	      allows  one  to  define  attribute  types	 that make use of non-
	      implemented syntaxes  using  the	correct	 syntax	 OID.	Unless
	      X-SUBST is used, this configuration statement would result in an
	      error,  since  no	 handlers would	be associated to the resulting
	      syntax structure.

       olcObjectClasses: ( <oid> [NAME <name>] [DESC <description>] [OBSOLETE]
	      [SUP <oids>]  [{	ABSTRACT   |   STRUCTURAL   |	AUXILIARY   }]
	      [MUST <oids>] [MAY <oids>] )
	      Specify  an  objectclass	using the LDAPv3 syntax	defined	in RFC
	      4512.  The slapd parser  extends	the  RFC  4512	definition  by
	      allowing string forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the
	      object  class  OID.   (See the olcObjectIdentifier description.)
	      Object classes are "STRUCTURAL" by default.

       olcObjectIdentifier: <name> { <oid> | <name>[:<suffix>] }
	      Define a string name that	equates	to the given OID.  The	string
	      can  be  used  in	 place	of  the	numeric	OID in objectclass and
	      attribute	definitions. The name can also be used with  a	suffix
	      of the form ":xx"	in which case the value	"oid.xx" will be used.

GENERAL	BACKEND	OPTIONS
       Options	in  these  entries only	apply to the configuration of a	single
       type of backend.	All backends may support this class  of	 options,  but
       currently    only   back-mdb   does.    The   entry   must   be	 named
       olcBackend=<databasetype>,cn=config and must have the  olcBackendConfig
       objectClass.   <databasetype>  should  be  one  of  asyncmeta,  config,
       dnssrv, ldap, ldif, mdb,	meta,  monitor,	 null,	passwd,	 perl,	relay,
       sock,  sql, or wt.  At present, only back-mdb implements	any options of
       this type, so this entry	should not be used for any other backends.

DATABASE OPTIONS
       Database	     options	  are	   set	    in	    entries	 named
       olcDatabase={x}<databasetype>,cn=config	   and	   must	   have	   the
       olcDatabaseConfig objectClass. Normally the config engine generates the
       "{x}" index in the  RDN	automatically,	so  it	can  be	 omitted  when
       initially loading these entries.

       The  special frontend database is always	numbered "{-1}"	and the	config
       database	is always numbered "{0}".

GLOBAL DATABASE	OPTIONS
       Options in this section may be set in the special  "frontend"  database
       and  inherited in all the other databases. These	options	may be altered
       by further settings in each specific database. The frontend entry  must
       be    named    olcDatabase=frontend,cn=config   and   must   have   the
       olcFrontendConfig objectClass.

       olcAccess: to <what> [ by <who> <access>	<control> ]+
	      Grant access (specified by <access>) to a	set of entries	and/or
	      attributes  (specified  by  <what>)  by  one  or more requestors
	      (specified by <who>).  If	no access controls  are	 present,  the
	      default  policy  allows anyone and everyone to read anything but
	      restricts	updates	to rootdn.   (e.g.,  "olcAccess:  to  *	 by  *
	      read").	See  slapd.access(5) and the "OpenLDAP Administrator's
	      Guide" for details.

	      Access controls set in the frontend are appended to  any	access
	      controls	set  on	 the  specific	databases.   The  rootdn  of a
	      database can always read and write EVERYTHING in that database.

	      Extra special care must be taken with the	access controls	on the
	      config database. Unlike other databases, the default policy  for
	      the  config  database  is	 to  only  allow access	to the rootdn.
	      Regular users should not have  read  access,  and	 write	access
	      should be	granted	very carefully to privileged administrators.

       olcDefaultSearchBase: <dn>
	      Specify  a default search	base to	use when client	submits	a non-
	      base search request with an empty	base DN.  Base	scoped	search
	      requests	with  an empty base DN are not affected.  This setting
	      is only allowed in the frontend entry.

       olcExtraAttrs: <attr>
	      Lists what attributes need  to  be  added	 to  search  requests.
	      Local  storage backends return the entire	entry to the frontend.
	      The  frontend  takes  care  of  only  returning  the   requested
	      attributes  that	are  allowed  by ACLs.	However, features like
	      access checking and so may need specific attributes that are not
	      automatically returned by	remote storage	backends,  like	 proxy
	      backends	and  so	on.  <attr> is an attribute that is needed for
	      internal purposes	and thus always	needs to  be  collected,  even
	      when  not	 explicitly  requested	by clients.  This attribute is
	      multi-valued.

       olcPasswordHash:	<hash> [<hash>...]
	      This option  configures  one  or	more  hashes  to  be  used  in
	      generation   of	user  passwords	 stored	 in  the  userPassword
	      attribute	during processing of  LDAP  Password  Modify  Extended
	      Operations (RFC 3062).  The <hash> must be one of	{SSHA},	{SHA},
	      {SMD5}, {MD5}, {CRYPT}, and {CLEARTEXT}.	The default is {SSHA}.

