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authorSimo Sorce <idra@samba.org>2004-09-30 16:08:09 +0000
committerGerald (Jerry) Carter <jerry@samba.org>2007-10-10 12:59:31 -0500
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+
+
+
+
+
+
+Network Working Group M. Wahl
+Request for Comments: 2252 Critical Angle Inc.
+Category: Standards Track A. Coulbeck
+ Isode Inc.
+ T. Howes
+ Netscape Communications Corp.
+ S. Kille
+ Isode Limited
+ December 1997
+
+
+ Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3):
+ Attribute Syntax Definitions
+
+1. Status of this Memo
+
+ This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
+ Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
+ improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
+ Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
+ and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+IESG Note
+
+ This document describes a directory access protocol that provides
+ both read and update access. Update access requires secure
+ authentication, but this document does not mandate implementation of
+ any satisfactory authentication mechanisms.
+
+ In accordance with RFC 2026, section 4.4.1, this specification is
+ being approved by IESG as a Proposed Standard despite this
+ limitation, for the following reasons:
+
+ a. to encourage implementation and interoperability testing of
+ these protocols (with or without update access) before they
+ are deployed, and
+
+ b. to encourage deployment and use of these protocols in read-only
+ applications. (e.g. applications where LDAPv3 is used as
+ a query language for directories which are updated by some
+ secure mechanism other than LDAP), and
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 1]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ c. to avoid delaying the advancement and deployment of other Internet
+ standards-track protocols which require the ability to query, but
+ not update, LDAPv3 directory servers.
+
+ Readers are hereby warned that until mandatory authentication
+ mechanisms are standardized, clients and servers written according to
+ this specification which make use of update functionality are
+ UNLIKELY TO INTEROPERATE, or MAY INTEROPERATE ONLY IF AUTHENTICATION
+ IS REDUCED TO AN UNACCEPTABLY WEAK LEVEL.
+
+ Implementors are hereby discouraged from deploying LDAPv3 clients or
+ servers which implement the update functionality, until a Proposed
+ Standard for mandatory authentication in LDAPv3 has been approved and
+ published as an RFC.
+
+2. Abstract
+
+ The Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) [1] requires that
+ the contents of AttributeValue fields in protocol elements be octet
+ strings. This document defines a set of syntaxes for LDAPv3, and the
+ rules by which attribute values of these syntaxes are represented as
+ octet strings for transmission in the LDAP protocol. The syntaxes
+ defined in this document are referenced by this and other documents
+ that define attribute types. This document also defines the set of
+ attribute types which LDAP servers should support.
+
+3. Overview
+
+ This document defines the framework for developing schemas for
+ directories accessible via the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol.
+
+ Schema is the collection of attribute type definitions, object class
+ definitions and other information which a server uses to determine
+ how to match a filter or attribute value assertion (in a compare
+ operation) against the attributes of an entry, and whether to permit
+ add and modify operations.
+
+ Section 4 states the general requirements and notations for attribute
+ types, object classes, syntax and matching rule definitions.
+
+ Section 5 lists attributes, section 6 syntaxes and section 7 object
+ classes.
+
+ Additional documents define schemas for representing real-world
+ objects as directory entries.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 2]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+4. General Issues
+
+ This document describes encodings used in an Internet protocol.
+
+ The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
+ "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
+ document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [4].
+
+ Attribute Type and Object Class definitions are written in a string
+ representation of the AttributeTypeDescription and
+ ObjectClassDescription data types defined in X.501(93) [3].
+ Implementors are strongly advised to first read the description of
+ how schema is represented in X.500 before reading the rest of this
+ document.
+
+4.1. Common Encoding Aspects
+
+ For the purposes of defining the encoding rules for attribute
+ syntaxes, the following BNF definitions will be used. They are based
+ on the BNF styles of RFC 822 [13].
+
+ a = "a" / "b" / "c" / "d" / "e" / "f" / "g" / "h" / "i" /
+ "j" / "k" / "l" / "m" / "n" / "o" / "p" / "q" / "r" /
+ "s" / "t" / "u" / "v" / "w" / "x" / "y" / "z" / "A" /
+ "B" / "C" / "D" / "E" / "F" / "G" / "H" / "I" / "J" /
+ "K" / "L" / "M" / "N" / "O" / "P" / "Q" / "R" / "S" /
+ "T" / "U" / "V" / "W" / "X" / "Y" / "Z"
+
+ d = "0" / "1" / "2" / "3" / "4" /
+ "5" / "6" / "7" / "8" / "9"
+
+ hex-digit = d / "a" / "b" / "c" / "d" / "e" / "f" /
+ "A" / "B" / "C" / "D" / "E" / "F"
+
+ k = a / d / "-" / ";"
+
+ p = a / d / """ / "(" / ")" / "+" / "," /
+ "-" / "." / "/" / ":" / "?" / " "
+
+ letterstring = 1*a
+
+ numericstring = 1*d
+
+ anhstring = 1*k
+
+ keystring = a [ anhstring ]
+
+ printablestring = 1*p
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 3]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ space = 1*" "
+
+ whsp = [ space ]
+
+ utf8 = <any sequence of octets formed from the UTF-8 [9]
+ transformation of a character from ISO10646 [10]>
+
+ dstring = 1*utf8
+
+ qdstring = whsp "'" dstring "'" whsp
+
+ qdstringlist = [ qdstring *( qdstring ) ]
+
+ qdstrings = qdstring / ( whsp "(" qdstringlist ")" whsp )
+
+ In the following BNF for the string representation of OBJECT
+ IDENTIFIERs, descr is the syntactic representation of an object
+ descriptor, which consists of letters and digits, starting with a
+ letter. An OBJECT IDENTIFIER in the numericoid format should not
+ have leading zeroes (e.g. "0.9.3" is permitted but "0.09.3" should
+ not be generated).
+
+ When encoding 'oid' elements in a value, the descr encoding option
+ SHOULD be used in preference to the numericoid. An object descriptor
+ is a more readable alias for a number OBJECT IDENTIFIER, and these
+ (where assigned and known by the implementation) SHOULD be used in
+ preference to numeric oids to the greatest extent possible. Examples
+ of object descriptors in LDAP are attribute type, object class and
+ matching rule names.
+
+ oid = descr / numericoid
+
+ descr = keystring
+
+ numericoid = numericstring *( "." numericstring )
+
+ woid = whsp oid whsp
+
+ ; set of oids of either form
+ oids = woid / ( "(" oidlist ")" )
+
+ oidlist = woid *( "$" woid )
+
+ ; object descriptors used as schema element names
+ qdescrs = qdescr / ( whsp "(" qdescrlist ")" whsp )
+
+ qdescrlist = [ qdescr *( qdescr ) ]
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 4]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ qdescr = whsp "'" descr "'" whsp
+
+4.2. Attribute Types
+
+ The attribute types are described by sample values for the subschema
+ "attributeTypes" attribute, which is written in the
+ AttributeTypeDescription syntax. While lines have been folded for
+ readability, the values transferred in protocol would not contain
+ newlines.
+
+ The AttributeTypeDescription is encoded according to the following
+ BNF, and the productions for oid, qdescrs and qdstring are given in
+ section 4.1. Implementors should note that future versions of this
+ document may have expanded this BNF to include additional terms.
+ Terms which begin with the characters "X-" are reserved for private
+ experiments, and MUST be followed by a <qdstrings>.
+
+ AttributeTypeDescription = "(" whsp
+ numericoid whsp ; AttributeType identifier
+ [ "NAME" qdescrs ] ; name used in AttributeType
+ [ "DESC" qdstring ] ; description
+ [ "OBSOLETE" whsp ]
+ [ "SUP" woid ] ; derived from this other
+ ; AttributeType
+ [ "EQUALITY" woid ; Matching Rule name
+ [ "ORDERING" woid ; Matching Rule name
+ [ "SUBSTR" woid ] ; Matching Rule name
+ [ "SYNTAX" whsp noidlen whsp ] ; see section 4.3
+ [ "SINGLE-VALUE" whsp ] ; default multi-valued
+ [ "COLLECTIVE" whsp ] ; default not collective
+ [ "NO-USER-MODIFICATION" whsp ]; default user modifiable
+ [ "USAGE" whsp AttributeUsage ]; default userApplications
+ whsp ")"
+
+ AttributeUsage =
+ "userApplications" /
+ "directoryOperation" /
+ "distributedOperation" / ; DSA-shared
+ "dSAOperation" ; DSA-specific, value depends on server
+
+ Servers are not required to provide the same or any text in the
+ description part of the subschema values they maintain. Servers
+ SHOULD provide at least one of the "SUP" and "SYNTAX" fields for each
+ AttributeTypeDescription.
+
+ Servers MUST implement all the attribute types referenced in sections
+ 5.1, 5.2 and 5.3.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 5]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ Servers MAY recognize additional names and attributes not listed in
+ this document, and if they do so, MUST publish the definitions of the
+ types in the attributeTypes attribute of their subschema entries.
+
+ Schema developers MUST NOT create attribute definitions whose names
+ conflict with attributes defined for use with LDAP in existing
+ standards-track RFCs.
+
+ An AttributeDescription can be used as the value in a NAME part of an
+ AttributeTypeDescription. Note that these are case insensitive.
+
+ Note that the AttributeTypeDescription does not list the matching
+ rules which can can be used with that attribute type in an
+ extensibleMatch search filter. This is done using the
+ matchingRuleUse attribute described in section 4.5.
+
+ This document refines the schema description of X.501 by requiring
+ that the syntax field in an AttributeTypeDescription be a string
+ representation of an OBJECT IDENTIFIER for the LDAP string syntax
+ definition, and an optional indication of the maximum length of a
+ value of this attribute (defined in section 4.3.2).
+
+4.3. Syntaxes
+
+ This section defines general requirements for LDAP attribute value
+ syntax encodings. All documents defining attribute syntax encodings
+ for use with LDAP are expected to conform to these requirements.
+
+ The encoding rules defined for a given attribute syntax must produce
+ octet strings. To the greatest extent possible, encoded octet
+ strings should be usable in their native encoded form for display
+ purposes. In particular, encoding rules for attribute syntaxes
+ defining non-binary values should produce strings that can be
+ displayed with little or no translation by clients implementing LDAP.
+ There are a few cases (e.g. audio) however, when it is not sensible
+ to produce a printable representation, and clients MUST NOT assume
+ that an unrecognized syntax is a string representation.
+
+ In encodings where an arbitrary string, not a Distinguished Name, is
+ used as part of a larger production, and other than as part of a
+ Distinguished Name, a backslash quoting mechanism is used to escape
+ the following separator symbol character (such as "'", "$" or "#") if
+ it should occur in that string. The backslash is followed by a pair
+ of hexadecimal digits representing the next character. A backslash
+ itself in the string which forms part of a larger syntax is always
+ transmitted as '\5C' or '\5c'. An example is given in section 6.27.
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 6]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ Syntaxes are also defined for matching rules whose assertion value
+ syntax is different from the attribute value syntax.
+
+4.3.1 Binary Transfer of Values
+
+ This encoding format is used if the binary encoding is requested by
+ the client for an attribute, or if the attribute syntax name is
+ "1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.5". The contents of the LDAP
+ AttributeValue or AssertionValue field is a BER-encoded instance of
+ the attribute value or a matching rule assertion value ASN.1 data
+ type as defined for use with X.500. (The first byte inside the OCTET
+ STRING wrapper is a tag octet. However, the OCTET STRING is still
+ encoded in primitive form.)
+
+ All servers MUST implement this form for both generating attribute
+ values in search responses, and parsing attribute values in add,
+ compare and modify requests, if the attribute type is recognized and
+ the attribute syntax name is that of Binary. Clients which request
+ that all attributes be returned from entries MUST be prepared to
+ receive values in binary (e.g. userCertificate;binary), and SHOULD
+ NOT simply display binary or unrecognized values to users.
+
+4.3.2. Syntax Object Identifiers
+
+ Syntaxes for use with LDAP are named by OBJECT IDENTIFIERs, which are
+ dotted-decimal strings. These are not intended to be displayed to
+ users.
+
+ noidlen = numericoid [ "{" len "}" ]
+
+ len = numericstring
+
+ The following table lists some of the syntaxes that have been defined
+ for LDAP thus far. The H-R column suggests whether a value in that
+ syntax would likely be a human readable string. Clients and servers
+ need not implement all the syntaxes listed here, and MAY implement
+ other syntaxes.
+
+ Other documents may define additional syntaxes. However, the
+ definition of additional arbitrary syntaxes is strongly deprecated
+ since it will hinder interoperability: today's client and server
+ implementations generally do not have the ability to dynamically
+ recognize new syntaxes. In most cases attributes will be defined
+ with the syntax for directory strings.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 7]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ Value being represented H-R OBJECT IDENTIFIER
+ =================================================================
+ ACI Item N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.1
+ Access Point Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.2
+ Attribute Type Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.3
+ Audio N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.4
+ Binary N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.5
+ Bit String Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.6
+ Boolean Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7
+ Certificate N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.8
+ Certificate List N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.9
+ Certificate Pair N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.10
+ Country String Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.11
+ DN Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12
+ Data Quality Syntax Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.13
+ Delivery Method Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.14
+ Directory String Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15
+ DIT Content Rule Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.16
+ DIT Structure Rule Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.17
+ DL Submit Permission Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.18
+ DSA Quality Syntax Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.19
+ DSE Type Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.20
+ Enhanced Guide Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.21
+ Facsimile Telephone Number Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.22
+ Fax N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.23
+ Generalized Time Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24
+ Guide Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.25
+ IA5 String Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26
+ INTEGER Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ JPEG N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.28
+ LDAP Syntax Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.54
+ LDAP Schema Definition Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.56
+ LDAP Schema Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.57
+ Master And Shadow Access Points Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.29
+ Matching Rule Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.30
+ Matching Rule Use Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.31
+ Mail Preference Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.32
+ MHS OR Address Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.33
+ Modify Rights Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.55
+ Name And Optional UID Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.34
+ Name Form Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.35
+ Numeric String Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.36
+ Object Class Description Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.37
+ Octet String Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40
+ OID Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38
+ Other Mailbox Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.39
+ Postal Address Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.41
+ Protocol Information Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.42
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 8]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ Presentation Address Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.43
+ Printable String Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.44
+ Substring Assertion Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.58
+ Subtree Specification Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.45
+ Supplier Information Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.46
+ Supplier Or Consumer Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.47
+ Supplier And Consumer Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.48
+ Supported Algorithm N 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.49
+ Telephone Number Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.50
+ Teletex Terminal Identifier Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.51
+ Telex Number Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.52
+ UTC Time Y 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.53
+
+ A suggested minimum upper bound on the number of characters in value
+ with a string-based syntax, or the number of bytes in a value for all
+ other syntaxes, may be indicated by appending this bound count inside
+ of curly braces following the syntax name's OBJECT IDENTIFIER in an
+ Attribute Type Description. This bound is not part of the syntax
+ name itself. For instance, "1.3.6.4.1.1466.0{64}" suggests that
+ server implementations should allow a string to be 64 characters
+ long, although they may allow longer strings. Note that a single
+ character of the Directory String syntax may be encoded in more than
+ one byte since UTF-8 is a variable-length encoding.
+
+4.3.3. Syntax Description
+
+ The following BNF may be used to associate a short description with a
+ syntax OBJECT IDENTIFIER. Implementors should note that future
+ versions of this document may expand this definition to include
+ additional terms. Terms whose identifier begins with "X-" are
+ reserved for private experiments, and MUST be followed by a
+ <qdstrings>.
+
+ SyntaxDescription = "(" whsp
+ numericoid whsp
+ [ "DESC" qdstring ]
+ whsp ")"
+
+4.4. Object Classes
+
+ The format for representation of object classes is defined in X.501
+ [3]. In general every entry will contain an abstract class ("top" or
+ "alias"), at least one structural object class, and zero or more
+ auxiliary object classes. Whether an object class is abstract,
+ structural or auxiliary is defined when the object class identifier
+ is assigned. An object class definition should not be changed
+ without having a new identifier assigned to it.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 9]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ Object class descriptions are written according to the following BNF.
+ Implementors should note that future versions of this document may
+ expand this definition to include additional terms. Terms whose
+ identifier begins with "X-" are reserved for private experiments, and
+ MUST be followed by a <qdstrings> encoding.
+
+ ObjectClassDescription = "(" whsp
+ numericoid whsp ; ObjectClass identifier
+ [ "NAME" qdescrs ]
+ [ "DESC" qdstring ]
+ [ "OBSOLETE" whsp ]
+ [ "SUP" oids ] ; Superior ObjectClasses
+ [ ( "ABSTRACT" / "STRUCTURAL" / "AUXILIARY" ) whsp ]
+ ; default structural
+ [ "MUST" oids ] ; AttributeTypes
+ [ "MAY" oids ] ; AttributeTypes
+ whsp ")"
+
+ These are described as sample values for the subschema
+ "objectClasses" attribute for a server which implements the LDAP
+ schema. While lines have been folded for readability, the values
+ transferred in protocol would not contain newlines.
+
+ Servers SHOULD implement all the object classes referenced in section
+ 7, except for extensibleObject, which is optional. Servers MAY
+ implement additional object classes not listed in this document, and
+ if they do so, MUST publish the definitions of the classes in the
+ objectClasses attribute of their subschema entries.
+
+ Schema developers MUST NOT create object class definitions whose
+ names conflict with attributes defined for use with LDAP in existing
+ standards-track RFCs.
+
+4.5. Matching Rules
+
+ Matching rules are used by servers to compare attribute values
+ against assertion values when performing Search and Compare
+ operations. They are also used to identify the value to be added or
+ deleted when modifying entries, and are used when comparing a
+ purported distinguished name with the name of an entry.
+
+ Most of the attributes given in this document will have an equality
+ matching rule defined.
+
+ Matching rule descriptions are written according to the following
+ BNF. Implementors should note that future versions of this document
+ may have expanded this BNF to include additional terms. Terms whose
+ identifier begins with "X-" are reserved for private experiments, and
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 10]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ MUST be followed by a <qdstrings> encoding.
+
+ MatchingRuleDescription = "(" whsp
+ numericoid whsp ; MatchingRule identifier
+ [ "NAME" qdescrs ]
+ [ "DESC" qdstring ]
+ [ "OBSOLETE" whsp ]
+ "SYNTAX" numericoid
+ whsp ")"
+
+ Values of the matchingRuleUse list the attributes which are suitable
+ for use with an extensible matching rule.