	      {SHA}  and  {SSHA}  use  the  SHA-1  algorithm (FIPS 160-1), the
	      latter with a seed.

	      {MD5} and	{SMD5} use the MD5 algorithm (RFC  1321),  the	latter
	      with a seed.

	      {CRYPT} uses the crypt(3).

	      {CLEARTEXT}  indicates  that the new password should be added to
	      userPassword as clear text.

	      Note  that  this	option	does  not  alter   the	 normal	  user
	      applications  handling  of userPassword during LDAP Add, Modify,
	      or other LDAP operations.	 This setting is only allowed  in  the
	      frontend entry.

       olcReadOnly: TRUE | FALSE
	      This  option  puts  the  database	 into  "read-only"  mode.  Any
	      attempts to modify the database will  return  an	"unwilling  to
	      perform"	error.	 By  default,  olcReadOnly is FALSE. Note that
	      when this	option is set TRUE on the frontend, it cannot be reset
	      without restarting the  server,  since  further  writes  to  the
	      config database will be rejected.

       olcRequires: <conditions>
	      Specify  a  set  of  conditions  to require (default none).  The
	      directive	 may  be  specified  globally	and/or	 per-database;
	      databases	   inherit    global   conditions,   so	  per-database
	      specifications are additive.  bind requires bind operation prior
	      to directory operations.	LDAPv3 requires	session	 to  be	 using
	      LDAP   version   3.   authc  requires  authentication  prior  to
	      directory	operations.  SASL requires SASL	 authentication	 prior
	      to  directory operations.	 strong	requires strong	authentication
	      prior  to	 directory  operations.	  The  strong  keyword	allows
	      protected	   "simple"    authentication	 as   well   as	  SASL
	      authentication.  none may	 be  used  to  require	no  conditions
	      (useful to clear out globally set	conditions within a particular
	      database); it must occur first in	the list of conditions.

       olcRestrict: <oplist>
	      Specify  a list of operations that are restricted.  Restrictions
	      on  a  specific  database	  override   any   frontend   setting.
	      Operations   can	 be   any   of	add,  bind,  compare,  delete,
	      extended[=<OID>],	modify,	rename,	search,	or the special pseudo-
	      operations read and write, which respectively summarize read and
	      write operations.	 The use of restrict write  is	equivalent  to
	      olcReadOnly:  TRUE (see above).  The extended keyword allows one
	      to indicate the OID of the specific operation to be restricted.

       olcSchemaDN: <dn>
	      Specify the distinguished	name for the subschema	subentry  that
	      controls	 the   entries	 on   this  server.   The  default  is
	      "cn=Subschema".

       olcSecurity: <factors>
	      Specify a	set of security	strength factors (separated  by	 white
	      space)  to  require  (see	 olcSaslSecprops's minssf option for a
	      description of security strength factors).  The directive	may be
	      specified	globally and/or	per-database.  ssf=<n>	specifies  the
	      overall  security	 strength factor.  transport=<n> specifies the
	      transport	security strength factor.  tls=<n> specifies  the  TLS
	      security	strength factor.  sasl=<n> specifies the SASL security
	      strength factor.	update_ssf=<n> specifies the overall  security
	      strength	  factor    to	  require   for	  directory   updates.
	      update_transport=<n> specifies the transport  security  strength
	      factor   to   require  for  directory  updates.	update_tls=<n>
	      specifies	the  TLS  security  strength  factor  to  require  for
	      directory	 updates.  update_sasl=<n> specifies the SASL security
	      strength	 factor	  to   require	  for	 directory    updates.
	      simple_bind=<n>  specifies the security strength factor required
	      for simple  username/password  authentication.   Note  that  the
	      transport	  factor  is  measure  of  security  provided  by  the
	      underlying transport, e.g. ldapi:// (and eventually IPSEC).   It
	      is not normally used.

       olcSizeLimit: {<integer>|unlimited}

       olcSizeLimit: size[.{soft|hard}]=<integer> [...]
	      Specify  the  maximum  number of entries to return from a	search
	      operation.  The default size limit is  500.   Use	 unlimited  to
	      specify  no  limits.   The  second  format  allows  a fine grain
	      setting of the  size  limits.   If  no  special  qualifiers  are
	      specified, both soft and hard limits are set.  Extra args	can be
	      added  in	 the same value.  Additional qualifiers	are available;
	      see olcLimits for	an explanation of all of the different flags.

       olcSortVals: <attr> [...]
	      Specify a	list of	 multi-valued  attributes  whose  values  will
	      always  be  maintained  in  sorted order.	Using this option will
	      allow  Modify,  Compare,	and  filter   evaluations   on	 these
	      attributes  to be	performed more efficiently. The	resulting sort
	      order depends on the attributes' syntax and matching  rules  and
	      may  not	correspond  to lexical order or	any other recognizable
	      order.  This setting is only allowed in the frontend entry.

       olcTimeLimit: {<integer>|unlimited}

       olcTimeLimit: time[.{soft|hard}]=<integer> [...]
	      Specify the maximum number of seconds (in	real time) slapd  will
	      spend  answering	a  search  request.  The default time limit is
	      3600.  Use unlimited to specify no limits.   The	second	format
	      allows  a	fine grain setting of the time limits.	Extra args can
	      be added in the same value. See olcLimits	for an explanation  of
	      the different flags.