+
+ MatchingRuleUseDescription = "(" whsp
+ numericoid whsp ; MatchingRule identifier
+ [ "NAME" qdescrs ]
+ [ "DESC" qdstring ]
+ [ "OBSOLETE" ]
+ "APPLIES" oids ; AttributeType identifiers
+ whsp ")"
+
+ Servers which support matching rules and the extensibleMatch SHOULD
+ implement all the matching rules in section 8.
+
+ Servers MAY implement additional matching rules not listed in this
+ document, and if they do so, MUST publish the definitions of the
+ matching rules in the matchingRules attribute of their subschema
+ entries. If the server supports the extensibleMatch, then the server
+ MUST publish the relationship between the matching rules and
+ attributes in the matchingRuleUse attribute.
+
+ For example, a server which implements a privately-defined matching
+ rule for performing sound-alike matches on Directory String-valued
+ attributes would include the following in the subschema entry
+ (1.2.3.4.5 is an example, the OID of an actual matching rule would be
+ different):
+
+ matchingRule: ( 1.2.3.4.5 NAME 'soundAlikeMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15 )
+
+ If this matching rule could be used with the attributes 2.5.4.41 and
+ 2.5.4.15, the following would also be present:
+
+ matchingRuleUse: ( 1.2.3.4.5 APPLIES (2.5.4.41 $ 2.5.4.15) )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 11]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ A client could then make use of this matching rule by sending a
+ search operation in which the filter is of the extensibleMatch
+ choice, the matchingRule field is "soundAlikeMatch", and the type
+ field is "2.5.4.41" or "2.5.4.15".
+
+5. Attribute Types
+
+ All LDAP server implementations MUST recognize the attribute types
+ defined in this section.
+
+ Servers SHOULD also recognize all the attributes from section 5 of
+ [12].
+
+5.1. Standard Operational Attributes
+
+ Servers MUST maintain values of these attributes in accordance with
+ the definitions in X.501(93).
+
+5.1.1. createTimestamp
+
+ This attribute SHOULD appear in entries which were created using the
+ Add operation.
+
+ ( 2.5.18.1 NAME 'createTimestamp' EQUALITY generalizedTimeMatch
+ ORDERING generalizedTimeOrderingMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24
+ SINGLE-VALUE NO-USER-MODIFICATION USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.1.2. modifyTimestamp
+
+ This attribute SHOULD appear in entries which have been modified
+ using the Modify operation.
+
+ ( 2.5.18.2 NAME 'modifyTimestamp' EQUALITY generalizedTimeMatch
+ ORDERING generalizedTimeOrderingMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24
+ SINGLE-VALUE NO-USER-MODIFICATION USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.1.3. creatorsName
+
+ This attribute SHOULD appear in entries which were created using the
+ Add operation.
+
+ ( 2.5.18.3 NAME 'creatorsName' EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12
+ SINGLE-VALUE NO-USER-MODIFICATION USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 12]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+5.1.4. modifiersName
+
+ This attribute SHOULD appear in entries which have been modified
+ using the Modify operation.
+
+ ( 2.5.18.4 NAME 'modifiersName' EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12
+ SINGLE-VALUE NO-USER-MODIFICATION USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.1.5. subschemaSubentry
+
+ The value of this attribute is the name of a subschema entry (or
+ subentry if the server is based on X.500(93)) in which the server
+ makes available attributes specifying the schema.
+
+ ( 2.5.18.10 NAME 'subschemaSubentry'
+ EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 NO-USER-MODIFICATION
+ SINGLE-VALUE USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.1.6. attributeTypes
+
+ This attribute is typically located in the subschema entry.
+
+ ( 2.5.21.5 NAME 'attributeTypes'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.3 USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.1.7. objectClasses
+
+ This attribute is typically located in the subschema entry.
+
+ ( 2.5.21.6 NAME 'objectClasses'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.37 USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.1.8. matchingRules
+
+ This attribute is typically located in the subschema entry.
+
+ ( 2.5.21.4 NAME 'matchingRules'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.30 USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 13]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+5.1.9. matchingRuleUse
+
+ This attribute is typically located in the subschema entry.
+
+ ( 2.5.21.8 NAME 'matchingRuleUse'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.31 USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.2. LDAP Operational Attributes
+
+ These attributes are only present in the root DSE (see [1] and [3]).
+
+ Servers MUST recognize these attribute names, but it is not required
+ that a server provide values for these attributes, when the attribute
+ corresponds to a feature which the server does not implement.
+
+5.2.1. namingContexts
+
+ The values of this attribute correspond to naming contexts which this
+ server masters or shadows. If the server does not master any
+ information (e.g. it is an LDAP gateway to a public X.500 directory)
+ this attribute will be absent. If the server believes it contains
+ the entire directory, the attribute will have a single value, and
+ that value will be the empty string (indicating the null DN of the
+ root). This attribute will allow a client to choose suitable base
+ objects for searching when it has contacted a server.
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.101.120.5 NAME 'namingContexts'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 USAGE dSAOperation )
+
+5.2.2. altServer
+
+ The values of this attribute are URLs of other servers which may be
+ contacted when this server becomes unavailable. If the server does
+ not know of any other servers which could be used this attribute will
+ be absent. Clients may cache this information in case their preferred
+ LDAP server later becomes unavailable.
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.101.120.6 NAME 'altServer'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26 USAGE dSAOperation )
+
+5.2.3. supportedExtension
+
+ The values of this attribute are OBJECT IDENTIFIERs identifying the
+ supported extended operations which the server supports.
+
+ If the server does not support any extensions this attribute will be
+ absent.
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 14]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.101.120.7 NAME 'supportedExtension'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 USAGE dSAOperation )
+
+5.2.4. supportedControl
+
+ The values of this attribute are the OBJECT IDENTIFIERs identifying
+ controls which the server supports. If the server does not support
+ any controls, this attribute will be absent.
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.101.120.13 NAME 'supportedControl'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 USAGE dSAOperation )
+
+5.2.5. supportedSASLMechanisms
+
+ The values of this attribute are the names of supported SASL
+ mechanisms which the server supports. If the server does not support
+ any mechanisms this attribute will be absent.
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.101.120.14 NAME 'supportedSASLMechanisms'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15 USAGE dSAOperation )
+
+5.2.6. supportedLDAPVersion
+
+ The values of this attribute are the versions of the LDAP protocol
+ which the server implements.
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.101.120.15 NAME 'supportedLDAPVersion'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 USAGE dSAOperation )
+
+5.3. LDAP Subschema Attribute
+
+ This attribute is typically located in the subschema entry.
+
+5.3.1. ldapSyntaxes
+
+ Servers MAY use this attribute to list the syntaxes which are
+ implemented. Each value corresponds to one syntax.
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.101.120.16 NAME 'ldapSyntaxes'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.54 USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.4. X.500 Subschema attributes
+
+ These attributes are located in the subschema entry. All servers
+ SHOULD recognize their name, although typically only X.500 servers
+ will implement their functionality.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 15]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+5.4.1. dITStructureRules
+
+ ( 2.5.21.1 NAME 'dITStructureRules' EQUALITY integerFirstComponentMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.17 USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.4.2. nameForms
+
+ ( 2.5.21.7 NAME 'nameForms'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.35 USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+5.4.3. ditContentRules
+
+ ( 2.5.21.2 NAME 'dITContentRules'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.16 USAGE directoryOperation )
+
+6. Syntaxes
+
+ Servers SHOULD recognize all the syntaxes described in this section.
+
+6.1. Attribute Type Description
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.3 DESC 'Attribute Type Description' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the BNF given at the
+ start of section 4.2. For example,
+
+ ( 2.5.4.0 NAME 'objectClass'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 )
+
+6.2. Binary
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.5 DESC 'Binary' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as described in section 4.3.1.
+
+6.3. Bit String
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.6 DESC 'Bit String' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ bitstring = "'" *binary-digit "'B"
+
+ binary-digit = "0" / "1"
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 16]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ Example:
+
+ '0101111101'B
+
+6.4. Boolean
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7 DESC 'Boolean' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ boolean = "TRUE" / "FALSE"
+
+ Boolean values have an encoding of "TRUE" if they are logically true,
+ and have an encoding of "FALSE" otherwise.
+
+6.5. Certificate
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.8 DESC 'Certificate' )
+
+ Because of the changes from X.509(1988) and X.509(1993) and
+ additional changes to the ASN.1 definition to support certificate
+ extensions, no string representation is defined, and values in this
+ syntax MUST only be transferred using the binary encoding, by
+ requesting or returning the attributes with descriptions
+ "userCertificate;binary" or "caCertificate;binary". The BNF notation
+ in RFC 1778 for "User Certificate" is not recommended to be used.
+
+6.6. Certificate List
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.9 DESC 'Certificate List' )
+
+ Because of the incompatibility of the X.509(1988) and X.509(1993)
+ definitions of revocation lists, values in this syntax MUST only be
+ transferred using a binary encoding, by requesting or returning the
+ attributes with descriptions "certificateRevocationList;binary" or
+ "authorityRevocationList;binary". The BNF notation in RFC 1778 for
+ "Authority Revocation List" is not recommended to be used.
+
+6.7. Certificate Pair
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.10 DESC 'Certificate Pair' )
+
+ Because the Certificate is being carried in binary, values in this
+ syntax MUST only be transferred using a binary encoding, by
+ requesting or returning the attribute description
+ "crossCertificatePair;binary". The BNF notation in RFC 1778 for
+ "Certificate Pair" is not recommended to be used.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 17]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+6.8. Country String
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.11 DESC 'Country String' )
+
+ A value in this syntax is encoded the same as a value of Directory
+ String syntax. Note that this syntax is limited to values of exactly
+ two printable string characters, as listed in ISO 3166 [14].
+
+ CountryString = p p
+
+ Example:
+ US
+
+6.9. DN
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 DESC 'DN' )
+
+ Values in the Distinguished Name syntax are encoded to have the
+ representation defined in [5]. Note that this representation is not
+ reversible to an ASN.1 encoding used in X.500 for Distinguished
+ Names, as the CHOICE of any DirectoryString element in an RDN is no
+ longer known.
+
+ Examples (from [5]):
+ CN=Steve Kille,O=Isode Limited,C=GB
+ OU=Sales+CN=J. Smith,O=Widget Inc.,C=US
+ CN=L. Eagle,O=Sue\, Grabbit and Runn,C=GB
+ CN=Before\0DAfter,O=Test,C=GB
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.0=#04024869,O=Test,C=GB
+ SN=Lu\C4\8Di\C4\87
+
+6.10. Directory String
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15 DESC 'Directory String' )
+
+ A string in this syntax is encoded in the UTF-8 form of ISO 10646 (a
+ superset of Unicode). Servers and clients MUST be prepared to
+ receive encodings of arbitrary Unicode characters, including
+ characters not presently assigned to any character set.
+
+ For characters in the PrintableString form, the value is encoded as
+ the string value itself.
+
+ If it is of the TeletexString form, then the characters are
+ transliterated to their equivalents in UniversalString, and encoded
+ in UTF-8 [9].
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 18]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ If it is of the UniversalString or BMPString forms [10], UTF-8 is
+ used to encode them.
+
+ Note: the form of DirectoryString is not indicated in protocol unless
+ the attribute value is carried in binary. Servers which convert to
+ DAP MUST choose an appropriate form. Servers MUST NOT reject values
+ merely because they contain legal Unicode characters outside of the
+ range of printable ASCII.
+
+ Example:
+
+ This is a string of DirectoryString containing #!%#@
+
+6.11. DIT Content Rule Description
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.16 DESC 'DIT Content Rule Description' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF.
+ Implementors should note that future versions of this document may
+ have expanded this BNF to include additional terms.
+
+
+ DITContentRuleDescription = "("
+ numericoid ; Structural ObjectClass identifier
+ [ "NAME" qdescrs ]
+ [ "DESC" qdstring ]
+ [ "OBSOLETE" ]
+ [ "AUX" oids ] ; Auxiliary ObjectClasses
+ [ "MUST" oids ] ; AttributeType identifiers
+ [ "MAY" oids ] ; AttributeType identifiers
+ [ "NOT" oids ] ; AttributeType identifiers
+ ")"
+
+6.12. Facsimile Telephone Number
+
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.22 DESC 'Facsimile Telephone Number' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ fax-number = printablestring [ "$" faxparameters ]
+
+ faxparameters = faxparm / ( faxparm "$" faxparameters )
+
+ faxparm = "twoDimensional" / "fineResolution" /
+ "unlimitedLength" /
+ "b4Length" / "a3Width" / "b4Width" / "uncompressed"
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 19]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ In the above, the first printablestring is the telephone number,
+ based on E.123 [15], and the faxparm tokens represent fax parameters.
+
+6.13. Fax
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.23 DESC 'Fax' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as if they were octet strings
+ containing Group 3 Fax images as defined in [7].
+
+6.14. Generalized Time
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24 DESC 'Generalized Time' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as printable strings, represented
+ as specified in X.208. Note that the time zone must be specified.
+ It is strongly recommended that GMT time be used. For example,
+
+ 199412161032Z
+
+6.15. IA5 String
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26 DESC 'IA5 String' )
+
+ The encoding of a value in this syntax is the string value itself.
+
+6.16. INTEGER
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 DESC 'INTEGER' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as the decimal representation of
+ their values, with each decimal digit represented by the its
+ character equivalent. So the number 1321 is represented by the
+ character string "1321".
+
+6.17. JPEG
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.28 DESC 'JPEG' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as strings containing JPEG images
+ in the JPEG File Interchange Format (JFIF), as described in [8].
+
+6.18. Matching Rule Description
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.30 DESC 'Matching Rule Description' )
+
+ Values of type matchingRules are encoded as strings according to the
+ BNF given in section 4.5.
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 20]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+6.19. Matching Rule Use Description
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.31 DESC 'Matching Rule Use Description'
+ )
+
+ Values of type matchingRuleUse are encoded as strings according to
+ the BNF given in section 4.5.
+
+6.20. MHS OR Address
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.33 DESC 'MHS OR Address' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as strings, according to the format
+ defined in [11].
+
+6.21. Name And Optional UID
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.34 DESC 'Name And Optional UID' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ NameAndOptionalUID = DistinguishedName [ "#" bitstring ]
+
+ Although the '#' character may occur in a string representation of a
+ distinguished name, no additional special quoting is done. This
+ syntax has been added subsequent to RFC 1778.
+
+ Example:
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.0=#04024869,O=Test,C=GB#'0101'B
+
+6.22. Name Form Description
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.35 DESC 'Name Form Description' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF.
+ Implementors should note that future versions of this document may
+ have expanded this BNF to include additional terms.
+
+ NameFormDescription = "(" whsp
+ numericoid whsp ; NameForm identifier
+ [ "NAME" qdescrs ]
+ [ "DESC" qdstring ]
+ [ "OBSOLETE" whsp ]
+ "OC" woid ; Structural ObjectClass
+ "MUST" oids ; AttributeTypes
+ [ "MAY" oids ] ; AttributeTypes
+ whsp ")"
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 21]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+6.23. Numeric String
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.36 DESC 'Numeric String' )
+
+ The encoding of a string in this syntax is the string value itself.
+ Example:
+
+ 1997
+
+6.24. Object Class Description
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.37 DESC 'Object Class Description' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the BNF in section
+ 4.4.
+
+6.25. OID
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 DESC 'OID' )
+
+ Values in the Object Identifier syntax are encoded according to
+ the BNF in section 4.1 for "oid".
+
+ Example:
+
+ 1.2.3.4
+ cn
+
+6.26. Other Mailbox
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.39 DESC 'Other Mailbox' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ otherMailbox = mailbox-type "$" mailbox
+
+ mailbox-type = printablestring
+
+ mailbox = <an encoded IA5 String>
+
+ In the above, mailbox-type represents the type of mail system in
+ which the mailbox resides, for example "MCIMail"; and mailbox is the
+ actual mailbox in the mail system defined by mailbox-type.
+
+6.27. Postal Address
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.41 DESC 'Postal Address' )
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 22]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ postal-address = dstring *( "$" dstring )
+
+ In the above, each dstring component of a postal address value is
+ encoded as a value of type Directory String syntax. Backslashes and
+ dollar characters, if they occur in the component, are quoted as
+ described in section 4.3. Many servers limit the postal address to
+ six lines of up to thirty characters.
+
+ Example:
+
+ 1234 Main St.$Anytown, CA 12345$USA
+ \241,000,000 Sweepstakes$PO Box 1000000$Anytown, CA 12345$USA
+
+6.28. Presentation Address
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.43 DESC 'Presentation Address' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded with the representation described
+ in RFC 1278 [6].
+
+6.29. Printable String
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.44 DESC 'Printable String' )
+
+ The encoding of a value in this syntax is the string value itself.
+ PrintableString is limited to the characters in production p of
+ section 4.1.
+
+ Example:
+
+ This is a PrintableString
+
+6.30. Telephone Number
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.50 DESC 'Telephone Number' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as if they were Printable String
+ types. Telephone numbers are recommended in X.520 to be in
+ international form, as described in E.123 [15].
+
+ Example:
+
+ +1 512 305 0280
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 23]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+6.31. UTC Time
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.53 DESC 'UTC Time' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as if they were printable strings
+ with the strings containing a UTCTime value. This is historical; new
+ attribute definitions SHOULD use GeneralizedTime instead.
+
+6.32. LDAP Syntax Description
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.54 DESC 'LDAP Syntax Description' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the BNF in section
+ 4.3.3.
+
+6.33. DIT Structure Rule Description
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.17 DESC 'DIT Structure Rule Description'
+ )
+
+ Values with this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ DITStructureRuleDescription = "(" whsp
+ ruleidentifier whsp ; DITStructureRule identifier
+ [ "NAME" qdescrs ]
+ [ "DESC" qdstring ]
+ [ "OBSOLETE" whsp ]
+ "FORM" woid whsp ; NameForm
+ [ "SUP" ruleidentifiers whsp ] ; superior DITStructureRules
+ ")"
+
+ ruleidentifier = integer
+
+ ruleidentifiers = ruleidentifier |
+ "(" whsp ruleidentifierlist whsp ")"
+
+ ruleidentifierlist = [ ruleidentifier *( ruleidentifier ) ]
+
+7. Object Classes
+
+ Servers SHOULD recognize all the names of standard classes from
+ section 7 of [12].
+
+7.1. Extensible Object Class
+
+ The extensibleObject object class, if present in an entry, permits
+ that entry to optionally hold any attribute. The MAY attribute list
+ of this class is implicitly the set of all attributes.
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 24]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.101.120.111 NAME 'extensibleObject'
+ SUP top AUXILIARY )
+
+ The mandatory attributes of the other object classes of this entry
+ are still required to be present.
+
+ Note that not all servers will implement this object class, and those
+ which do not will reject requests to add entries which contain this
+ object class, or modify an entry to add this object class.
+
+7.2. subschema
+
+ This object class is used in the subschema entry.
+
+ ( 2.5.20.1 NAME 'subschema' AUXILIARY
+ MAY ( dITStructureRules $ nameForms $ ditContentRules $
+ objectClasses $ attributeTypes $ matchingRules $
+ matchingRuleUse ) )
+
+ The ldapSyntaxes operational attribute may also be present in
+ subschema entries.
+
+8. Matching Rules
+
+ Servers which implement the extensibleMatch filter SHOULD allow all
+ the matching rules listed in this section to be used in the
+ extensibleMatch. In general these servers SHOULD allow matching
+ rules to be used with all attribute types known to the server, when
+ the assertion syntax of the matching rule is the same as the value
+ syntax of the attribute.
+
+ Servers MAY implement additional matching rules.
+
+8.1. Matching Rules used in Equality Filters
+
+ Servers SHOULD be capable of performing the following matching rules.
+
+ For all these rules, the assertion syntax is the same as the value
+ syntax.
+
+ ( 2.5.13.0 NAME 'objectIdentifierMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 )
+
+ If the client supplies a filter using an objectIdentifierMatch whose
+ matchValue oid is in the "descr" form, and the oid is not recognized
+ by the server, then the filter is Undefined.
+
+ ( 2.5.13.1 NAME 'distinguishedNameMatch'
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 25]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.2 NAME 'caseIgnoreMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.8 NAME 'numericStringMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.36 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.11 NAME 'caseIgnoreListMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.41 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.14 NAME 'integerMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.16 NAME 'bitStringMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.6 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.20 NAME 'telephoneNumberMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.50 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.22 NAME 'presentationAddressMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.43 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.23 NAME 'uniqueMemberMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.34 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.24 NAME 'protocolInformationMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.42 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.27 NAME 'generalizedTimeMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24 )
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.109.114.1 NAME 'caseExactIA5Match'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26 )
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.109.114.2 NAME 'caseIgnoreIA5Match'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26 )
+
+ When performing the caseIgnoreMatch, caseIgnoreListMatch,
+ telephoneNumberMatch, caseExactIA5Match and caseIgnoreIA5Match,
+ multiple adjoining whitespace characters are treated the same as an
+ individual space, and leading and trailing whitespace is ignored.
+
+ Clients MUST NOT assume that servers are capable of transliteration
+ of Unicode values.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 26]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+8.2. Matching Rules used in Inequality Filters
+
+ Servers SHOULD be capable of performing the following matching rules,
+ which are used in greaterOrEqual and lessOrEqual filters.
+
+ ( 2.5.13.28 NAME 'generalizedTimeOrderingMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.3 NAME 'caseIgnoreOrderingMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15 )
+
+ The sort ordering for a caseIgnoreOrderingMatch is implementation-
+ dependent.
+
+8.3. Syntax and Matching Rules used in Substring Filters
+
+ The Substring Assertion syntax is used only as the syntax of
+ assertion values in the extensible match. It is not used as the
+ syntax of attributes, or in the substring filter.
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.58 DESC 'Substring Assertion' )
+
+ The Substring Assertion is encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ substring = [initial] any [final]
+ initial = value
+ any = "*" *(value "*")
+ final = value
+
+ The <value> production is UTF-8 encoded string. Should the backslash
+ or asterix characters be present in a production of <value>, they are
+ quoted as described in section 4.3.
+
+ Servers SHOULD be capable of performing the following matching rules,
+ which are used in substring filters.
+
+ ( 2.5.13.4 NAME 'caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.58 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.21 NAME 'telephoneNumberSubstringsMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.58 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.10 NAME 'numericStringSubstringsMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.58 )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 27]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+8.4. Matching Rules for Subschema Attributes
+
+ Servers which allow subschema entries to be modified by clients MUST
+ support the following matching rules, as they are the equality
+ matching rules for several of the subschema attributes.
+
+ ( 2.5.13.29 NAME 'integerFirstComponentMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27 )
+
+ ( 2.5.13.30 NAME 'objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 )
+
+ Implementors should note that the assertion syntax of these matching
+ rules, an INTEGER or OID, is different from the value syntax of
+ attributes for which this is the equality matching rule.
+
+ If the client supplies an extensible filter using an
+ objectIdentifierFirstComponentMatch whose matchValue is in the
+ "descr" form, and the OID is not recognized by the server, then the
+ filter is Undefined.
+
+9. Security Considerations
+
+9.1. Disclosure
+
+ Attributes of directory entries are used to provide descriptive
+ information about the real-world objects they represent, which can be
+ people, organizations or devices. Most countries have privacy laws
+ regarding the publication of information about people.
+
+9.2. Use of Attribute Values in Security Applications
+
+ The transformations of an AttributeValue value from its X.501 form to
+ an LDAP string representation are not always reversible back to the
+ same BER or DER form. An example of a situation which requires the
+ DER form of a distinguished name is the verification of an X.509
+ certificate.
+
+ For example, a distinguished name consisting of one RDN with one AVA,
+ in which the type is commonName and the value is of the TeletexString
+ choice with the letters 'Sam' would be represented in LDAP as the
+ string CN=Sam. Another distinguished name in which the value is
+ still 'Sam' but of the PrintableString choice would have the same
+ representation CN=Sam.
+
+ Applications which require the reconstruction of the DER form of the
+ value SHOULD NOT use the string representation of attribute syntaxes
+ when converting a value to LDAP format. Instead it SHOULD use the
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 28]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+ Binary syntax.
+
+10. Acknowledgements
+
+ This document is based substantially on RFC 1778, written by Tim
+ Howes, Steve Kille, Wengyik Yeong and Colin Robbins.
+
+ Many of the attribute syntax encodings defined in this and related
+ documents are adapted from those used in the QUIPU and the IC R3
+ X.500 implementations. The contributions of the authors of both these
+ implementations in the specification of syntaxes are gratefully
+ acknowledged.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 29]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+11. Authors' Addresses
+
+ Mark Wahl
+ Critical Angle Inc.
+ 4815 West Braker Lane #502-385
+ Austin, TX 78759
+ USA
+
+ Phone: +1 512 372-3160
+ EMail: M.Wahl@critical-angle.com
+
+ Andy Coulbeck
+ Isode Inc.
+ 9390 Research Blvd Suite 305
+ Austin, TX 78759
+ USA
+
+ Phone: +1 512 231-8993
+ EMail: A.Coulbeck@isode.com
+
+ Tim Howes
+ Netscape Communications Corp.
+ 501 E. Middlefield Rd, MS MV068
+ Mountain View, CA 94043
+ USA
+
+ Phone: +1 650 937-3419
+ EMail: howes@netscape.com
+
+ Steve Kille
+ Isode Limited
+ The Dome, The Square
+ Richmond
+ TW9 1DT
+ UK
+
+ Phone: +44-181-332-9091
+ EMail: S.Kille@isode.com
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 30]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+12. Bibliography
+
+ [1] Wahl, M., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "Lightweight Directory Access
+ Protocol (v3)", RFC 2251, December 1997.
+
+ [2] The Directory: Selected Attribute Types. ITU-T Recommendation
+ X.520, 1993.
+
+ [3] The Directory: Models. ITU-T Recommendation X.501, 1993.
+
+ [4] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
+ Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997.
+
+ [5] Wahl, M., Kille, S., and T. Howes, "Lightweight Directory Access
+ Protocol (v3): UTF-8 String Representation of
+ Distinguished Names", RFC 2253, December 1997.
+
+ [6] Kille, S., "A String Representation for Presentation Addresses",
+ RFC 1278, November 1991.
+
+ [7] Terminal Equipment and Protocols for Telematic Services -
+ Standardization of Group 3 facsimile apparatus for document
+ transmission. CCITT, Recommendation T.4.
+
+ [8] JPEG File Interchange Format (Version 1.02). Eric Hamilton,
+ C-Cube Microsystems, Milpitas, CA, September 1, 1992.
+
+ [9] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of Unicode and ISO
+ 10646", RFC 2044, October 1996.
+
+ [10] Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) -
+ Architecture and Basic Multilingual Plane, ISO/IEC 10646-1 :
+ 1993 (With amendments).
+
+ [11] Hardcastle-Kille, S., "Mapping between X.400(1988) / ISO 10021
+ and RFC 822", RFC 1327, May 1992.
+
+ [12] Wahl, M., "A Summary of the X.500(96) User Schema for use
+ with LDAPv3", RFC 2256, December 1997.
+
+ [13] Crocker, D., "Standard of the Format of ARPA-Internet Text
+ Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, August 1982.
+
+ [14] ISO 3166, "Codes for the representation of names of countries".
+
+ [15] ITU-T Rec. E.123, Notation for national and international
+ telephone numbers, 1988.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 31]
+
+RFC 2252 LADPv3 Attributes December 1997
+
+
+13. Full Copyright Statement
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+ This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
+ others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
+ or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
+ and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
+ kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
+ included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
+ document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
+ the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
+ Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
+ developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
+ copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
+ followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
+ English.
+
+ The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
+ revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
+
+ This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
+ "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
+ TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
+ BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
+ HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
+ MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Standards Track [Page 32]
+
diff --git a/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2253.txt b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2253.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a7439eed77
--- /dev/null
+++ b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2253.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,563 @@
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Network Working Group M. Wahl
+Request for Comments: 2253 Critical Angle Inc.
+Obsoletes: 1779 S. Kille
+Category: Standards Track Isode Ltd.
+ T. Howes
+ Netscape Communications Corp.
+ December 1997
+
+
+ Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3):
+ UTF-8 String Representation of Distinguished Names
+
+Status of this Memo
+
+ This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
+ Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
+ improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
+ Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
+ and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+IESG Note
+
+ This document describes a directory access protocol that provides
+ both read and update access. Update access requires secure
+ authentication, but this document does not mandate implementation of
+ any satisfactory authentication mechanisms.
+
+ In accordance with RFC 2026, section 4.4.1, this specification is
+ being approved by IESG as a Proposed Standard despite this
+ limitation, for the following reasons:
+
+ a. to encourage implementation and interoperability testing of
+ these protocols (with or without update access) before they
+ are deployed, and
+
+ b. to encourage deployment and use of these protocols in read-only
+ applications. (e.g. applications where LDAPv3 is used as
+ a query language for directories which are updated by some
+ secure mechanism other than LDAP), and
+
+ c. to avoid delaying the advancement and deployment of other Internet
+ standards-track protocols which require the ability to query, but
+ not update, LDAPv3 directory servers.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 1]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+ Readers are hereby warned that until mandatory authentication
+ mechanisms are standardized, clients and servers written according to
+ this specification which make use of update functionality are
+ UNLIKELY TO INTEROPERATE, or MAY INTEROPERATE ONLY IF AUTHENTICATION
+ IS REDUCED TO AN UNACCEPTABLY WEAK LEVEL.
+
+ Implementors are hereby discouraged from deploying LDAPv3 clients or
+ servers which implement the update functionality, until a Proposed
+ Standard for mandatory authentication in LDAPv3 has been approved and
+ published as an RFC.
+
+Abstract
+
+ The X.500 Directory uses distinguished names as the primary keys to
+ entries in the directory. Distinguished Names are encoded in ASN.1
+ in the X.500 Directory protocols. In the Lightweight Directory
+ Access Protocol, a string representation of distinguished names is
+ transferred. This specification defines the string format for
+ representing names, which is designed to give a clean representation
+ of commonly used distinguished names, while being able to represent
+ any distinguished name.
+
+ The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
+ "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
+ document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [6].
+
+1. Background
+
+ This specification assumes familiarity with X.500 [1], and the
+ concept of Distinguished Name. It is important to have a common
+ format to be able to unambiguously represent a distinguished name.
+ The primary goal of this specification is ease of encoding and
+ decoding. A secondary goal is to have names that are human readable.
+ It is not expected that LDAP clients with a human user interface
+ would display these strings directly to the user, but would most
+ likely be performing translations (such as expressing attribute type
+ names in one of the local national languages).
+
+2. Converting DistinguishedName from ASN.1 to a String
+
+ In X.501 [2] the ASN.1 structure of distinguished name is defined as:
+
+ DistinguishedName ::= RDNSequence
+
+ RDNSequence ::= SEQUENCE OF RelativeDistinguishedName
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 2]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+ RelativeDistinguishedName ::= SET SIZE (1..MAX) OF
+ AttributeTypeAndValue
+
+ AttributeTypeAndValue ::= SEQUENCE {
+ type AttributeType,
+ value AttributeValue }
+
+ The following sections define the algorithm for converting from an
+ ASN.1 structured representation to a UTF-8 string representation.
+
+2.1. Converting the RDNSequence
+
+ If the RDNSequence is an empty sequence, the result is the empty or
+ zero length string.
+
+ Otherwise, the output consists of the string encodings of each
+ RelativeDistinguishedName in the RDNSequence (according to 2.2),
+ starting with the last element of the sequence and moving backwards
+ toward the first.
+
+ The encodings of adjoining RelativeDistinguishedNames are separated
+ by a comma character (',' ASCII 44).
+
+2.2. Converting RelativeDistinguishedName
+
+ When converting from an ASN.1 RelativeDistinguishedName to a string,
+ the output consists of the string encodings of each
+ AttributeTypeAndValue (according to 2.3), in any order.
+
+ Where there is a multi-valued RDN, the outputs from adjoining
+ AttributeTypeAndValues are separated by a plus ('+' ASCII 43)
+ character.
+
+2.3. Converting AttributeTypeAndValue
+
+ The AttributeTypeAndValue is encoded as the string representation of
+ the AttributeType, followed by an equals character ('=' ASCII 61),
+ followed by the string representation of the AttributeValue. The
+ encoding of the AttributeValue is given in section 2.4.
+
+ If the AttributeType is in a published table of attribute types
+ associated with LDAP [4], then the type name string from that table
+ is used, otherwise it is encoded as the dotted-decimal encoding of
+ the AttributeType's OBJECT IDENTIFIER. The dotted-decimal notation is
+ described in [3]. As an example, strings for a few of the attribute
+ types frequently seen in RDNs include:
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 3]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+ String X.500 AttributeType
+ ------------------------------
+ CN commonName
+ L localityName
+ ST stateOrProvinceName
+ O organizationName
+ OU organizationalUnitName
+ C countryName
+ STREET streetAddress
+ DC domainComponent
+ UID userid
+
+2.4. Converting an AttributeValue from ASN.1 to a String
+
+ If the AttributeValue is of a type which does not have a string
+ representation defined for it, then it is simply encoded as an
+ octothorpe character ('#' ASCII 35) followed by the hexadecimal
+ representation of each of the bytes of the BER encoding of the X.500
+ AttributeValue. This form SHOULD be used if the AttributeType is of
+ the dotted-decimal form.
+
+ Otherwise, if the AttributeValue is of a type which has a string
+ representation, the value is converted first to a UTF-8 string
+ according to its syntax specification (see for example section 6 of
+ [4]).
+
+ If the UTF-8 string does not have any of the following characters
+ which need escaping, then that string can be used as the string
+ representation of the value.
+
+ o a space or "#" character occurring at the beginning of the
+ string
+
+ o a space character occurring at the end of the string
+
+ o one of the characters ",", "+", """, "\", "<", ">" or ";"
+
+ Implementations MAY escape other characters.
+
+ If a character to be escaped is one of the list shown above, then it
+ is prefixed by a backslash ('\' ASCII 92).
+
+ Otherwise the character to be escaped is replaced by a backslash and
+ two hex digits, which form a single byte in the code of the
+ character.
+
+ Examples of the escaping mechanism are shown in section 5.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 4]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+3. Parsing a String back to a Distinguished Name
+
+ The structure of the string is specified in a BNF grammar, based on
+ the grammar defined in RFC 822 [5]. Server implementations parsing a
+ DN string generated by an LDAPv2 client MUST also accept (and ignore)
+ the variants given in section 4 of this document.
+
+distinguishedName = [name] ; may be empty string
+
+name = name-component *("," name-component)
+
+name-component = attributeTypeAndValue *("+" attributeTypeAndValue)
+
+attributeTypeAndValue = attributeType "=" attributeValue
+
+attributeType = (ALPHA 1*keychar) / oid
+keychar = ALPHA / DIGIT / "-"
+
+oid = 1*DIGIT *("." 1*DIGIT)
+
+attributeValue = string
+
+string = *( stringchar / pair )
+ / "#" hexstring
+ / QUOTATION *( quotechar / pair ) QUOTATION ; only from v2
+
+quotechar = <any character except "\" or QUOTATION >
+
+special = "," / "=" / "+" / "<" / ">" / "#" / ";"
+
+pair = "\" ( special / "\" / QUOTATION / hexpair )
+stringchar = <any character except one of special, "\" or QUOTATION >
+
+hexstring = 1*hexpair
+hexpair = hexchar hexchar
+
+hexchar = DIGIT / "A" / "B" / "C" / "D" / "E" / "F"
+ / "a" / "b" / "c" / "d" / "e" / "f"
+
+ALPHA = <any ASCII alphabetic character>
+ ; (decimal 65-90 and 97-122)
+DIGIT = <any ASCII decimal digit> ; (decimal 48-57)
+QUOTATION = <the ASCII double quotation mark character '"' decimal 34>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 5]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+4. Relationship with RFC 1779 and LDAPv2
+
+ The syntax given in this document is more restrictive than the syntax
+ in RFC 1779. Implementations parsing a string generated by an LDAPv2
+ client MUST accept the syntax of RFC 1779. Implementations MUST NOT,
+ however, generate any of the RFC 1779 encodings which are not
+ described above in section 2.
+
+ Implementations MUST allow a semicolon character to be used instead
+ of a comma to separate RDNs in a distinguished name, and MUST also
+ allow whitespace characters to be present on either side of the comma
+ or semicolon. The whitespace characters are ignored, and the
+ semicolon replaced with a comma.