GENERAL	DATABASE OPTIONS
       Options	in  this section only apply to the specific database for which
       they are	defined.  They are supported by	every type of backend. All  of
       the Global Database Options may also be used here.

       olcAddContentAcl: TRUE |	FALSE
	      Controls	whether	 Add operations	will perform ACL checks	on the
	      content of the entry being added.	This check is off by  default.
	      See  the	slapd.access(5)	 manual	 page  for more	details	on ACL
	      requirements for Add operations.

       olcHidden: TRUE | FALSE
	      Controls whether the database will be used to answer queries.  A
	      database	that  is  hidden  will never be	selected to answer any
	      queries, and any suffix  configured  on  the  database  will  be
	      ignored  in  checks  for	conflicts  with	 other	databases.  By
	      default, olcHidden is FALSE.

       olcLastMod: TRUE	| FALSE
	      Controls	whether	 slapd	 will	automatically	maintain   the
	      modifiersName,	  modifyTimestamp,	creatorsName,	   and
	      createTimestamp attributes for entries.  It  also	 controls  the
	      entryCSN	and  entryUUID	attributes,  which  are	 needed	by the
	      syncrepl provider. By default, olcLastMod	is TRUE.

       olcLastBind: TRUE | FALSE
	      Controls	whether	 slapd	 will	automatically	maintain   the
	      pwdLastSuccess attribute for entries. By default,	olcLastBind is
	      FALSE.

       olcLastBindPrecision: <integer>
	      If    olcLastBind	  is   enabled,	  specifies   how   frequently
	      pwdLastSuccess will be updated. More than	integer	 seconds  must
	      have  passed  since  the	last  successful bind. In a replicated
	      environment with frequent	bind activity it may be	useful to  set
	      this to a	large value.

       olcLimits: <selector> <limit> [<limit> [...]]
	      Specify  time and	size limits based on the operation's initiator
	      or base DN.  The argument	<selector> can be any of

		     anonymous | users | [<dnspec>=]<pattern> |
		     group[/oc[/at]]=<pattern>

	      with

		     <dnspec> ::= dn[.<type>][.<style>]

		     <type>  ::= self |	this

		     <style> ::= exact | base |	onelevel | subtree | children
		     | regex | anonymous

	      DN type self is the default and means the	bound user, while this
	      means the	base DN	of the operation.  The term anonymous  matches
	      all   unauthenticated  clients.	The  term  users  matches  all
	      authenticated clients; otherwise an exact	dn pattern is  assumed
	      unless  otherwise	 specified  by	qualifying  the	(optional) key
	      string dn	with exact or base (which are synonyms), to require an
	      exact match; with	onelevel, to  require  exactly	one  level  of
	      depth  match;  with  subtree, to allow any level of depth	match,
	      including	the exact match; with children,	to allow any level  of
	      depth  match,  not  including  the exact match; regex explicitly
	      requires the  (default)  match  based  on	 POSIX	(''extended'')
	      regular  expression pattern.  Finally, anonymous matches unbound
	      operations; the pattern field is ignored.	 The same behavior  is
	      obtained	by  using the anonymous	form of	the <selector> clause.
	      The  term	 group,	 with  the   optional	objectClass   oc   and
	      attributeType  at	 fields,  followed by pattern, sets the	limits
	      for any DN listed	in the values of  the  at  attribute  (default
	      member) of the oc	group objectClass (default groupOfNames) whose
	      DN exactly matches pattern.

	      The currently supported limits are size and time.

	      The  syntax  for	time  limits  is time[.{soft|hard}]=<integer>,
	      where  integer  is  the  number  of  seconds  slapd  will	 spend
	      answering	 a  search  request.   If  no time limit is explicitly
	      requested	by  the	 client,  the  soft  limit  is	used;  if  the
	      requested	 time  limit  exceeds the hard limit, the value	of the
	      limit is used instead.  If the hard limit	is set to the  keyword
	      soft, the	soft limit is used in either case; if it is set	to the
	      keyword unlimited, no hard limit is enforced.  Explicit requests
	      for  time	limits smaller or equal	to the hard limit are honored.
	      If no limit specifier is set, the	value is assigned to the  soft
	      limit,  and  the	hard  limit  is	 set  to soft, to preserve the
	      original behavior.

	      The	 syntax	       for	  size	      limits	    is
	      size[.{soft|hard|unchecked}]=<integer>,  where  integer  is  the
	      maximum number of	entries	slapd will return answering  a	search
	      request.	 If  no	 size  limit  is  explicitly  requested	by the
	      client, the soft limit is	used;  if  the	requested  size	 limit
	      exceeds  the hard	limit, the value of the	limit is used instead.
	      If the hard limit	is set to the keyword soft, the	soft limit  is
	      used  in	either case; if	it is set to the keyword unlimited, no
	      hard limit is  enforced.	 Explicit  requests  for  size	limits
	      smaller  or  equal to the	hard limit are honored.	 The unchecked
	      specifier	sets a limit on	the  number  of	 candidates  a	search
	      request  is allowed to examine.  The rationale behind it is that
	      searches for non-properly	indexed	attributes may result in large
	      sets of candidates,  which  must	be  examined  by  slapd(8)  to
	      determine	 whether  they	match  the  search filter or not.  The
	      unchecked	limit provides a means to drop such operations	before
	      they  are	 even  started.	 If the	selected candidates exceed the
	      unchecked	 limit,	 the  search  will  abort  with	 Unwilling  to
	      perform.	 If  it	 is  set to the	keyword	unlimited, no limit is
	      applied (the default).  If it is set to disabled,	the search  is
	      not  even	performed; this	can be used to disallow	searches for a
	      specific set of users.  If no limit specifier is set, the	 value
	      is  assigned  to	the  soft  limit, and the hard limit is	set to
	      soft, to preserve	the original behavior.

	      In case of no match, the global limits are  used.	  The  default
	      values  are  the	same  as for olcSizeLimit and olcTimeLimit; no
	      limit is set on unchecked.

	      If pagedResults control is requested, the	 hard  size  limit  is
	      used  by default,	because	the request of a specific page size is
	      considered an explicit request for a limitation on the number of
	      entries to be returned.  However,	the size limit applies to  the
	      total  count of entries returned within the search, and not to a
	      single page.  Additional size limits may be enforced; the	syntax
	      is size.pr={<integer>|noEstimate|unlimited},  where  integer  is
	      the  max	page  size  if	no  explicit limit is set; the keyword
	      noEstimate inhibits the server from returning an estimate	of the
	      total number of  entries	that  might  be	 returned  (note:  the
	      current  implementation  does  not  return  any  estimate).  The
	      keyword unlimited	indicates that no  limit  is  applied  to  the
	      pagedResults	control	    page     size.	The	syntax
	      size.prtotal={<integer>|hard|unlimited|disabled} allows  one  to
	      set a limit on the total number of entries that the pagedResults
	      control  will  return.   By  default it is set to	the hard limit
	      which will use the size.hard value.  When	set,  integer  is  the
	      max  number  of  entries that the	whole search with pagedResults
	      control can return.  Use unlimited to allow unlimited number  of
	      entries	to   be	 returned,  e.g.  to  allow  the  use  of  the
	      pagedResults control as a	means to circumvent  size  limitations
	      on  regular searches; the	keyword	disabled disables the control,
	      i.e. no paged results can	be  returned.	Note  that  the	 total
	      number  of  entries  returned  when  the pagedResults control is
	      requested	cannot exceed the hard size limit of regular  searches
	      unless extended by the prtotal switch.

	      The  olcLimits  statement	 is typically used to let an unlimited
	      number of	entries	be returned by	searches  performed  with  the
	      identity	used  by  the consumer for synchronization purposes by
	      means of the RFC 4533 LDAP Content Synchronization protocol (see
	      olcSyncrepl for details).

	      When using subordinate databases,	it is necessary	for any	limits
	      that are to be applied across the	parent and its subordinates to
	      be defined in both the parent and	 its  subordinates.  Otherwise
	      the settings on the subordinate databases	are not	honored.

       olcMaxDerefDepth: <depth>
	      Specifies	 the  maximum  number  of  aliases to dereference when
	      trying to	resolve	an entry, used to avoid	infinite alias	loops.
	      The default is 15.

       olcMultiProvider: TRUE |	FALSE
	      This  option  puts a consumer database into Multi-Provider mode.
	      Update operations	will be	accepted from any user,	not  just  the
	      updatedn.	 The database must already be configured as a syncrepl
	      consumer before this keyword may be set. This mode also requires
	      a	 olcServerID  (see  above) to be configured.  By default, this
	      setting is FALSE.

       olcMonitoring: TRUE | FALSE
	      This option enables database-specific monitoring	in  the	 entry
	      related to the current database in the "cn=Databases,cn=Monitor"
	      subtree  of  the	monitor	 database,  if the monitor database is
	      enabled.	Currently, only	the MDB	 database  provides  database-
	      specific	monitoring.  If	monitoring is supported	by the backend
	      it defaults to TRUE, otherwise FALSE.