+
+ Implementations MUST allow an oid in the attribute type to be
+ prefixed by one of the character strings "oid." or "OID.".
+
+ Implementations MUST allow for space (' ' ASCII 32) characters to be
+ present between name-component and ',', between attributeTypeAndValue
+ and '+', between attributeType and '=', and between '=' and
+ attributeValue. These space characters are ignored when parsing.
+
+ Implementations MUST allow a value to be surrounded by quote ('"'
+ ASCII 34) characters, which are not part of the value. Inside the
+ quoted value, the following characters can occur without any
+ escaping:
+
+ ",", "=", "+", "<", ">", "#" and ";"
+
+5. Examples
+
+ This notation is designed to be convenient for common forms of name.
+ This section gives a few examples of distinguished names written
+ using this notation. First is a name containing three relative
+ distinguished names (RDNs):
+
+ CN=Steve Kille,O=Isode Limited,C=GB
+
+ Here is an example name containing three RDNs, in which the first RDN
+ is multi-valued:
+
+ OU=Sales+CN=J. Smith,O=Widget Inc.,C=US
+
+ This example shows the method of quoting of a comma in an
+ organization name:
+
+ CN=L. Eagle,O=Sue\, Grabbit and Runn,C=GB
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 6]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+ An example name in which a value contains a carriage return
+ character:
+
+ CN=Before\0DAfter,O=Test,C=GB
+
+ An example name in which an RDN was of an unrecognized type. The
+ value is the BER encoding of an OCTET STRING containing two bytes
+ 0x48 and 0x69.
+
+ 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.0=#04024869,O=Test,C=GB
+
+ Finally, an example of an RDN surname value consisting of 5 letters:
+
+ Unicode Letter Description 10646 code UTF-8 Quoted
+ =============================== ========== ====== =======
+ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L U0000004C 0x4C L
+ LATIN SMALL LETTER U U00000075 0x75 u
+ LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH CARON U0000010D 0xC48D \C4\8D
+ LATIN SMALL LETTER I U00000069 0x69 i
+ LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH ACUTE U00000107 0xC487 \C4\87
+
+ Could be written in printable ASCII (useful for debugging purposes):
+
+ SN=Lu\C4\8Di\C4\87
+
+6. References
+
+ [1] The Directory -- overview of concepts, models and services.
+ ITU-T Rec. X.500(1993).
+
+ [2] The Directory -- Models. ITU-T Rec. X.501(1993).
+
+ [3] Wahl, M., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "Lightweight Directory
+ Access Protocol (v3)", RFC 2251, December 1997.
+
+ [4] Wahl, M., Coulbeck, A., Howes, T. and S. Kille, "Lightweight
+ Directory Access Protocol (v3): Attribute Syntax Definitions",
+ RFC 2252, December 1997.
+
+ [5] Crocker, D., "Standard of the Format of ARPA-Internet Text
+ Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, August 1982.
+
+ [6] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
+ Levels", RFC 2119.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 7]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+7. Security Considerations
+
+7.1. Disclosure
+
+ Distinguished Names typically consist of descriptive information
+ about the entries they name, which can be people, organizations,
+ devices or other real-world objects. This frequently includes some
+ of the following kinds of information:
+
+ - the common name of the object (i.e. a person's full name)
+ - an email or TCP/IP address
+ - its physical location (country, locality, city, street address)
+ - organizational attributes (such as department name or affiliation)
+
+ Most countries have privacy laws regarding the publication of
+ information about people.
+
+7.2. Use of Distinguished Names in Security Applications
+
+ The transformations of an AttributeValue value from its X.501 form to
+ an LDAP string representation are not always reversible back to the
+ same BER or DER form. An example of a situation which requires the
+ DER form of a distinguished name is the verification of an X.509
+ certificate.
+
+ For example, a distinguished name consisting of one RDN with one AVA,
+ in which the type is commonName and the value is of the TeletexString
+ choice with the letters 'Sam' would be represented in LDAP as the
+ string CN=Sam. Another distinguished name in which the value is
+ still 'Sam' but of the PrintableString choice would have the same
+ representation CN=Sam.
+
+ Applications which require the reconstruction of the DER form of the
+ value SHOULD NOT use the string representation of attribute syntaxes
+ when converting a distinguished name to the LDAP format. Instead,
+ they SHOULD use the hexadecimal form prefixed by the octothorpe ('#')
+ as described in the first paragraph of section 2.4.
+
+8. Authors' Addresses
+
+ Mark Wahl
+ Critical Angle Inc.
+ 4815 W. Braker Lane #502-385
+ Austin, TX 78759
+ USA
+
+ EMail: M.Wahl@critical-angle.com
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 8]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+ Steve Kille
+ Isode Ltd.
+ The Dome
+ The Square
+ Richmond, Surrey
+ TW9 1DT
+ England
+
+ Phone: +44-181-332-9091
+ EMail: S.Kille@ISODE.COM
+
+
+ Tim Howes
+ Netscape Communications Corp.
+ 501 E. Middlefield Rd, MS MV068
+ Mountain View, CA 94043
+ USA
+
+ Phone: +1 650 937-3419
+ EMail: howes@netscape.com
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 9]
+
+RFC 2253 LADPv3 Distinguished Names December 1997
+
+
+9. Full Copyright Statement
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+ This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
+ others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
+ or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
+ and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
+ kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
+ included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
+ document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
+ the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
+ Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
+ developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
+ copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
+ followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
+ English.
+
+ The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
+ revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
+
+ This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
+ "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
+ TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
+ BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
+ HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
+ MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl, et. al. Proposed Standard [Page 10]
+
diff --git a/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2254.txt b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2254.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..323fdb00b7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2254.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,451 @@
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Network Working Group T. Howes
+Request for Comments: 2254 Netscape Communications Corp.
+Category: Standards Track December 1997
+
+
+ The String Representation of LDAP Search Filters
+
+1. Status of this Memo
+
+ This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
+ Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
+ improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
+ Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
+ and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+IESG Note
+
+ This document describes a directory access protocol that provides
+ both read and update access. Update access requires secure
+ authentication, but this document does not mandate implementation of
+ any satisfactory authentication mechanisms.
+
+ In accordance with RFC 2026, section 4.4.1, this specification is
+ being approved by IESG as a Proposed Standard despite this
+ limitation, for the following reasons:
+
+ a. to encourage implementation and interoperability testing of
+ these protocols (with or without update access) before they
+ are deployed, and
+
+ b. to encourage deployment and use of these protocols in read-only
+ applications. (e.g. applications where LDAPv3 is used as
+ a query language for directories which are updated by some
+ secure mechanism other than LDAP), and
+
+ c. to avoid delaying the advancement and deployment of other Internet
+ standards-track protocols which require the ability to query, but
+ not update, LDAPv3 directory servers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes Standards Track [Page 1]
+
+RFC 2254 String Representation of LDAP December 1997
+
+
+ Readers are hereby warned that until mandatory authentication
+ mechanisms are standardized, clients and servers written according to
+ this specification which make use of update functionality are
+ UNLIKELY TO INTEROPERATE, or MAY INTEROPERATE ONLY IF AUTHENTICATION
+ IS REDUCED TO AN UNACCEPTABLY WEAK LEVEL.
+
+ Implementors are hereby discouraged from deploying LDAPv3 clients or
+ servers which implement the update functionality, until a Proposed
+ Standard for mandatory authentication in LDAPv3 has been approved and
+ published as an RFC.
+
+2. Abstract
+
+ The Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) [1] defines a
+ network representation of a search filter transmitted to an LDAP
+ server. Some applications may find it useful to have a common way of
+ representing these search filters in a human-readable form. This
+ document defines a human-readable string format for representing LDAP
+ search filters.
+
+ This document replaces RFC 1960, extending the string LDAP filter
+ definition to include support for LDAP version 3 extended match
+ filters, and including support for representing the full range of
+ possible LDAP search filters.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes Standards Track [Page 2]
+
+RFC 2254 String Representation of LDAP December 1997
+
+
+3. LDAP Search Filter Definition
+
+ An LDAPv3 search filter is defined in Section 4.5.1 of [1] as
+ follows:
+
+ Filter ::= CHOICE {
+ and [0] SET OF Filter,
+ or [1] SET OF Filter,
+ not [2] Filter,
+ equalityMatch [3] AttributeValueAssertion,
+ substrings [4] SubstringFilter,
+ greaterOrEqual [5] AttributeValueAssertion,
+ lessOrEqual [6] AttributeValueAssertion,
+ present [7] AttributeDescription,
+ approxMatch [8] AttributeValueAssertion,
+ extensibleMatch [9] MatchingRuleAssertion
+ }
+
+ SubstringFilter ::= SEQUENCE {
+ type AttributeDescription,
+ SEQUENCE OF CHOICE {
+ initial [0] LDAPString,
+ any [1] LDAPString,
+ final [2] LDAPString
+ }
+ }
+
+ AttributeValueAssertion ::= SEQUENCE {
+ attributeDesc AttributeDescription,
+ attributeValue AttributeValue
+ }
+
+ MatchingRuleAssertion ::= SEQUENCE {
+ matchingRule [1] MatchingRuleID OPTIONAL,
+ type [2] AttributeDescription OPTIONAL,
+ matchValue [3] AssertionValue,
+ dnAttributes [4] BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE
+ }
+
+ AttributeDescription ::= LDAPString
+
+ AttributeValue ::= OCTET STRING
+
+ MatchingRuleID ::= LDAPString
+
+ AssertionValue ::= OCTET STRING
+
+ LDAPString ::= OCTET STRING
+
+
+
+Howes Standards Track [Page 3]
+
+RFC 2254 String Representation of LDAP December 1997
+
+
+ where the LDAPString above is limited to the UTF-8 encoding of the
+ ISO 10646 character set [4]. The AttributeDescription is a string
+ representation of the attribute description and is defined in [1].
+ The AttributeValue and AssertionValue OCTET STRING have the form
+ defined in [2]. The Filter is encoded for transmission over a
+ network using the Basic Encoding Rules defined in [3], with
+ simplifications described in [1].
+
+4. String Search Filter Definition
+
+ The string representation of an LDAP search filter is defined by the
+ following grammar, following the ABNF notation defined in [5]. The
+ filter format uses a prefix notation.
+
+ filter = "(" filtercomp ")"
+ filtercomp = and / or / not / item
+ and = "&" filterlist
+ or = "|" filterlist
+ not = "!" filter
+ filterlist = 1*filter
+ item = simple / present / substring / extensible
+ simple = attr filtertype value
+ filtertype = equal / approx / greater / less
+ equal = "="
+ approx = "~="
+ greater = ">="
+ less = "<="
+ extensible = attr [":dn"] [":" matchingrule] ":=" value
+ / [":dn"] ":" matchingrule ":=" value
+ present = attr "=*"
+ substring = attr "=" [initial] any [final]
+ initial = value
+ any = "*" *(value "*")
+ final = value
+ attr = AttributeDescription from Section 4.1.5 of [1]
+ matchingrule = MatchingRuleId from Section 4.1.9 of [1]
+ value = AttributeValue from Section 4.1.6 of [1]
+
+ The attr, matchingrule, and value constructs are as described in the
+ corresponding section of [1] given above.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes Standards Track [Page 4]
+
+RFC 2254 String Representation of LDAP December 1997
+
+
+ If a value should contain any of the following characters
+
+ Character ASCII value
+ ---------------------------
+ * 0x2a
+ ( 0x28
+ ) 0x29
+ \ 0x5c
+ NUL 0x00
+
+ the character must be encoded as the backslash '\' character (ASCII
+ 0x5c) followed by the two hexadecimal digits representing the ASCII
+ value of the encoded character. The case of the two hexadecimal
+ digits is not significant.
+
+ This simple escaping mechanism eliminates filter-parsing ambiguities
+ and allows any filter that can be represented in LDAP to be
+ represented as a NUL-terminated string. Other characters besides the
+ ones listed above may be escaped using this mechanism, for example,
+ non-printing characters.
+
+ For example, the filter checking whether the "cn" attribute contained
+ a value with the character "*" anywhere in it would be represented as
+ "(cn=*\2a*)".
+
+ Note that although both the substring and present productions in the
+ grammar above can produce the "attr=*" construct, this construct is
+ used only to denote a presence filter.
+
+5. Examples
+
+ This section gives a few examples of search filters written using
+ this notation.
+
+ (cn=Babs Jensen)
+ (!(cn=Tim Howes))
+ (&(objectClass=Person)(|(sn=Jensen)(cn=Babs J*)))
+ (o=univ*of*mich*)
+
+ The following examples illustrate the use of extensible matching.
+
+ (cn:1.2.3.4.5:=Fred Flintstone)
+ (sn:dn:2.4.6.8.10:=Barney Rubble)
+ (o:dn:=Ace Industry)
+ (:dn:2.4.6.8.10:=Dino)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes Standards Track [Page 5]
+
+RFC 2254 String Representation of LDAP December 1997
+
+
+ The second example illustrates the use of the ":dn" notation to
+ indicate that matching rule "2.4.6.8.10" should be used when making
+ comparisons, and that the attributes of an entry's distinguished name
+ should be considered part of the entry when evaluating the match.
+
+ The third example denotes an equality match, except that DN
+ components should be considered part of the entry when doing the
+ match.
+
+ The fourth example is a filter that should be applied to any
+ attribute supporting the matching rule given (since the attr has been
+ left off). Attributes supporting the matching rule contained in the
+ DN should also be considered.
+
+ The following examples illustrate the use of the escaping mechanism.
+
+ (o=Parens R Us \28for all your parenthetical needs\29)
+ (cn=*\2A*)
+ (filename=C:\5cMyFile)
+ (bin=\00\00\00\04)
+ (sn=Lu\c4\8di\c4\87)
+
+ The first example shows the use of the escaping mechanism to
+ represent parenthesis characters. The second shows how to represent a
+ "*" in a value, preventing it from being interpreted as a substring
+ indicator. The third illustrates the escaping of the backslash
+ character.
+
+ The fourth example shows a filter searching for the four-byte value
+ 0x00000004, illustrating the use of the escaping mechanism to
+ represent arbitrary data, including NUL characters.
+
+ The final example illustrates the use of the escaping mechanism to
+ represent various non-ASCII UTF-8 characters.
+
+6. Security Considerations
+
+ This memo describes a string representation of LDAP search filters.
+ While the representation itself has no known security implications,
+ LDAP search filters do. They are interpreted by LDAP servers to
+ select entries from which data is retrieved. LDAP servers should
+ take care to protect the data they maintain from unauthorized access.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes Standards Track [Page 6]
+
+RFC 2254 String Representation of LDAP December 1997
+
+
+7. References
+
+ [1] Wahl, M., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "Lightweight Directory Access
+ Protocol (v3)", RFC 2251, December 1997.
+
+ [2] Wahl, M., Coulbeck, A., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "Lightweight
+ Directory Access Protocol (v3): Attribute Syntax Definitions", RFC
+ 2252, December 1997.
+
+ [3] Specification of ASN.1 encoding rules: Basic, Canonical, and
+ Distinguished Encoding Rules, ITU-T Recommendation X.690, 1994.
+
+ [4] Yergeau, F., "UTF-8, a transformation format of Unicode and ISO
+ 10646", RFC 2044, October 1996.
+
+ [5] Crocker, D., "Standard for the Format of ARPA Internet Text
+ Messages", STD 11, RFC 822, August 1982.
+
+8. Author's Address
+
+ Tim Howes
+ Netscape Communications Corp.
+ 501 E. Middlefield Road
+ Mountain View, CA 94043
+ USA
+
+ Phone: +1 415 937-3419
+ EMail: howes@netscape.com
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes Standards Track [Page 7]
+
+RFC 2254 String Representation of LDAP December 1997
+
+
+9. Full Copyright Statement
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+ This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
+ others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
+ or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
+ and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
+ kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
+ included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
+ document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
+ the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
+ Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
+ developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
+ copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
+ followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
+ English.
+
+ The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
+ revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
+
+ This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
+ "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
+ TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
+ BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
+ HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
+ MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes Standards Track [Page 8]
+
diff --git a/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2255.txt b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2255.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a03567154e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2255.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,563 @@
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Network Working Group T. Howes
+Request for Comments: 2255 M. Smith
+Category: Standards Track Netscape Communications Corp.
+ December 1997
+
+
+ The LDAP URL Format
+
+1. Status of this Memo
+
+ This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
+ Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
+ improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
+ Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
+ and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+IESG NOTE
+
+ This document describes a directory access protocol that provides
+ both read and update access. Update access requires secure
+ authentication, but this document does not mandate implementation of
+ any satisfactory authentication mechanisms.
+
+ In accordance with RFC 2026, section 4.4.1, this specification is
+ being approved by IESG as a Proposed Standard despite this
+ limitation, for the following reasons:
+
+ a. to encourage implementation and interoperability testing of
+ these protocols (with or without update access) before they
+ are deployed, and
+
+ b. to encourage deployment and use of these protocols in read-only
+ applications. (e.g. applications where LDAPv3 is used as
+ a query language for directories which are updated by some
+ secure mechanism other than LDAP), and
+
+ c. to avoid delaying the advancement and deployment of other Internet
+ standards-track protocols which require the ability to query, but
+ not update, LDAPv3 directory servers.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 1]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+ Readers are hereby warned that until mandatory authentication
+ mechanisms are standardized, clients and servers written according to
+ this specification which make use of update functionality are
+ UNLIKELY TO INTEROPERATE, or MAY INTEROPERATE ONLY IF AUTHENTICATION
+ IS REDUCED TO AN UNACCEPTABLY WEAK LEVEL.
+
+ Implementors are hereby discouraged from deploying LDAPv3 clients or
+ servers which implement the update functionality, until a Proposed
+ Standard for mandatory authentication in LDAPv3 has been approved and
+ published as an RFC.
+
+2. Abstract
+
+ LDAP is the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, defined in [1],
+ [2] and [3]. This document describes a format for an LDAP Uniform
+ Resource Locator. The format describes an LDAP search operation to
+ perform to retrieve information from an LDAP directory. This document
+ replaces RFC 1959. It updates the LDAP URL format for version 3 of
+ LDAP and clarifies how LDAP URLs are resolved. This document also
+ defines an extension mechanism for LDAP URLs, so that future
+ documents can extend their functionality, for example, to provide
+ access to new LDAPv3 extensions as they are defined.