       olcPlugin: <plugin_type>	<lib_path> <init_function> [<arguments>]
	      Configure	a SLAPI	plugin.	See the	 slapd.plugin(5)  manpage  for
	      more details.

       olcRootDN: <dn>
	      Specify  the  distinguished  name	 that is not subject to	access
	      control or administrative	limit restrictions for	operations  on
	      this  database.	This  DN  may or may not be associated with an
	      entry.  An empty root DN (the default) specifies no root	access
	      is  to  be  granted.   It	is recommended that the	rootdn only be
	      specified	when needed  (such  as	when  initially	 populating  a
	      database).   If the rootdn is within a namingContext (suffix) of
	      the database, a simple bind password may also be provided	 using
	      the  olcRootPW  directive.  Many	optional  features,  including
	      syncrepl,	require	the rootdn to be  defined  for	the  database.
	      The  olcRootDN  of  the cn=config	database defaults to cn=config
	      itself.

       olcRootPW: <password>
	      Specify a	password (or hash of the  password)  for  the  rootdn.
	      The  password  can  only	be  set	 if  the  rootdn is within the
	      namingContext (suffix) of	the database.  This option accepts all
	      RFC  2307	 userPassword  formats	known  to  the	 server	  (see
	      olcPasswordHash	 description)	 as    well    as   cleartext.
	      slappasswd(8) may	be used	to generate  a	hash  of  a  password.
	      Cleartext	 and  {CRYPT} passwords	are not	recommended.  If empty
	      (the default), authentication of the root	DN is by  other	 means
	      (e.g. SASL).  Use	of SASL	is encouraged.

       olcSubordinate: [TRUE | FALSE | advertise]
	      Specify  that  the  current backend database is a	subordinate of
	      another backend database.	A subordinate  database	may have  only
	      one  suffix.  This option	may be used to glue multiple databases
	      into a single namingContext.   If	 the  suffix  of  the  current
	      database	is  within  the	 namingContext of a superior database,
	      searches against the superior database will be propagated	to the
	      subordinate as well. All of  the	databases  associated  with  a
	      single namingContext should have identical rootdns.  Behavior of
	      other   LDAP  operations	is  unaffected	by  this  setting.  In
	      particular, it is	not possible to	use moddn  to  move  an	 entry
	      from   one   subordinate	 to  another  subordinate  within  the
	      namingContext.

	      If the optional advertise	flag is	supplied, the  naming  context
	      of  this	database is advertised in the root DSE.	The default is
	      to hide this database context, so	that only the superior context
	      is visible.

	      If the slap  tools  slapcat(8),  slapadd(8),  slapmodify(8),  or
	      slapindex(8)  are	 used  on  the	superior  database,  any glued
	      subordinates that	support	these tools are	opened as well.

	      Databases	that are glued together	should usually	be  configured
	      with the same indices (assuming they support indexing), even for
	      attributes  that	only  exist  in	 some  of  these databases. In
	      general, all of the glued	 databases  should  be	configured  as
	      similarly	 as  possible,	since  the  intent  is	to provide the
	      appearance of a single directory.

	      Note  that  the	subordinate   functionality   is   implemented
	      internally  by  the  glue	 overlay and as	such its behavior will
	      interact with other  overlays  in	 use.  By  default,  the  glue
	      overlay  is  automatically configured as the last	overlay	on the
	      superior	database.  Its	position  on  the  database   can   be
	      explicitly  configured  by  setting an overlay glue directive at
	      the desired position. This explicit configuration	 is  necessary
	      e.g.   when  using  the  syncprov	overlay, which needs to	follow
	      glue in order to work over all of	the glued databases. E.g.
		   dn: olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config
		   olcSuffix: dc=example,dc=com
		   ...

		   dn: olcOverlay={0}glue,olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config
		   ...

		   dn: olcOverlay={1}syncprov,olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config
		   ...
       See the Overlays	section	below for more details.

       olcSuffix: <dn suffix>
	      Specify the DN suffix of queries that will  be  passed  to  this
	      backend  database.   Multiple  suffix  lines can be given	and at
	      least one	is required for	each database definition.

	      If the suffix of one database is "inside"	that of	 another,  the
	      database	 with	the  inner  suffix  must  come	first  in  the
	      configuration file.  You may also	want to	 glue  such  databases
	      together with the	olcSubordinate attribute.

       olcSyncUseSubentry: TRUE	| FALSE
	      Store  the  syncrepl  contextCSN	in  a  subentry	instead	of the
	      context entry of	the  database.	The  subentry's	 RDN  will  be
	      "cn=ldapsync".  The  default is FALSE, meaning the contextCSN is
	      stored in	the context entry.

       olcSyncrepl:  rid=<replica   ID>	  provider=ldap[s]://<hostname>[:port]
	      searchbase=<base	   DN>	  [type=refreshOnly|refreshAndPersist]
	      [interval=dd:hh:mm:ss]   [retry=[<retry	 interval>    <#    of
	      retries>]+]  [filter=<filter  str>]  [scope=sub|one|base|subord]
	      [attrs=<attr   list>]    [exattrs=<attr	 list>]	   [attrsonly]
	      [sizelimit=<limit>]  [timelimit=<limit>] [schemachecking=on|off]
	      [network-timeout=<seconds>]		   [timeout=<seconds>]
	      [tcp-user-timeout=<milliseconds>]	      [bindmethod=simple|sasl]
	      [binddn=<dn>]	  [saslmech=<mech>]	  [authcid=<identity>]
	      [authzid=<identity>]    [credentials=<passwd>]   [realm=<realm>]
	      [secprops=<properties>]	[keepalive=<idle>:<probes>:<interval>]
	      [starttls=yes|critical]	 [tls_cert=<file>]    [tls_key=<file>]
	      [tls_cacert=<file>]			[tls_cacertdir=<path>]
	      [tls_reqcert=never|allow|try|demand]
	      [tls_reqsan=never|allow|try|demand] [tls_cipher_suite=<ciphers>]
	      [tls_ecname=<names>]		  [tls_crlcheck=none|peer|all]
	      [tls_protocol_min=<major>[.<minor>]]  [suffixmassage=<real  DN>]
	      [logbase=<base	    DN>]	[logfilter=<filter	 str>]
	      [syncdata=default|accesslog|changelog] [lazycommit]
	      Specify the current database as a	consumer which is kept	up-to-
	      date  with  the  provider	 content  by  establishing the current
	      slapd(8) as a  replication  consumer  site  running  a  syncrepl
	      replication  engine.   The consumer content is kept synchronized
	      to the provider content using the	LDAP  Content  Synchronization
	      protocol.	 Refer	to  the	 "OpenLDAP  Administrator's Guide" for
	      detailed information on setting up a replicated slapd  directory
	      service using the	syncrepl replication engine.

	      rid   identifies	the  current  syncrepl	directive  within  the
	      replication consumer site.  It is	 a  non-negative  integer  not
	      greater than 999 (limited	to three decimal digits).

	      provider	specifies the replication provider site	containing the
	      provider content as an LDAP URI. If <port>  is  not  given,  the
	      standard LDAP port number	(389 or	636) is	used.

	      The  content  of the syncrepl consumer is	defined	using a	search
	      specification as its result set. The consumer  slapd  will  send
	      search  requests	to  the	provider slapd according to the	search
	      specification. The  search  specification	 includes  searchbase,
	      scope,   filter,	attrs,	attrsonly,  sizelimit,	and  timelimit
	      parameters as in the normal search  specification.  The  exattrs
	      option  may  also	 be  used to specify attributes	that should be
	      omitted from incoming entries.  The scope	defaults to  sub,  the
	      filter  defaults	to  (objectclass=*),  and  there is no default
	      searchbase. The attrs list defaults to "*,+" to return all  user
	      and  operational attributes, and attrsonly and exattrs are unset
	      by default.  The sizelimit and timelimit only accept "unlimited"
	      and positive integers, and both  default	to  "unlimited".   The
	      sizelimit	 and  timelimit	parameters define a consumer requested
	      limitation on the	number of entries that can be returned by  the
	      LDAP  Content  Synchronization  operation;  these	should be left
	      unchanged	from  the  default  otherwise  replication  may	 never
	      succeed.	 Note,	however, that any provider-side	limits for the
	      replication identity will	be enforced by the provider regardless
	      of the limits requested  by  the	LDAP  Content  Synchronization
	      operation, much like for any other search	operation.

	      The  LDAP	 Content  Synchronization  protocol  has two operation
	      types.  In the refreshOnly operation, the	 next  synchronization
	      search operation is periodically rescheduled at an interval time
	      (specified  by  interval parameter; 1 day	by default) after each
	      synchronization operation	finishes.   In	the  refreshAndPersist
	      operation,  a  synchronization  search remains persistent	in the
	      provider slapd.  Further updates to the provider	will  generate
	      searchResultEntry	 to the	consumer slapd as the search responses
	      to the persistent	synchronization	search.	If the initial	search
	      fails due	to an error, the next synchronization search operation
	      is  periodically	rescheduled  at	an interval time (specified by
	      interval parameter; 1 day	by default)

	      If an error occurs during	replication, the consumer will attempt
	      to reconnect according to	the retry parameter which is a list of
	      the <retry interval> and <# of  retries>	pairs.	 For  example,
	      retry="60	10 300 3" lets the consumer retry every	60 seconds for
	      the first	10 times and then retry	every 300 seconds for the next
	      3	 times	before	stop retrying. The `+' in <# of	retries> means
	      indefinite number	of retries until  success.   If	 no  retry  is
	      specified, by default syncrepl retries every hour	forever.