+
+ The key words "MUST", "MAY", and "SHOULD" used in this document are
+ to be interpreted as described in [6].
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 2]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+3. URL Definition
+
+ An LDAP URL begins with the protocol prefix "ldap" and is defined by
+ the following grammar.
+
+ ldapurl = scheme "://" [hostport] ["/"
+ [dn ["?" [attributes] ["?" [scope]
+ ["?" [filter] ["?" extensions]]]]]]
+ scheme = "ldap"
+ attributes = attrdesc *("," attrdesc)
+ scope = "base" / "one" / "sub"
+ dn = distinguishedName from Section 3 of [1]
+ hostport = hostport from Section 5 of RFC 1738 [5]
+ attrdesc = AttributeDescription from Section 4.1.5 of [2]
+ filter = filter from Section 4 of [4]
+ extensions = extension *("," extension)
+ extension = ["!"] extype ["=" exvalue]
+ extype = token / xtoken
+ exvalue = LDAPString from section 4.1.2 of [2]
+ token = oid from section 4.1 of [3]
+ xtoken = ("X-" / "x-") token
+
+ The "ldap" prefix indicates an entry or entries residing in the LDAP
+ server running on the given hostname at the given portnumber. The
+ default LDAP port is TCP port 389. If no hostport is given, the
+ client must have some apriori knowledge of an appropriate LDAP server
+ to contact.
+
+ The dn is an LDAP Distinguished Name using the string format
+ described in [1]. It identifies the base object of the LDAP search.
+
+ ldapurl = scheme "://" [hostport] ["/"
+ [dn ["?" [attributes] ["?" [scope]
+ ["?" [filter] ["?" extensions]]]]]]
+ scheme = "ldap"
+ attributes = attrdesc *("," attrdesc)
+ scope = "base" / "one" / "sub"
+ dn = distinguishedName from Section 3 of [1]
+ hostport = hostport from Section 5 of RFC 1738 [5]
+ attrdesc = AttributeDescription from Section 4.1.5 of [2]
+ filter = filter from Section 4 of [4]
+ extensions = extension *("," extension)
+ extension = ["!"] extype ["=" exvalue]
+ extype = token / xtoken
+ exvalue = LDAPString from section 4.1.2 of [2]
+ token = oid from section 4.1 of [3]
+ xtoken = ("X-" / "x-") token
+
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 3]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+ The "ldap" prefix indicates an entry or entries residing in the LDAP
+ server running on the given hostname at the given portnumber. The
+ default LDAP port is TCP port 389. If no hostport is given, the
+ client must have some apriori knowledge of an appropriate LDAP server
+ to contact.
+
+ The dn is an LDAP Distinguished Name using the string format
+ described in [1]. It identifies the base object of the LDAP search.
+
+ The attributes construct is used to indicate which attributes should
+ be returned from the entry or entries. Individual attrdesc names are
+ as defined for AttributeDescription in [2]. If the attributes part
+ is omitted, all user attributes of the entry or entries should be
+ requested (e.g., by setting the attributes field
+ AttributeDescriptionList in the LDAP search request to a NULL list,
+ or (in LDAPv3) by requesting the special attribute name "*").
+
+ The scope construct is used to specify the scope of the search to
+ perform in the given LDAP server. The allowable scopes are "base"
+ for a base object search, "one" for a one-level search, or "sub" for
+ a subtree search. If scope is omitted, a scope of "base" is assumed.
+
+ The filter is used to specify the search filter to apply to entries
+ within the specified scope during the search. It has the format
+ specified in [4]. If filter is omitted, a filter of
+ "(objectClass=*)" is assumed.
+
+ The extensions construct provides the LDAP URL with an extensibility
+ mechanism, allowing the capabilities of the URL to be extended in the
+ future. Extensions are a simple comma-separated list of type=value
+ pairs, where the =value portion MAY be omitted for options not
+ requiring it. Each type=value pair is a separate extension. These
+ LDAP URL extensions are not necessarily related to any of the LDAPv3
+ extension mechanisms. Extensions may be supported or unsupported by
+ the client resolving the URL. An extension prefixed with a '!'
+ character (ASCII 33) is critical. An extension not prefixed with a '
+ !' character is non-critical.
+
+ If an extension is supported by the client, the client MUST obey the
+ extension if the extension is critical. The client SHOULD obey
+ supported extensions that are non-critical.
+
+ If an extension is unsupported by the client, the client MUST NOT
+ process the URL if the extension is critical. If an unsupported
+ extension is non-critical, the client MUST ignore the extension.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 4]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+ If a critical extension cannot be processed successfully by the
+ client, the client MUST NOT process the URL. If a non-critical
+ extension cannot be processed successfully by the client, the client
+ SHOULD ignore the extension.
+
+ Extension types prefixed by "X-" or "x-" are reserved for use in
+ bilateral agreements between communicating parties. Other extension
+ types MUST be defined in this document, or in other standards-track
+ documents.
+
+ One LDAP URL extension is defined in this document in the next
+ section. Other documents or a future version of this document MAY
+ define other extensions.
+
+ Note that any URL-illegal characters (e.g., spaces), URL special
+ characters (as defined in section 2.2 of RFC 1738) and the reserved
+ character '?' (ASCII 63) occurring inside a dn, filter, or other
+ element of an LDAP URL MUST be escaped using the % method described
+ in RFC 1738 [5]. If a comma character ',' occurs inside an extension
+ value, the character MUST also be escaped using the % method.
+
+4. The Bindname Extension
+
+ This section defines an LDAP URL extension for representing the
+ distinguished name for a client to use when authenticating to an LDAP
+ directory during resolution of an LDAP URL. Clients MAY implement
+ this extension.
+
+ The extension type is "bindname". The extension value is the
+ distinguished name of the directory entry to authenticate as, in the
+ same form as described for dn in the grammar above. The dn may be the
+ NULL string to specify unauthenticated access. The extension may be
+ either critical (prefixed with a '!' character) or non-critical (not
+ prefixed with a '!' character).
+
+ If the bindname extension is critical, the client resolving the URL
+ MUST authenticate to the directory using the given distinguished name
+ and an appropriate authentication method. Note that for a NULL
+ distinguished name, no bind MAY be required to obtain anonymous
+ access to the directory. If the extension is non-critical, the client
+ MAY bind to the directory using the given distinguished name.
+
+5. URL Processing
+
+ This section describes how an LDAP URL SHOULD be resolved by a
+ client.
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 5]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+ First, the client obtains a connection to the LDAP server referenced
+ in the URL, or an LDAP server of the client's choice if no LDAP
+ server is explicitly referenced. This connection MAY be opened
+ specifically for the purpose of resolving the URL or the client MAY
+ reuse an already open connection. The connection MAY provide
+ confidentiality, integrity, or other services, e.g., using TLS. Use
+ of security services is at the client's discretion if not specified
+ in the URL.
+
+ Next, the client authenticates itself to the LDAP server. This step
+ is optional, unless the URL contains a critical bindname extension
+ with a non-NULL value. If a bindname extension is given, the client
+ proceeds according to the section above.
+
+ If a bindname extension is not specified, the client MAY bind to the
+ directory using a appropriate dn and authentication method of its own
+ choosing (including NULL authentication).
+
+ Next, the client performs the LDAP search operation specified in the
+ URL. Additional fields in the LDAP protocol search request, such as
+ sizelimit, timelimit, deref, and anything else not specified or
+ defaulted in the URL specification, MAY be set at the client's
+ discretion.
+
+ Once the search has completed, the client MAY close the connection to
+ the LDAP server, or the client MAY keep the connection open for
+ future use.
+
+6. Examples
+
+ The following are some example LDAP URLs using the format defined
+ above. The first example is an LDAP URL referring to the University
+ of Michigan entry, available from an LDAP server of the client's
+ choosing:
+
+ ldap:///o=University%20of%20Michigan,c=US
+
+ The next example is an LDAP URL referring to the University of
+ Michigan entry in a particular ldap server:
+
+ ldap://ldap.itd.umich.edu/o=University%20of%20Michigan,c=US
+
+ Both of these URLs correspond to a base object search of the
+ "o=University of Michigan, c=US" entry using a filter of
+ "(objectclass=*)", requesting all attributes.
+
+ The next example is an LDAP URL referring to only the postalAddress
+ attribute of the University of Michigan entry:
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 6]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+ ldap://ldap.itd.umich.edu/o=University%20of%20Michigan,
+ c=US?postalAddress
+
+ The corresponding LDAP search operation is the same as in the
+ previous example, except that only the postalAddress attribute is
+ requested.
+
+ The next example is an LDAP URL referring to the set of entries found
+ by querying the given LDAP server on port 6666 and doing a subtree
+ search of the University of Michigan for any entry with a common name
+ of "Babs Jensen", retrieving all attributes:
+
+ ldap://host.com:6666/o=University%20of%20Michigan,
+ c=US??sub?(cn=Babs%20Jensen)
+
+ The next example is an LDAP URL referring to all children of the c=GB
+ entry:
+
+ ldap://ldap.itd.umich.edu/c=GB?objectClass?one
+
+ The objectClass attribute is requested to be returned along with the
+ entries, and the default filter of "(objectclass=*)" is used.
+
+ The next example is an LDAP URL to retrieve the mail attribute for
+ the LDAP entry named "o=Question?,c=US" is given below, illustrating
+ the use of the escaping mechanism on the reserved character '?'.
+
+ ldap://ldap.question.com/o=Question%3f,c=US?mail
+
+ The next example illustrates the interaction between LDAP and URL
+ quoting mechanisms.
+
+ ldap://ldap.netscape.com/o=Babsco,c=US??(int=%5c00%5c00%5c00%5c04)
+
+ The filter in this example uses the LDAP escaping mechanism of \ to
+ encode three zero or null bytes in the value. In LDAP, the filter
+ would be written as (int=\00\00\00\04). Because the \ character must
+ be escaped in a URL, the \'s are escaped as %5c in the URL encoding.
+
+ The final example shows the use of the bindname extension to specify
+ the dn a client should use for authentication when resolving the URL.
+
+ ldap:///??sub??bindname=cn=Manager%2co=Foo
+ ldap:///??sub??!bindname=cn=Manager%2co=Foo
+
+ The two URLs are the same, except that the second one marks the
+ bindname extension as critical. Notice the use of the % encoding
+ method to encode the comma in the distinguished name value in the
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 7]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+ bindname extension.
+
+7. Security Considerations
+
+ General URL security considerations discussed in [5] are relevant for
+ LDAP URLs.
+
+ The use of security mechanisms when processing LDAP URLs requires
+ particular care, since clients may encounter many different servers
+ via URLs, and since URLs are likely to be processed automatically,
+ without user intervention. A client SHOULD have a user-configurable
+ policy about which servers to connect to using which security
+ mechanisms, and SHOULD NOT make connections that are inconsistent
+ with this policy.
+
+ Sending authentication information, no matter the mechanism, may
+ violate a user's privacy requirements. In the absence of specific
+ policy permitting authentication information to be sent to a server,
+ a client should use an anonymous connection. (Note that clients
+ conforming to previous LDAP URL specifications, where all connections
+ are anonymous and unprotected, are consistent with this
+ specification; they simply have the default security policy.)
+
+ Some authentication methods, in particular reusable passwords sent to
+ the server, may reveal easily-abused information to the remote server
+ or to eavesdroppers in transit, and should not be used in URL
+ processing unless explicitly permitted by policy. Confirmation by
+ the human user of the use of authentication information is
+ appropriate in many circumstances. Use of strong authentication
+ methods that do not reveal sensitive information is much preferred.
+
+ The LDAP URL format allows the specification of an arbitrary LDAP
+ search operation to be performed when evaluating the LDAP URL.
+ Following an LDAP URL may cause unexpected results, for example, the
+ retrieval of large amounts of data, the initiation of a long-lived
+ search, etc. The security implications of resolving an LDAP URL are
+ the same as those of resolving an LDAP search query.
+
+8. Acknowledgements
+
+ The LDAP URL format was originally defined at the University of
+ Michigan. This material is based upon work supported by the National
+ Science Foundation under Grant No. NCR-9416667. The support of both
+ the University of Michigan and the National Science Foundation is
+ gratefully acknowledged.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 8]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+ Several people have made valuable comments on this document. In
+ particular RL "Bob" Morgan and Mark Wahl deserve special thanks for
+ their contributions.
+
+9. References
+
+ [1] Wahl, M., Kille, S., and T. Howes, "Lightweight Directory Access
+ Protocol (v3): UTF-8 String Representation of Distinguished Names",
+ RFC 2253, December 1997.
+
+ [2] Wahl, M., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "Lightweight Directory Access
+ Protocol (v3)", RFC 2251, December 1997.
+
+ [3] Wahl, M., Coulbeck, A., Howes, T. and S. Kille, "Lightweight
+ Directory Access Protocol (v3): Attribute Syntax Definitions", RFC
+ 2252, December 1997.
+
+ [4] Howes, T., "A String Representation of LDAP Search Filters", RFC
+ 2254, December 1997.
+
+ [5] Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L. and M. McCahill, "Uniform Resource
+ Locators (URL)," RFC 1738, December 1994.
+
+ [6] Bradner, S., "Key Words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
+ Levels," RFC 2119, March 1997.
+
+Authors' Addresses
+
+ Tim Howes
+ Netscape Communications Corp.
+ 501 E. Middlefield Rd.
+ Mountain View, CA 94043
+ USA
+
+ Phone: +1 415 937-3419
+ EMail: howes@netscape.com
+
+
+ Mark Smith
+ Netscape Communications Corp.
+ 501 E. Middlefield Rd.
+ Mountain View, CA 94043
+ USA
+
+ Phone: +1 415 937-3477
+ EMail: mcs@netscape.com
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 9]
+
+RFC 2255 LDAP URL Format December 1997
+
+
+Full Copyright Statement
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+ This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
+ others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
+ or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
+ and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
+ kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
+ included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
+ document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
+ the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
+ Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
+ developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
+ copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
+ followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
+ English.
+
+ The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
+ revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
+
+ This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
+ "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
+ TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
+ BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
+ HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
+ MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howes & Smith Standards Track [Page 10]
+
diff --git a/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2256.txt b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2256.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..69706f65a6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2256.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,1123 @@
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Network Working Group M. Wahl
+Request for Comments: 2256 Critical Angle Inc.
+Category: Standards Track December 1997
+
+
+ A Summary of the X.500(96) User Schema for use with LDAPv3
+
+1. Status of this Memo
+
+ This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
+ Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
+ improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
+ Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
+ and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+IESG Note
+
+ This document describes a directory access protocol that provides
+ both read and update access. Update access requires secure
+ authentication, but this document does not mandate implementation of
+ any satisfactory authentication mechanisms.
+
+ In accordance with RFC 2026, section 4.4.1, this specification is
+ being approved by IESG as a Proposed Standard despite this
+ limitation, for the following reasons:
+
+ a. to encourage implementation and interoperability testing of
+ these protocols (with or without update access) before they
+ are deployed, and
+
+ b. to encourage deployment and use of these protocols in read-only
+ applications. (e.g. applications where LDAPv3 is used as
+ a query language for directories which are updated by some
+ secure mechanism other than LDAP), and
+
+ c. to avoid delaying the advancement and deployment of other Internet
+ standards-track protocols which require the ability to query, but
+ not update, LDAPv3 directory servers.
+
+ Readers are hereby warned that until mandatory authentication
+ mechanisms are standardized, clients and servers written according to
+ this specification which make use of update functionality are
+ UNLIKELY TO INTEROPERATE, or MAY INTEROPERATE ONLY IF AUTHENTICATION
+ IS REDUCED TO AN UNACCEPTABLY WEAK LEVEL.
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 1]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+ Implementors are hereby discouraged from deploying LDAPv3 clients or
+ servers which implement the update functionality, until a Proposed
+ Standard for mandatory authentication in LDAPv3 has been approved and
+ published as an RFC.
+
+2. Abstract
+
+ This document provides an overview of the attribute types and object
+ classes defined by the ISO and ITU-T committees in the X.500
+ documents, in particular those intended for use by directory clients.
+ This is the most widely used schema for LDAP/X.500 directories, and
+ many other schema definitions for white pages objects use it as a
+ basis. This document does not cover attributes used for the
+ administration of X.500 directory servers, nor does it include
+ attributes defined by other ISO/ITU-T documents.
+
+ The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
+ "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
+ document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [6].
+
+3. General Issues
+
+ This document references syntaxes given in section 6 of this document
+ and section 6 of [1]. Matching rules are listed in section 8 of this
+ document and section 8 of [1].
+
+ The attribute type and object class definitions are written using the
+ BNF form of AttributeTypeDescription and ObjectClassDescription given
+ in [1]. Lines have been folded for readability.
+
+4. Source
+
+ The schema definitions in this document are based on those found in
+ X.500 [2],[3],[4],[5], and updates to these documents, specifically:
+
+ Sections Source
+ ============ ============
+ 5.1 - 5.2 X.501(93)
+ 5.3 - 5.36 X.520(88)
+ 5.37 - 5.41 X.509(93)
+ 5.42 - 5.52 X.520(93)
+ 5.53 - 5.54 X.509(96)
+ 5.55 X.520(96)
+ 6.1 RFC 1274
+ 6.2 (new syntax)
+ 6.3 - 6.6 RFC 1274
+ 7.1 - 7.2 X.501(93)
+ 7.3 - 7.18 X.521(93)
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 2]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+ 7.19 - 7.21 X.509(96)
+ 7.22 X.521(96)
+
+ Some attribute names are different from those found in X.520(93).
+
+ Three new attributes supportedAlgorithms, deltaRevocationList and
+ dmdName, and the objectClass dmd, are defined in the X.500(96)
+ documents.
+
+5. Attribute Types
+
+ An LDAP server implementation SHOULD recognize the attribute types
+ described in this section.
+
+5.1. objectClass
+
+ The values of the objectClass attribute describe the kind of object
+ which an entry represents. The objectClass attribute is present in
+ every entry, with at least two values. One of the values is either
+ "top" or "alias".