	      The  schema  checking  can be enforced at	the LDAP Sync consumer
	      site by turning on the schemachecking parameter. The default  is
	      off.  Schema checking on means that replicated entries must have
	      a	 structural objectClass, must obey to objectClass requirements
	      in  terms	 of  required/allowed  attributes,  and	 that	naming
	      attributes  and  distinguished  values  must  be	present.  As a
	      consequence,  schema  checking  should  be  off	when   partial
	      replication is used.

	      The  network-timeout  parameter  sets how	long the consumer will
	      wait to establish	a network connection to	the provider.  Once  a
	      connection  is established, the timeout parameter	determines how
	      long the consumer	will wait for  the  initial  Bind  request  to
	      complete.	  The	defaults   for	 these	parameters  come  from
	      ldap.conf(5).   The  tcp-user-timeout  parameter,	 if  non-zero,
	      corresponds   to	 the   TCP_USER_TIMEOUT	  set  on  the	target
	      connections, overriding the operating system setting.  Only some
	      systems support the  customization  of  this  parameter,	it  is
	      ignored otherwise	and system-wide	settings are used.

	      A	  bindmethod   of  simple  requires  the  options  binddn  and
	      credentials and should  only  be	used  when  adequate  security
	      services	(e.g.  TLS  or	IPSEC) are in place.  REMEMBER:	simple
	      bind credentials must be in cleartext!   A  bindmethod  of  sasl
	      requires	the  option  saslmech.	Depending on the mechanism, an
	      authentication identity  and/or  credentials  can	 be  specified
	      using  authcid  and  credentials.	  The authzid parameter	may be
	      used to specify an authorization	identity.   Specific  security
	      properties  (as with the sasl-secprops keyword above) for	a SASL
	      bind can be set with the secprops	option.	 A  non	 default  SASL
	      realm  can  be set with the realm	option.	 The identity used for
	      synchronization by the consumer should be	allowed	to receive  an
	      unlimited	 number	 of  entries  in response to a search request.
	      The provider, other than allowing	authentication of the syncrepl
	      identity,	 should	 grant	that   identity	  appropriate	access
	      privileges   to  the  data  that	is  being  replicated  (access
	      directive), and appropriate time and size	limits.	 This  can  be
	      accomplished   by	  either   allowing  unlimited	sizelimit  and
	      timelimit, or by setting an appropriate limits statement in  the
	      consumer's configuration (see sizelimit and limits for details).

	      The  keepalive  parameter	 sets  the values of idle, probes, and
	      interval used to check whether a socket is alive;	 idle  is  the
	      number  of  seconds a connection needs to	remain idle before TCP
	      starts sending keepalive probes; probes is the maximum number of
	      keepalive	probes TCP should send before dropping the connection;
	      interval is interval in  seconds	between	 individual  keepalive
	      probes.	Only  some  systems support the	customization of these
	      values;  the  keepalive  parameter  is  ignored  otherwise,  and
	      system-wide settings are used.

	      The  starttls  parameter	specifies use of the StartTLS extended
	      operation	to establish a	TLS  session  before  Binding  to  the
	      provider.	If the critical	argument is supplied, the session will
	      be aborted if the	StartTLS request fails.	Otherwise the syncrepl
	      session  continues without TLS. The tls_reqcert setting defaults
	      to "demand", the tls_reqsan setting defaults to "allow", and the
	      other TLS	settings default to the	same as	 the  main  slapd  TLS
	      settings.

	      The  suffixmassage parameter allows the consumer to pull entries
	      from a remote directory whose DN suffix differs from  the	 local
	      directory.  The  portion of the remote entries' DNs that matches
	      the searchbase will be replaced with the suffixmassage DN.

	      Rather than replicating whole entries, the  consumer  can	 query
	      logs  of	data modifications. This mode of operation is referred
	      to as delta syncrepl. In addition	to the above  parameters,  the
	      logbase  and  logfilter parameters must be set appropriately for
	      the log that will	be used. The syncdata parameter	must be	set to
	      either "accesslog" if the	log conforms to	the slapo-accesslog(5)
	      log format, or "changelog" if the	log conforms to	 the  obsolete
	      changelog	format.	If the syncdata	parameter is omitted or	set to
	      "default"	then the log parameters	are ignored.