+
+ ( 2.5.4.0 NAME 'objectClass' EQUALITY objectIdentifierMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 )
+
+5.2. aliasedObjectName
+
+ The aliasedObjectName attribute is used by the directory service if
+ the entry containing this attribute is an alias.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.1 NAME 'aliasedObjectName' EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+5.3. knowledgeInformation
+
+ This attribute is no longer used.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.2 NAME 'knowledgeInformation' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{32768} )
+
+5.4. cn
+
+ This is the X.500 commonName attribute, which contains a name of an
+ object. If the object corresponds to a person, it is typically the
+ person's full name.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.3 NAME 'cn' SUP name )
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 3]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+5.5. sn
+
+ This is the X.500 surname attribute, which contains the family name
+ of a person.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.4 NAME 'sn' SUP name )
+
+5.6. serialNumber
+
+ This attribute contains the serial number of a device.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.5 NAME 'serialNumber' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.44{64} )
+
+5.7. c
+
+ This attribute contains a two-letter ISO 3166 country code
+ (countryName).
+
+ ( 2.5.4.6 NAME 'c' SUP name SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+5.8. l
+
+ This attribute contains the name of a locality, such as a city,
+ county or other geographic region (localityName).
+
+ ( 2.5.4.7 NAME 'l' SUP name )
+
+5.9. st
+
+ This attribute contains the full name of a state or province
+ (stateOrProvinceName).
+
+ ( 2.5.4.8 NAME 'st' SUP name )
+
+5.10. street
+
+ This attribute contains the physical address of the object to which
+ the entry corresponds, such as an address for package delivery
+ (streetAddress).
+
+ ( 2.5.4.9 NAME 'street' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{128} )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 4]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+5.11. o
+
+ This attribute contains the name of an organization
+ (organizationName).
+
+ ( 2.5.4.10 NAME 'o' SUP name )
+
+5.12. ou
+
+ This attribute contains the name of an organizational unit
+ (organizationalUnitName).
+
+ ( 2.5.4.11 NAME 'ou' SUP name )
+
+5.13. title
+
+ This attribute contains the title, such as "Vice President", of a
+ person in their organizational context. The "personalTitle"
+ attribute would be used for a person's title independent of their job
+ function.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.12 NAME 'title' SUP name )
+
+5.14. description
+
+ This attribute contains a human-readable description of the object.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.13 NAME 'description' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{1024} )
+
+5.15. searchGuide
+
+ This attribute is for use by X.500 clients in constructing search
+ filters. It is obsoleted by enhancedSearchGuide, described below in
+ 5.48.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.14 NAME 'searchGuide'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.25 )
+
+5.16. businessCategory
+
+ This attribute describes the kind of business performed by an
+ organization.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.15 NAME 'businessCategory' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{128} )
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 5]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+5.17. postalAddress
+
+ ( 2.5.4.16 NAME 'postalAddress' EQUALITY caseIgnoreListMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreListSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.41 )
+
+5.18. postalCode
+
+ ( 2.5.4.17 NAME 'postalCode' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{40} )
+
+5.19. postOfficeBox
+
+ ( 2.5.4.18 NAME 'postOfficeBox' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{40} )
+
+5.20. physicalDeliveryOfficeName
+
+ ( 2.5.4.19 NAME 'physicalDeliveryOfficeName' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{128} )
+
+5.21. telephoneNumber
+
+ ( 2.5.4.20 NAME 'telephoneNumber' EQUALITY telephoneNumberMatch
+ SUBSTR telephoneNumberSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.50{32} )
+
+5.22. telexNumber
+
+ ( 2.5.4.21 NAME 'telexNumber'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.52 )
+
+5.23. teletexTerminalIdentifier
+
+ ( 2.5.4.22 NAME 'teletexTerminalIdentifier'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.51 )
+
+5.24. facsimileTelephoneNumber
+
+ ( 2.5.4.23 NAME 'facsimileTelephoneNumber'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.22 )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 6]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+5.25. x121Address
+
+ ( 2.5.4.24 NAME 'x121Address' EQUALITY numericStringMatch
+ SUBSTR numericStringSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.36{15} )
+
+5.26. internationaliSDNNumber
+
+ ( 2.5.4.25 NAME 'internationaliSDNNumber' EQUALITY numericStringMatch
+ SUBSTR numericStringSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.36{16} )
+
+5.27. registeredAddress
+
+ This attribute holds a postal address suitable for reception of
+ telegrams or expedited documents, where it is necessary to have the
+ recipient accept delivery.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.26 NAME 'registeredAddress' SUP postalAddress
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.41 )
+
+5.28. destinationIndicator
+
+ This attribute is used for the telegram service.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.27 NAME 'destinationIndicator' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.44{128} )
+
+5.29. preferredDeliveryMethod
+
+ ( 2.5.4.28 NAME 'preferredDeliveryMethod'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.14
+ SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+5.30. presentationAddress
+
+ This attribute contains an OSI presentation address.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.29 NAME 'presentationAddress'
+ EQUALITY presentationAddressMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.43
+ SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 7]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+5.31. supportedApplicationContext
+
+ This attribute contains the identifiers of OSI application contexts.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.30 NAME 'supportedApplicationContext'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 )
+
+5.32. member
+
+ ( 2.5.4.31 NAME 'member' SUP distinguishedName )
+
+5.33. owner
+
+ ( 2.5.4.32 NAME 'owner' SUP distinguishedName )
+
+5.34. roleOccupant
+
+ ( 2.5.4.33 NAME 'roleOccupant' SUP distinguishedName )
+
+5.35. seeAlso
+
+ ( 2.5.4.34 NAME 'seeAlso' SUP distinguishedName )
+
+5.36. userPassword
+
+ ( 2.5.4.35 NAME 'userPassword' EQUALITY octetStringMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40{128} )
+
+ Passwords are stored using an Octet String syntax and are not
+ encrypted. Transfer of cleartext passwords are strongly discouraged
+ where the underlying transport service cannot guarantee
+ confidentiality and may result in disclosure of the password to
+ unauthorized parties.
+
+5.37. userCertificate
+
+ This attribute is to be stored and requested in the binary form, as
+ 'userCertificate;binary'.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.36 NAME 'userCertificate'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.8 )
+
+5.38. cACertificate
+
+ This attribute is to be stored and requested in the binary form, as
+ 'cACertificate;binary'.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 8]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+ ( 2.5.4.37 NAME 'cACertificate'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.8 )
+
+5.39. authorityRevocationList
+
+ This attribute is to be stored and requested in the binary form, as
+ 'authorityRevocationList;binary'.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.38 NAME 'authorityRevocationList'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.9 )
+
+5.40. certificateRevocationList
+
+ This attribute is to be stored and requested in the binary form, as
+ 'certificateRevocationList;binary'.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.39 NAME 'certificateRevocationList'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.9 )
+
+5.41. crossCertificatePair
+
+ This attribute is to be stored and requested in the binary form, as
+ 'crossCertificatePair;binary'.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.40 NAME 'crossCertificatePair'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.10 )
+
+5.42. name
+
+ The name attribute type is the attribute supertype from which string
+ attribute types typically used for naming may be formed. It is
+ unlikely that values of this type itself will occur in an entry. LDAP
+ server implementations which do not support attribute subtyping need
+ not recognize this attribute in requests. Client implementations
+ MUST NOT assume that LDAP servers are capable of performing attribute
+ subtyping.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.41 NAME 'name' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{32768} )
+
+5.43. givenName
+
+ The givenName attribute is used to hold the part of a person's name
+ which is not their surname nor middle name.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.42 NAME 'givenName' SUP name )
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 9]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+5.44. initials
+
+ The initials attribute contains the initials of some or all of an
+ individuals names, but not the surname(s).
+
+ ( 2.5.4.43 NAME 'initials' SUP name )
+
+5.45. generationQualifier
+
+ The generationQualifier attribute contains the part of the name which
+ typically is the suffix, as in "IIIrd".
+
+ ( 2.5.4.44 NAME 'generationQualifier' SUP name )
+
+5.46. x500UniqueIdentifier
+
+ The x500UniqueIdentifier attribute is used to distinguish between
+ objects when a distinguished name has been reused. This is a
+ different attribute type from both the "uid" and "uniqueIdentifier"
+ types.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.45 NAME 'x500UniqueIdentifier' EQUALITY bitStringMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.6 )
+
+5.47. dnQualifier
+
+ The dnQualifier attribute type specifies disambiguating information
+ to add to the relative distinguished name of an entry. It is
+ intended for use when merging data from multiple sources in order to
+ prevent conflicts between entries which would otherwise have the same
+ name. It is recommended that the value of the dnQualifier attribute
+ be the same for all entries from a particular source.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.46 NAME 'dnQualifier' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ ORDERING caseIgnoreOrderingMatch SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.44 )
+
+5.48. enhancedSearchGuide
+
+ This attribute is for use by X.500 clients in constructing search
+ filters.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.47 NAME 'enhancedSearchGuide'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.21 )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 10]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+5.49. protocolInformation
+
+ This attribute is used in conjunction with the presentationAddress
+ attribute, to provide additional information to the OSI network
+ service.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.48 NAME 'protocolInformation'
+ EQUALITY protocolInformationMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.42 )
+
+5.50. distinguishedName
+
+ This attribute type is not used as the name of the object itself, but
+ it is instead a base type from which attributes with DN syntax
+ inherit.
+
+ It is unlikely that values of this type itself will occur in an
+ entry. LDAP server implementations which do not support attribute
+ subtyping need not recognize this attribute in requests. Client
+ implementations MUST NOT assume that LDAP servers are capable of
+ performing attribute subtyping.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.49 NAME 'distinguishedName' EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12 )
+
+5.51. uniqueMember
+
+ ( 2.5.4.50 NAME 'uniqueMember' EQUALITY uniqueMemberMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.34 )
+
+5.52. houseIdentifier
+
+ This attribute is used to identify a building within a location.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.51 NAME 'houseIdentifier' EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15{32768} )
+
+5.53. supportedAlgorithms
+
+ This attribute is to be stored and requested in the binary form, as
+ 'supportedAlgorithms;binary'.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.52 NAME 'supportedAlgorithms'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.49 )
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 11]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+5.54. deltaRevocationList
+
+ This attribute is to be stored and requested in the binary form, as
+ 'deltaRevocationList;binary'.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.53 NAME 'deltaRevocationList'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.9 )
+
+5.55. dmdName
+
+ The value of this attribute specifies a directory management domain
+ (DMD), the administrative authority which operates the directory
+ server.
+
+ ( 2.5.4.54 NAME 'dmdName' SUP name )
+
+6. Syntaxes
+
+ Servers SHOULD recognize the syntaxes defined in this section. Each
+ syntax begins with a sample value of the ldapSyntaxes attribute which
+ defines the OBJECT IDENTIFIER of the syntax. The descriptions of
+ syntax names are not carried in protocol, and are not guaranteed to
+ be unique.
+
+6.1. Delivery Method
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.14 DESC 'Delivery Method' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ delivery-value = pdm / ( pdm whsp "$" whsp delivery-value )
+
+ pdm = "any" / "mhs" / "physical" / "telex" / "teletex" /
+ "g3fax" / "g4fax" / "ia5" / "videotex" / "telephone"
+
+ Example:
+
+ telephone
+
+6.2. Enhanced Guide
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.21 DESC 'Enhanced Guide' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ EnhancedGuide = woid whsp "#" whsp criteria whsp "#" whsp subset
+
+ subset = "baseobject" / "oneLevel" / "wholeSubtree"
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 12]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+ The criteria production is defined in the Guide syntax below. This
+ syntax has been added subsequent to RFC 1778.
+
+ Example:
+
+ person#(sn)#oneLevel
+
+6.3. Guide
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.25 DESC 'Guide' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ guide-value = [ object-class "#" ] criteria
+
+ object-class = woid
+
+ criteria = criteria-item / criteria-set / ( "!" criteria )
+
+ criteria-set = ( [ "(" ] criteria "&" criteria-set [ ")" ] ) /
+ ( [ "(" ] criteria "|" criteria-set [ ")" ] )
+
+ criteria-item = [ "(" ] attributetype "$" match-type [ ")" ]
+
+ match-type = "EQ" / "SUBSTR" / "GE" / "LE" / "APPROX"
+
+ This syntax should not be used for defining new attributes.
+
+6.4. Octet String
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40 DESC 'Octet String' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded as octet strings.
+
+
+ Example:
+
+ secret
+
+6.5. Teletex Terminal Identifier
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.51 DESC 'Teletex Terminal Identifier' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ teletex-id = ttx-term 0*("$" ttx-param)
+
+ ttx-term = printablestring
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 13]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+ ttx-param = ttx-key ":" ttx-value
+
+ ttx-key = "graphic" / "control" / "misc" / "page" / "private"
+
+ ttx-value = octetstring
+
+ In the above, the first printablestring is the encoding of the first
+ portion of the teletex terminal identifier to be encoded, and the
+ subsequent 0 or more octetstrings are subsequent portions of the
+ teletex terminal identifier.
+
+6.6. Telex Number
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.52 DESC 'Telex Number' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are encoded according to the following BNF:
+
+ telex-number = actual-number "$" country "$" answerback
+
+ actual-number = printablestring
+
+ country = printablestring
+
+ answerback = printablestring
+
+ In the above, actual-number is the syntactic representation of the
+ number portion of the TELEX number being encoded, country is the
+ TELEX country code, and answerback is the answerback code of a TELEX
+ terminal.
+
+6.7. Supported Algorithm
+
+ ( 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.49 DESC 'Supported Algorithm' )
+
+ No printable representation of values of the supportedAlgorithms
+ attribute is defined in this document. Clients which wish to store
+ and retrieve this attribute MUST use "supportedAlgorithms;binary", in
+ which the value is transferred as a binary encoding.
+
+7. Object Classes
+
+ LDAP servers MUST recognize the object classes "top" and "subschema".
+ LDAP servers SHOULD recognize all the other object classes listed
+ here as values of the objectClass attribute.
+
+7.1. top
+
+ ( 2.5.6.0 NAME 'top' ABSTRACT MUST objectClass )
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 14]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+7.2. alias
+
+ ( 2.5.6.1 NAME 'alias' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST aliasedObjectName )
+
+7.3. country
+
+ ( 2.5.6.2 NAME 'country' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST c
+ MAY ( searchGuide $ description ) )
+
+7.4. locality
+
+ ( 2.5.6.3 NAME 'locality' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ MAY ( street $ seeAlso $ searchGuide $ st $ l $ description ) )
+
+7.5. organization
+
+ ( 2.5.6.4 NAME 'organization' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST o
+ MAY ( userPassword $ searchGuide $ seeAlso $ businessCategory $
+ x121Address $ registeredAddress $ destinationIndicator $
+ preferredDeliveryMethod $ telexNumber $ teletexTerminalIdentifier $
+ telephoneNumber $ internationaliSDNNumber $
+ facsimileTelephoneNumber $
+ street $ postOfficeBox $ postalCode $ postalAddress $
+ physicalDeliveryOfficeName $ st $ l $ description ) )
+
+7.6. organizationalUnit
+
+ ( 2.5.6.5 NAME 'organizationalUnit' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST ou
+ MAY ( userPassword $ searchGuide $ seeAlso $ businessCategory $
+ x121Address $ registeredAddress $ destinationIndicator $
+ preferredDeliveryMethod $ telexNumber $ teletexTerminalIdentifier $
+ telephoneNumber $ internationaliSDNNumber $
+ facsimileTelephoneNumber $
+ street $ postOfficeBox $ postalCode $ postalAddress $
+ physicalDeliveryOfficeName $ st $ l $ description ) )
+
+7.7. person
+
+ ( 2.5.6.6 NAME 'person' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST ( sn $ cn )
+ MAY ( userPassword $ telephoneNumber $ seeAlso $ description ) )
+
+7.8. organizationalPerson
+
+ ( 2.5.6.7 NAME 'organizationalPerson' SUP person STRUCTURAL
+ MAY ( title $ x121Address $ registeredAddress $
+ destinationIndicator $
+ preferredDeliveryMethod $ telexNumber $ teletexTerminalIdentifier $
+ telephoneNumber $ internationaliSDNNumber $
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 15]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+ facsimileTelephoneNumber $
+ street $ postOfficeBox $ postalCode $ postalAddress $
+ physicalDeliveryOfficeName $ ou $ st $ l ) )
+
+7.9. organizationalRole
+
+ ( 2.5.6.8 NAME 'organizationalRole' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST cn
+ MAY ( x121Address $ registeredAddress $ destinationIndicator $
+ preferredDeliveryMethod $ telexNumber $ teletexTerminalIdentifier $
+ telephoneNumber $ internationaliSDNNumber $
+ facsimileTelephoneNumber $
+ seeAlso $ roleOccupant $ preferredDeliveryMethod $ street $
+ postOfficeBox $ postalCode $ postalAddress $
+ physicalDeliveryOfficeName $ ou $ st $ l $ description ) )
+
+7.10. groupOfNames
+
+ ( 2.5.6.9 NAME 'groupOfNames' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST ( member $ cn )
+ MAY ( businessCategory $ seeAlso $ owner $ ou $ o $ description ) )
+
+7.11. residentialPerson
+
+ ( 2.5.6.10 NAME 'residentialPerson' SUP person STRUCTURAL MUST l
+ MAY ( businessCategory $ x121Address $ registeredAddress $
+ destinationIndicator $ preferredDeliveryMethod $ telexNumber $
+ teletexTerminalIdentifier $ telephoneNumber $
+ internationaliSDNNumber $
+ facsimileTelephoneNumber $ preferredDeliveryMethod $ street $
+ postOfficeBox $ postalCode $ postalAddress $
+ physicalDeliveryOfficeName $ st $ l ) )
+
+7.12. applicationProcess
+
+ ( 2.5.6.11 NAME 'applicationProcess' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST cn
+ MAY ( seeAlso $ ou $ l $ description ) )
+
+7.13. applicationEntity
+
+ ( 2.5.6.12 NAME 'applicationEntity' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ MUST ( presentationAddress $ cn )
+ MAY ( supportedApplicationContext $ seeAlso $ ou $ o $ l $
+ description ) )
+
+7.14. dSA
+
+ ( 2.5.6.13 NAME 'dSA' SUP applicationEntity STRUCTURAL
+ MAY knowledgeInformation )
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 16]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+7.15. device
+
+ ( 2.5.6.14 NAME 'device' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST cn
+ MAY ( serialNumber $ seeAlso $ owner $ ou $ o $ l $ description ) )
+
+7.16. strongAuthenticationUser
+
+ ( 2.5.6.15 NAME 'strongAuthenticationUser' SUP top AUXILIARY
+ MUST userCertificate )
+
+7.17. certificationAuthority
+
+ ( 2.5.6.16 NAME 'certificationAuthority' SUP top AUXILIARY
+ MUST ( authorityRevocationList $ certificateRevocationList $
+ cACertificate ) MAY crossCertificatePair )
+
+7.18. groupOfUniqueNames
+
+ ( 2.5.6.17 NAME 'groupOfUniqueNames' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ MUST ( uniqueMember $ cn )
+ MAY ( businessCategory $ seeAlso $ owner $ ou $ o $ description ) )
+
+7.19. userSecurityInformation
+
+ ( 2.5.6.18 NAME 'userSecurityInformation' SUP top AUXILIARY
+ MAY ( supportedAlgorithms ) )
+
+7.20. certificationAuthority-V2
+
+ ( 2.5.6.16.2 NAME 'certificationAuthority-V2' SUP
+ certificationAuthority
+ AUXILIARY MAY ( deltaRevocationList ) )
+
+7.21. cRLDistributionPoint
+
+ ( 2.5.6.19 NAME 'cRLDistributionPoint' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ MUST ( cn ) MAY ( certificateRevocationList $
+ authorityRevocationList $
+ deltaRevocationList ) )
+
+7.22. dmd
+
+ ( 2.5.6.20 NAME 'dmd' SUP top STRUCTURAL MUST ( dmdName )
+ MAY ( userPassword $ searchGuide $ seeAlso $ businessCategory $
+ x121Address $ registeredAddress $ destinationIndicator $
+ preferredDeliveryMethod $ telexNumber $ teletexTerminalIdentifier $
+ telephoneNumber $ internationaliSDNNumber $
+ facsimileTelephoneNumber $
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 17]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+ street $ postOfficeBox $ postalCode $ postalAddress $
+ physicalDeliveryOfficeName $ st $ l $ description ) )
+
+8. Matching Rules
+
+ Servers MAY implement additional matching rules.
+
+8.1. octetStringMatch
+
+ Servers which implement the extensibleMatch filter SHOULD allow the
+ matching rule listed in this section to be used in the
+ extensibleMatch. In general these servers SHOULD allow matching
+ rules to be used with all attribute types known to the server, when
+ the assertion syntax of the matching rule is the same as the value
+ syntax of the attribute.
+
+ ( 2.5.13.17 NAME 'octetStringMatch'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40 )
+
+9. Security Considerations
+
+ Attributes of directory entries are used to provide descriptive
+ information about the real-world objects they represent, which can be
+ people, organizations or devices. Most countries have privacy laws
+ regarding the publication of information about people.
+
+ Transfer of cleartext passwords are strongly discouraged where the
+ underlying transport service cannot guarantee confidentiality and may
+ result in disclosure of the password to unauthorized parties.
+
+10. Acknowledgements
+
+ The definitions on which this document have been developed by
+ committees for telecommunications and international standards. No
+ new attribute definitions have been added. The syntax definitions
+ are based on the ISODE "QUIPU" implementation of X.500.
+
+11. Bibliography
+
+ [1] Wahl, M., Coulbeck, A., Howes, T., and S. Kille,
+ "Lightweight X.500 Directory Access Protocol (v3): Attribute
+ Syntax Definitions", RFC 2252, December 1997.
+
+ [2] The Directory: Models. ITU-T Recommendation X.501, 1996.
+
+ [3] The Directory: Authentication Framework. ITU-T Recommendation
+ X.509, 1996.
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 18]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+ [4] The Directory: Selected Attribute Types. ITU-T Recommendation
+ X.520, 1996.
+
+ [5] The Directory: Selected Object Classes. ITU-T Recommendation
+ X.521, 1996.
+
+ [6] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
+ Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997.
+
+12. Author's Address
+
+ Mark Wahl
+ Critical Angle Inc.
+ 4815 West Braker Lane #502-385
+ Austin, TX 78759
+ USA
+
+ Phone: +1 512 372 3160
+ EMail: M.Wahl@critical-angle.com
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 19]
+
+RFC 2256 LDAPv3 Schema December 1997
+
+
+13. Full Copyright Statement
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved.
+
+ This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
+ others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
+ or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
+ and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
+ kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
+ included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
+ document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
+ the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
+ Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
+ developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
+ copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
+ followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
+ English.
+
+ The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
+ revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
+
+ This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
+ "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
+ TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
+ BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
+ HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
+ MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Wahl Standards Track [Page 20]
+
diff --git a/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2307.txt b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2307.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..f46519f127
--- /dev/null
+++ b/source4/ldap_server/devdocs/rfc2307.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,1179 @@
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Network Working Group L. Howard
+Request for Comments: 2307 Independent Consultant
+Category: Experimental March 1998
+
+
+ An Approach for Using LDAP as a Network Information Service
+
+Status of this Memo
+
+ This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet
+ community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.
+ Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.
+ Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved.
+
+Abstract
+
+ This document describes an experimental mechanism for mapping
+ entities related to TCP/IP and the UNIX system into X.500 [X500]
+ entries so that they may be resolved with the Lightweight Directory
+ Access Protocol [RFC2251]. A set of attribute types and object
+ classes are proposed, along with specific guidelines for interpreting
+ them.
+
+ The intention is to assist the deployment of LDAP as an
+ organizational nameservice. No proposed solutions are intended as
+ standards for the Internet. Rather, it is hoped that a general
+ consensus will emerge as to the appropriate solution to such
+ problems, leading eventually to the adoption of standards. The
+ proposed mechanism has already been implemented with some success.
+
+1. Background and Motivation
+
+ The UNIX (R) operating system, and its derivatives (specifically,
+ those which support TCP/IP and conform to the X/Open Single UNIX
+ specification [XOPEN]) require a means of looking up entities, by
+ matching them against search criteria or by enumeration. (Other
+ operating systems that support TCP/IP may provide some means of
+ resolving some of these entities. This schema is applicable to those
+ environments also.)
+
+ These entities include users, groups, IP services (which map names to
+ IP ports and protocols, and vice versa), IP protocols (which map
+ names to IP protocol numbers and vice versa), RPCs (which map names
+ to ONC Remote Procedure Call [RFC1057] numbers and vice versa), NIS
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 1]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ netgroups, booting information (boot parameters and MAC address
+ mappings), filesystem mounts, IP hosts and networks, and RFC822 mail
+ aliases.
+
+ Resolution requests are made through a set of C functions, provided
+ in the UNIX system's C library. For example, the UNIX system utility
+ "ls", which enumerates the contents of a filesystem directory, uses
+ the C library function getpwuid() in order to map user IDs to login
+ names. Once the request is made, it is resolved using a "nameservice"
+ which is supported by the client library. The nameservice may be, at
+ its simplest, a collection of files in the local filesystem which are
+ opened and searched by the C library. Other common nameservices
+ include the Network Information Service (NIS) and the Domain Name
+ System (DNS). (The latter is typically used for resolving hosts,
+ services and networks.) Both these nameservices have the advantage of
+ being distributed and thus permitting a common set of entities to be
+ shared amongst many clients.
+
+ LDAP is a distributed, hierarchical directory service access protocol
+ which is used to access repositories of users and other network-
+ related entities. Because LDAP is often not tightly integrated with
+ the host operating system, information such as users may need to be
+ kept both in LDAP and in an operating system supported nameservice
+ such as NIS. By using LDAP as the the primary means of resolving
+ these entities, these redundancy issues are minimized and the
+ scalability of LDAP can be exploited. (By comparison, NIS services
+ based on flat files do not have the scalability or extensibility of
+ LDAP or X.500.)
+
+ The object classes and attributes defined below are suitable for
+ representing the aforementioned entities in a form compatible with
+ LDAP and X.500 directory services.
+
+2. General Issues
+
+2.1. Terminology
+
+ The key words "MUST", "SHOULD", and "MAY" used in this document are
+ to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
+
+ For the purposes of this document, the term "nameservice" refers to a
+ service, such as NIS or flat files, that is used by the operating
+ system to resolve entities within a single, local naming context.
+ Contrast this with a "directory service" such as LDAP, which supports
+ extensible schema and multiple naming contexts.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 2]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ The term "NIS-related entities" broadly refers to entities which are
+ typically resolved using the Network Information Service. (NIS was
+ previously known as YP.) Deploying LDAP for resolving these entities
+ does not imply that NIS be used, as a gateway or otherwise. In
+ particular, the host and network classes are generically applicable,
+ and may be implemented on any system that wishes to use LDAP or X.500
+ for host and network resolution.
+
+ The "DUA" (directory user agent) refers to the LDAP client querying
+ these entities, such as an LDAP to NIS gateway or the C library. The
+ "client" refers to the application which ultimately makes use of the
+ information returned by the resolution. It is irrelevant whether the
+ DUA and the client reside within the same address space. The act of
+ the DUA making this information to the client is termed
+ "republishing".
+
+ To avoid confusion, the term "login name" refers to the user's login
+ name (being the value of the uid attribute) and the term "user ID"
+ refers to he user's integer identification number (being the value of
+ the uidNumber attribute).
+
+ The phrases "resolving an entity" and "resolution of entities" refer
+ respectively to enumerating NIS-related entities of a given type, and
+ matching them against a given search criterion. One or more entities
+ are returned as a result of successful "resolutions" (a "match"
+ operation will only return one entity).
+
+ The use of the term UNIX does not confer upon this schema the
+ endorsement of owners of the UNIX trademark. Where necessary, the
+ term "TCP/IP entity" is used to refer to protocols, services, hosts,
+ and networks, and the term "UNIX entity" to its complement. (The
+ former category does not mandate the host operating system supporting
+ the interfaces required for resolving UNIX entities.)
+
+ The OIDs defined below are derived from iso(1) org(3) dod(6)
+ internet(1) directory(1) nisSchema(1).
+
+2.2. Attributes
+
+ The attributes and classes defined in this document are summarized
+ below.
+
+ The following attributes are defined in this document:
+
+ uidNumber
+ gidNumber
+ gecos
+ homeDirectory
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 3]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ loginShell
+ shadowLastChange
+ shadowMin
+ shadowMax
+ shadowWarning
+ shadowInactive
+ shadowExpire
+ shadowFlag
+ memberUid
+ memberNisNetgroup
+ nisNetgroupTriple
+ ipServicePort
+ ipServiceProtocol
+ ipProtocolNumber
+ oncRpcNumber
+ ipHostNumber
+ ipNetworkNumber
+ ipNetmaskNumber
+ macAddress
+ bootParameter
+ bootFile
+ nisMapName
+ nisMapEntry
+
+ Additionally, some of the attributes defined in [RFC2256] are
+ required.
+
+2.3. Object classes
+
+ The following object classes are defined in this document:
+
+ posixAccount
+ shadowAccount
+ posixGroup
+ ipService
+ ipProtocol
+ oncRpc
+ ipHost
+ ipNetwork
+ nisNetgroup
+ nisMap
+ nisObject
+ ieee802Device
+ bootableDevice
+
+ Additionally, some of the classes defined in [RFC2256] are required.
+
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 4]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+2.4. Syntax definitions
+
+ The following syntax definitions [RFC2252] are used by this schema.
+ The nisNetgroupTripleSyntax represents NIS netgroup triples:
+
+ ( nisSchema.0.0 NAME 'nisNetgroupTripleSyntax'
+ DESC 'NIS netgroup triple' )
+
+ Values in this syntax are represented by the following:
+
+ nisnetgrouptriple = "(" hostname "," username "," domainname ")"
+ hostname = "" / "-" / keystring
+ username = "" / "-" / keystring
+ domainname = "" / "-" / keystring
+
+ X.500 servers may use the following representation of the above
+ syntax:
+
+ nisNetgroupTripleSyntax ::= SEQUENCE {
+ hostname [0] IA5String OPTIONAL,
+ username [1] IA5String OPTIONAL,
+ domainname [2] IA5String OPTIONAL
+ }
+
+ The bootParameterSyntax syntax represents boot parameters:
+
+ ( nisSchema.0.1 NAME 'bootParameterSyntax'
+ DESC 'Boot parameter' )
+
+ where:
+
+ bootparameter = key "=" server ":" path
+ key = keystring
+ server = keystring
+ path = keystring
+
+ X.500 servers may use the following representation of the above
+ syntax:
+
+ bootParameterSyntax ::= SEQUENCE {
+ key IA5String,
+ server IA5String,
+ path IA5String
+ }
+
+ Values adhering to these syntaxes are encoded as strings by LDAP
+ servers.
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 5]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+3. Attribute definitions
+
+ This section contains attribute definitions to be implemented by DUAs
+ supporting this schema.
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.0 NAME 'uidNumber'
+ DESC 'An integer uniquely identifying a user in an
+ administrative domain'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.1 NAME 'gidNumber'
+ DESC 'An integer uniquely identifying a group in an
+ administrative domain'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.2 NAME 'gecos'
+ DESC 'The GECOS field; the common name'
+ EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match
+ SUBSTRINGS caseIgnoreIA5SubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.3 NAME 'homeDirectory'
+ DESC 'The absolute path to the home directory'
+ EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.4 NAME 'loginShell'
+ DESC 'The path to the login shell'
+ EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.5 NAME 'shadowLastChange'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.6 NAME 'shadowMin'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.7 NAME 'shadowMax'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.8 NAME 'shadowWarning'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.9 NAME 'shadowInactive'
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 6]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.10 NAME 'shadowExpire'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.11 NAME 'shadowFlag'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.12 NAME 'memberUid'
+ EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match
+ SUBSTRINGS caseExactIA5SubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String' )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.13 NAME 'memberNisNetgroup'
+ EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match
+ SUBSTRINGS caseExactIA5SubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String' )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.14 NAME 'nisNetgroupTriple'
+ DESC 'Netgroup triple'
+ SYNTAX 'nisNetgroupTripleSyntax' )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.15 NAME 'ipServicePort'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.16 NAME 'ipServiceProtocol'
+ SUP name )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.17 NAME 'ipProtocolNumber'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.18 NAME 'oncRpcNumber'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 'INTEGER' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.19 NAME 'ipHostNumber'
+ DESC 'IP address as a dotted decimal, eg. 192.168.1.1,
+ omitting leading zeros'
+ EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String{128}' )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.20 NAME 'ipNetworkNumber'
+ DESC 'IP network as a dotted decimal, eg. 192.168,
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 7]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ omitting leading zeros'
+ EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String{128}' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.21 NAME 'ipNetmaskNumber'
+ DESC 'IP netmask as a dotted decimal, eg. 255.255.255.0,
+ omitting leading zeros'
+ EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String{128}' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.22 NAME 'macAddress'
+ DESC 'MAC address in maximal, colon separated hex
+ notation, eg. 00:00:92:90:ee:e2'
+ EQUALITY caseIgnoreIA5Match
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String{128}' )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.23 NAME 'bootParameter'
+ DESC 'rpc.bootparamd parameter'
+ SYNTAX 'bootParameterSyntax' )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.24 NAME 'bootFile'
+ DESC 'Boot image name'
+ EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String' )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.26 NAME 'nisMapName'
+ SUP name )
+
+ ( nisSchema.1.27 NAME 'nisMapEntry'
+ EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match
+ SUBSTRINGS caseExactIA5SubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 'IA5String{1024}' SINGLE-VALUE )
+
+4. Class definitions
+
+ This section contains class definitions to be implemented by DUAs
+ supporting the schema.
+
+ The rfc822MailGroup object class MAY be used to represent a mail
+ group for the purpose of alias expansion. Several alternative schemes
+ for mail routing and delivery using LDAP directories, which are
+ outside the scope of this document.
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.0 NAME 'posixAccount' SUP top AUXILIARY
+ DESC 'Abstraction of an account with POSIX attributes'
+ MUST ( cn $ uid $ uidNumber $ gidNumber $ homeDirectory )
+ MAY ( userPassword $ loginShell $ gecos $ description ) )
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 8]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.1 NAME 'shadowAccount' SUP top AUXILIARY
+ DESC 'Additional attributes for shadow passwords'
+ MUST uid
+ MAY ( userPassword $ shadowLastChange $ shadowMin
+ shadowMax $ shadowWarning $ shadowInactive $
+ shadowExpire $ shadowFlag $ description ) )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.2 NAME 'posixGroup' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ DESC 'Abstraction of a group of accounts'
+ MUST ( cn $ gidNumber )
+ MAY ( userPassword $ memberUid $ description ) )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.3 NAME 'ipService' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ DESC 'Abstraction an Internet Protocol service.
+ Maps an IP port and protocol (such as tcp or udp)
+ to one or more names; the distinguished value of
+ the cn attribute denotes the service's canonical
+ name'
+ MUST ( cn $ ipServicePort $ ipServiceProtocol )
+ MAY ( description ) )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.4 NAME 'ipProtocol' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ DESC 'Abstraction of an IP protocol. Maps a protocol number
+ to one or more names. The distinguished value of the cn
+ attribute denotes the protocol's canonical name'
+ MUST ( cn $ ipProtocolNumber $ description )
+ MAY description )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.5 NAME 'oncRpc' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ DESC 'Abstraction of an Open Network Computing (ONC)
+ [RFC1057] Remote Procedure Call (RPC) binding.
+ This class maps an ONC RPC number to a name.