	      The  lazycommit  parameter tells the underlying database that it
	      can store	changes	without	performing a  full  flush  after  each
	      change.  This  may  improve  performance for the consumer, while
	      sacrificing safety or durability.

       olcUpdateDN: <dn>
	      This option is  only  applicable	in  a  replica	database.   It
	      specifies	  the  DN  permitted  to  update  (subject  to	access
	      controls)	the replica.  It is only needed	in  certain  push-mode
	      replication  scenarios.	Generally,  this  DN should not	be the
	      same as the rootdn used at the provider.

       olcUpdateRef: <url>
	      Specify the referral to pass back	 when  slapd(8)	 is  asked  to
	      modify  a	 replicated  local  database.	If multiple values are
	      specified, each url is provided.

DATABASE-SPECIFIC OPTIONS
       Each database  may  allow  specific  configuration  options;  they  are
       documented   separately	 in   the  backends'  manual  pages.  See  the
       slapd.backends(5) manual	page for an overview of	available backends.

OVERLAYS
       An overlay is a piece of	code that intercepts  database	operations  in
       order  to  extend or change them. Overlays are pushed onto a stack over
       the database, and so they will execute in the reverse of	the  order  in
       which they were configured and the database itself will receive control
       last of all.

       Overlays	 must  be  configured as child entries of a specific database.
       The entry's RDN must be of the form olcOverlay={x}<overlaytype> and the
       entry must have the olcOverlayConfig objectClass. Normally  the	config
       engine generates	the "{x}" index	in the RDN automatically, so it	can be
       omitted when initially loading these entries.

       See  the	 slapd.overlays(5)  manual  page  for an overview of available
       overlays.

EXAMPLES
       Here is a short example of a configuration in  LDIF  suitable  for  use
       with slapadd(8) :

	      dn: cn=config
	      objectClass: olcGlobal
	      cn: config
	      olcPidFile: /var/db/run/slapd.pid
	      olcAttributeOptions: x-hidden lang-

	      dn: cn=schema,cn=config
	      objectClass: olcSchemaConfig
	      cn: schema

	      include: file:///usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/core.ldif

	      dn: olcDatabase=frontend,cn=config
	      objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
	      objectClass: olcFrontendConfig
	      olcDatabase: frontend
	      #	Subtypes of "name" (e.g. "cn" and "ou")	with the
	      #	option ";x-hidden" can be searched for/compared,
	      #	but are	not shown.  See	slapd.access(5).
	      olcAccess: to attrs=name;x-hidden	by * =cs
	      #	Protect	passwords.  See	slapd.access(5).
	      olcAccess: to attrs=userPassword	by * auth
	      #	Read access to other attributes	and entries.
	      olcAccess: to * by * read

	      #	set a rootpw for the config database so	we can bind.
	      #	deny access to everyone	else.
	      dn: olcDatabase=config,cn=config
	      objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
	      olcDatabase: config
	      olcRootPW: {SSHA}XKYnrjvGT3wZFQrDD5040US592LxsdLy
	      olcAccess: to * by * none

	      dn: olcDatabase=mdb,cn=config
	      objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
	      objectClass: olcMdbConfig
	      olcDatabase: mdb
	      olcSuffix: "dc=our-domain,dc=com"
	      #	The database directory MUST exist prior	to
	      #	running	slapd AND should only be accessible
	      #	by the slapd/tools. Mode 0700 recommended.
	      olcDbDirectory: /var/db/openldap-data
	      #	Indices	to maintain
	      olcDbIndex:     objectClass  eq
	      olcDbIndex:     cn,sn,mail   pres,eq,approx,sub

	      #	We serve small clients that do not handle referrals,
	      #	so handle remote lookups on their behalf.
	      dn: olcDatabase=ldap,cn=config
	      objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
	      objectClass: olcLdapConfig
	      olcDatabase: ldap
	      olcSuffix: ""
	      olcDbUri:	ldap://ldap.some-server.com/

       Assuming	the above data was saved in a file named "config.ldif" and the
       /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.d	 directory   has  been	created,  this
       command will initialize the configuration:
	      slapadd -F /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.d -n 0 -l config.ldif

       "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide"	contains a longer annotated example of
       a slapd configuration.

       Alternatively, an existing slapd.conf file can be converted to the  new
       format using slapd or any of the	slap tools:
	      slaptest -f /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.conf -F	/usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.d

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

       /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.d
	      default slapd configuration directory

SEE ALSO
       ldap(3),	 ldif(5),  gnutls-cli(1),  slapd.access(5), slapd.backends(5),
       slapd.conf(5),	 slapd.overlays(5),	slapd.plugin(5),     slapd(8),
       slapacl(8),    slapadd(8),    slapauth(8),    slapcat(8),    slapdn(8),
       slapindex(8), slapmodify(8), slappasswd(8), slaptest(8).

       "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide"	(http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       OpenLDAP	Software is developed and maintained by	The  OpenLDAP  Project
       <http://www.openldap.org/>.   OpenLDAP  Software	 is  derived  from the
       University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release.

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

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