+ The distinguished value of the cn attribute denotes
+ the RPC service's canonical name'
+ MUST ( cn $ oncRpcNumber $ description )
+ MAY description )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.6 NAME 'ipHost' SUP top AUXILIARY
+
+ DESC 'Abstraction of a host, an IP device. The distinguished
+ value of the cn attribute denotes the host's canonical
+ name. Device SHOULD be used as a structural class'
+ MUST ( cn $ ipHostNumber )
+ MAY ( l $ description $ manager ) )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.7 NAME 'ipNetwork' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ DESC 'Abstraction of a network. The distinguished value of
+ the cn attribute denotes the network's canonical name'
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 9]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ MUST ( cn $ ipNetworkNumber )
+ MAY ( ipNetmaskNumber $ l $ description $ manager ) )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.8 NAME 'nisNetgroup' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ DESC 'Abstraction of a netgroup. May refer to other netgroups'
+ MUST cn
+ MAY ( nisNetgroupTriple $ memberNisNetgroup $ description ) )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.09 NAME 'nisMap' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ DESC 'A generic abstraction of a NIS map'
+ MUST nisMapName
+ MAY description )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.10 NAME 'nisObject' SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ DESC 'An entry in a NIS map'
+ MUST ( cn $ nisMapEntry $ nisMapName )
+ MAY description )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.11 NAME 'ieee802Device' SUP top AUXILIARY
+ DESC 'A device with a MAC address; device SHOULD be
+ used as a structural class'
+ MAY macAddress )
+
+ ( nisSchema.2.12 NAME 'bootableDevice' SUP top AUXILIARY
+ DESC 'A device with boot parameters; device SHOULD be
+ used as a structural class'
+ MAY ( bootFile $ bootParameter ) )
+
+5. Implementation details
+
+5.1. Suggested resolution methods
+
+ The preferred means of directing a client application (one using the
+ shared services of the C library) to use LDAP as its information
+ source for the functions listed in 5.2 is to modify the source code
+ to directly query LDAP. As the source to commercial C libraries and
+ applications is rarely available to the end-user, one could emulate a
+ supported nameservice (such as NIS). (This is also an appropriate
+ opportunity to perform caching of entries across process address
+ spaces.) In the case of NIS, reference implementations are widely
+ available and the RPC interface is well known.
+
+ The means by which the operating system is directed to use LDAP is
+ implementation dependent. For example, some operating systems and C
+ libraries support end-user extensible resolvers using dynamically
+ loadable libraries and a nameservice "switch". The means in which the
+ DUA locates LDAP servers is also implementation dependent.
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 10]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+5.2. Affected library functions
+
+ The following functions are typically found in the C libraries of
+ most UNIX and POSIX compliant systems. An LDAP search filter
+ [RFC2254] which may be used to satisfy the function call is included
+ alongside each function name. Parameters are denoted by %s and %d for
+ string and integer arguments, respectively. Long lines are broken.
+
+ getpwnam() (&(objectClass=posixAccount)(uid=%s))
+ getpwuid() (&(objectClass=posixAccount)
+ (uidNumber=%d))
+ getpwent() (objectClass=posixAccount)
+
+ getspnam() (&(objectClass=shadowAccount)(uid=%s))
+ getspent() (objectClass=shadowAccount)
+
+ getgrnam() (&(objectClass=posixGroup)(cn=%s))
+ getgrgid() (&(objectClass=posixGroup)
+ (gidNumber=%d))
+ getgrent() (objectClass=posixGroup)
+
+ getservbyname() (&(objectClass=ipService)
+ (cn=%s)(ipServiceProtocol=%s))
+ getservbyport() (&(objectClass=ipService)
+ (ipServicePort=%d)
+ (ipServiceProtocol=%s))
+ getservent() (objectClass=ipService)
+
+ getrpcbyname() (&(objectClass=oncRpc)(cn=%s))
+ getrpcbynumber() (&(objectClass=oncRpc)(oncRpcNumber=%d))
+ getrpcent() (objectClass=oncRpc)
+
+ getprotobyname() (&(objectClass=ipProtocol)(cn=%s))
+ getprotobynumber() (&(objectClass=ipProtocol)
+ (ipProtocolNumber=%d))
+ getprotoent() (objectClass=ipProtocol)
+
+ gethostbyname() (&(objectClass=ipHost)(cn=%s))
+ gethostbyaddr() (&(objectClass=ipHost)(ipHostNumber=%s))
+ gethostent() (objectClass=ipHost)
+
+ getnetbyname() (&(objectClass=ipNetwork)(cn=%s))
+ getnetbyaddr() (&(objectClass=ipNetwork)
+ (ipNetworkNumber=%s))
+ getnetent() (objectClass=ipNetwork)
+
+ setnetgrent() (&(objectClass=nisNetgroup)(cn=%s))
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 11]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+5.3. Interpreting user and group entries
+
+ User and group resolution is initiated by the functions prefixed by
+ getpw and getgr respectively. The uid attribute contains the user's
+ login name. The cn attribute, in posixGroup entries, contains the
+ group's name.
+
+ The account object class provides a convenient structural class for
+ posixAccount, and SHOULD be used where additional attributes are not
+ required.
+
+ It is suggested that uid and cn are used as the RDN attribute type
+ for posixAccount and posixGroup entries, respectively.
+
+ An account's GECOS field is preferably determined by a value of the
+ gecos attribute. If no gecos attribute exists, the value of the cn
+ attribute MUST be used. (The existence of the gecos attribute allows
+ information embedded in the GECOS field, such as a user's telephone
+ number, to be returned to the client without overloading the cn
+ attribute. It also accommodates directories where the common name
+ does not contain the user's full name.)
+
+ An entry of class posixAccount, posixGroup, or shadowAccount without
+ a userPassword attribute MUST NOT be used for authentication. The
+ client should be returned a non-matchable password such as "x".
+
+ userPassword values MUST be represented by following syntax:
+
+ passwordvalue = schemeprefix encryptedpassword
+ schemeprefix = "{" scheme "}"
+ scheme = "crypt" / "md5" / "sha" / altscheme
+ altscheme = "x-" keystring
+ encryptedpassword = encrypted password
+
+ The encrypted password contains of a plaintext key hashed using the
+ algorithm scheme.
+
+ userPassword values which do not adhere to this syntax MUST NOT be
+ used for authentication. The DUA MUST iterate through the values of
+ the attribute until a value matching the above syntax is found. Only
+ if encryptedpassword is an empty string does the user have no
+ password. DUAs are not required to consider encryption schemes which
+ the client will not recognize; in most cases, it may be sufficient to
+ consider only "crypt".
+
+ Below is an example of a userPassword attribute:
+
+ userPassword: {crypt}X5/DBrWPOQQaI
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 12]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ A future standard may specify LDAP v3 attribute descriptions to
+ represent hashed userPasswords, as noted below. This schema MUST NOT
+ be used with LDAP v2 DUAs and DSAs.
+
+ attributetype = attributename sep attributeoption
+ attributename = "userPassword"
+ sep = ";"
+ attributeoption = schemeclass "-" scheme
+ schemeclass = "hash" / altschemeclass
+ scheme = "crypt" / "md5" / "sha" / altscheme
+ altschemeclass = "x-" keystring
+ altscheme = keystring
+
+
+ Below is an example of a userPassword attribute, represented with an
+ LDAP v3 attribute description:
+
+ userPassword;hash-crypt: X5/DBrWPOQQaI
+
+
+ A DUA MAY utilise the attributes in the shadowAccount class to
+ provide shadow password service (getspnam() and getspent()). In such
+ cases, the DUA MUST NOT make use of the userPassword attribute for
+ getpwnam() et al, and MUST return a non-matchable password (such as
+ "x") to the client instead.
+
+5.4. Interpreting hosts and networks
+
+ The ipHostNumber and ipNetworkNumber attributes are defined in
+ preference to dNSRecord (defined in [RFC1279]), in order to simplify
+ the DUA's role in interpreting entries in the directory. A dNSRecord
+ expresses a complete resource record, including time to live and
+ class data, which is extraneous to this schema.
+
+ Additionally, the ipHost and ipNetwork classes permit a host or
+ network (respectively) and all its aliases to be represented by a
+ single entry in the directory. This is not necessarily possible if a
+ DNS resource record is mapped directly to an LDAP entry.
+ Implementations that wish to use LDAP to master DNS zone information
+ are not precluded from doing so, and may simply avoid the ipHost and
+ ipNetwork classes.
+
+ This document redefines, although not exclusively, the ipNetwork
+ class defined in [RFC1279], in order to achieve consistent naming
+ with ipHost. The ipNetworkNumber attribute is also used in the
+ siteContact object class [ROSE].
+
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 13]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ The trailing zeros in a network address MUST be omitted. CIDR-style
+ network addresses (eg. 192.168.1/24) MAY be used.
+
+ Hosts with IPv6 addresses MUST be written in their "preferred" form
+ as defined in section 2.2.1 of [RFC1884], such that all components of
+ the address are indicated and leading zeros are omitted. This
+ provides a consistent means of resolving ipHosts by address.
+
+5.5. Interpreting other entities
+
+ In general, a one-to-one mapping between entities and LDAP entries is
+ proposed, in that each entity has exactly one representation in the
+ DIT. In some cases this is not feasible; for example, a service which
+ is represented in more than one protocol domain. Consider the
+ following entry:
+
+ dn: cn=domain, dc=aja, dc=com
+ cn: domain
+ cn: nameserver
+ objectClass: top
+ objectClass: ipService
+ ipServicePort: 53
+ ipServiceProtocol: tcp
+ ipServiceProtocol: udp
+
+ This entry MUST map to the following two (2) services entities:
+
+ domain 53/tcp nameserver
+ domain 53/udp nameserver
+
+ While the above two entities may be represented as separate LDAP
+ entities, with different distinguished names (such as
+ cn=domain+ipServiceProtocol=tcp, ... and
+ cn=domain+ipServiceProtocol=udp, ...) it is convenient to represent
+ them as a single entry. (If a service is represented in multiple
+ protocol domains with different ports, then multiple entries are
+ required; multivalued RDNs may be used to distinguish them.)
+
+ With the exception of userPassword values, which are parsed according
+ to the syntax considered in section 5.2, any empty values (consisting
+ of a zero length string) are returned by the DUA to the client. The
+ DUA MUST reject any entries which do not conform to the schema
+ (missing mandatory attributes). Non-conforming entries SHOULD be
+ ignored while enumerating entries.
+
+ The nisObject object class MAY be used as a generic means of
+ representing NIS entities. Its use is not encouraged; where support
+ for entities not described in this schema is desired, an appropriate
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 14]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ schema should be devised. Implementors are strongly advised to
+ support end-user extensible mappings between NIS entities and object
+ classes. (Where the nisObject class is used, the nisMapName attribute
+ may be used as a RDN.)
+
+5.6. Canonicalizing entries with multi-valued naming attributes
+
+ For entities such as hosts, services, networks, protocols, and RPCs,
+ where there may be one or more aliases, the respective entry's
+ relative distinguished name SHOULD be used to determine the canonical
+ name. Any other values for the same attribute are used as aliases.
+ For example, the service described in section 5.5 has the canonical
+ name "domain" and exactly one alias, "nameserver".
+
+ The schema in this document generally only defines one attribute per
+ class which is suitable for distinguishing an entity (excluding any
+ attributes with integer syntax; it is assumed that entries will be
+ distinguished on name). Usually, this is the common name (cn)
+ attribute. This aids the DUA in determining the canonical name of an
+ entity, as it can examine the value of the relative distinguished
+ name. Aliases are thus any values of the distinguishing attribute
+ (such as cn) which do not match the canonical name of the entity.
+
+ In the event that a different attribute is used to distinguish the
+ entry, as may be the case where these object classes are used as
+ auxiliary classes, the entry's canonical name may not be present in
+ the RDN. In this case, the DUA MUST choose one of the non-
+ distinguished values to represent the entity's canonical name. As the
+ directory server guarantees no ordering of attribute values, it may
+ not be possible to distinguish an entry deterministically. This
+ ambiguity SHOULD NOT be resolved by mapping one directory entry into
+ multiple entities.
+
+6. Implementation focus
+
+ A NIS server which uses LDAP instead of local files has been
+ developed which supports the schema defined in this document.
+
+ A reference implementation of the C library resolution code has been
+ written for the Free Software Foundation. It may support other C
+ libraries which support the Name Service Switch (NSS) or the
+ Information Retrieval Service (IRS).
+
+ The author has made available a freely distributable set of scripts
+ which parses local databases such as /etc/passwd and /etc/hosts into
+ a form suitable for loading into an LDAP server.
+
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 15]
+
+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+7. Security Considerations
+
+ The entirety of related security considerations are outside the scope
+ of this document. It is noted that making passwords encrypted with a
+ widely understood hash function (such as crypt()) available to non-
+ privileged users is dangerous because it exposes them to dictionary
+ and brute-force attacks. This is proposed only for compatibility
+ with existing UNIX system implementations. Sites where security is
+ critical SHOULD consider using a strong authentication service for
+ user authentication.
+
+ Alternatively, the encrypted password could be made available only to
+ a subset of privileged DUAs, which would provide "shadow" password
+ service to client applications. This may be difficult to enforce.
+
+ Because the schema represents operating system-level entities, access
+ to these entities SHOULD be granted on a discretionary basis. (There
+ is little point in restricting access to data which will be
+ republished without restriction, however.) It is particularly
+ important that only administrators can modify entries defined in this
+ schema, with the exception of allowing a principal to change their
+ password (which may be done on behalf of the user by a client bound
+ as a superior principal, such that password restrictions may be
+ enforced). For example, if a user were allowed to change the value of
+ their uidNumber attribute, they could subvert security by
+ equivalencing their account with the superuser account.
+
+ A subtree of the DIT which is to be republished by a DUA (such as a
+ NIS gateway) SHOULD be within the same administrative domain that the
+ republishing DUA represents. (For example, principals outside an
+ organization, while conceivably part of the DIT, should not be
+ considered with the same degree of authority as those within the
+ organization.)
+
+ Finally, care should be exercised with integer attributes of a
+ sensitive nature (particularly the uidNumber and gidNumber
+ attributes) which contain zero-length values. DUAs MAY treat such
+ values as corresponding to the "nobody" or "nogroup" user and group,
+ respectively.
+
+8. Acknowledgements
+
+ Thanks to Leif Hedstrom of Netscape Communications Corporation,
+ Michael Grant and Rosanna Lee of Sun Microsystems Inc., Ed Reed of
+ Novell Inc., and Mark Wahl of Critical Angle Inc. for their valuable
+ contributions to the development of this schema. Thanks to Andrew
+ Josey of The Open Group for clarifying the use of the UNIX trademark,
+ and to Tim Howes and Peter J. Cherny for their support.
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 16]
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+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group.
+
+9. References
+
+ [RFC1057]
+ Sun Microsystems, Inc., "RPC: Remote Procedure Call: Protocol
+ Specification Version 2", RFC 1057, June 1988.
+
+ [RFC1279]
+ Kille, S., "X.500 and Domains", RFC 1279, November 1991.
+
+ [RFC1884]
+ Hinden, R., and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
+ Architecture", RFC 1884, December 1995.
+
+ [RFC2119]
+ Bradner, S., "Key Words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
+ Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
+
+ [RFC2251]
+ Wahl, M., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "Lightweight Directory Access
+ Protocol (v3)", RFC 2251, December 1997.
+
+ [RFC2252]
+ Wahl, M., Coulbeck, A., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "Lightweight
+ Directory Access Protocol (v3): Attribute Syntax Definitions",
+ RFC 2252, December 1997.
+
+ [RFC2254]
+ Howes, T., "The String Representation of LDAP Search Filters",
+ RFC 2254, December 1997.
+
+ [RFC2256]
+ Wahl, M., "A Summary of the X.500(96) User Schema for use with
+ LDAPv3", RFC 2256, December 1997.
+
+ [ROSE]
+ M. T. Rose, "The Little Black Book: Mail Bonding with OSI
+ Directory Services", ISBN 0-13-683210-5, Prentice-Hall, Inc.,
+ 1992.
+
+ [X500]
+ "Information Processing Systems - Open Systems Interconnection -
+ The Directory: Overview of Concepts, Models and Service",
+ ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC21, International Standard 9594-1, 1988.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Howard Experimental [Page 17]
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+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+ [XOPEN]
+ ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990, Information Technology - Portable Operating
+ Systems Interface (POSIX) - Part 1: Systems Application
+ Programming Interface (API) [C Language]
+
+10. Author's Address
+
+ Luke Howard
+ PO Box 59
+ Central Park Vic 3145
+ Australia
+
+ EMail: lukeh@xedoc.com
+
+
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+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
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+
+A. Example entries
+
+ The examples described in this section are provided to illustrate the
+ schema described in this memo. They are not meant to be exhaustive.
+
+ The following entry is an example of the posixAccount class:
+
+ dn: uid=lester, dc=aja, dc=com
+ objectClass: top
+ objectClass: account
+ objectClass: posixAccount
+ uid: lester
+ cn: Lester the Nightfly
+ userPassword: {crypt}X5/DBrWPOQQaI
+ gecos: Lester
+ loginShell: /bin/csh
+ uidNumber: 10
+ gidNumber: 10
+ homeDirectory: /home/lester
+
+
+ This corresponds the UNIX system password file entry:
+
+ lester:X5/DBrWPOQQaI:10:10:Lester:/home/lester:/bin/sh
+
+ The following entry is an example of the ipHost class:
+
+ dn: cn=peg.aja.com, dc=aja, dc=com
+ objectClass: top
+ objectClass: device
+ objectClass: ipHost
+ objectClass: bootableDevice
+ objectClass: ieee802Device
+ cn: peg.aja.com
+ cn: www.aja.com
+ ipHostNumber: 10.0.0.1
+ macAddress: 00:00:92:90:ee:e2
+ bootFile: mach
+ bootParameter: root=fs:/nfsroot/peg
+ bootParameter: swap=fs:/nfsswap/peg
+ bootParameter: dump=fs:/nfsdump/peg
+
+ This entry represents the host canonically peg.aja.com, also known as
+ www.aja.com. The Ethernet address and four boot parameters are also
+ specified.
+
+
+
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+Howard Experimental [Page 19]
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+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
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+
+ An example of the nisNetgroup class:
+
+ dn: cn=nightfly, dc=aja, dc=com
+ objectClass: top
+ objectClass: nisNetgroup
+ cn: nightfly
+ nisNetgroupTriple: (charlemagne,peg,dunes.aja.com)
+ nisNetgroupTriple: (lester,-,)
+ memberNisNetgroup: kamakiriad
+
+ This entry represents the netgroup nightfly, which contains two
+ triples (the user charlemagne, the host peg, and the domain
+ dunes.aja.com; and, the user lester, no host, and any domain) and one
+ netgroup (kamakiriad).
+
+ Finally, an example of the nisObject class:
+
+ dn: nisMapName=tracks, dc=dunes, dc=aja, dc=com
+ objectClass: top
+ objectClass: nisMap
+ nisMapName: tracks
+
+ dn: cn=Maxine, nisMapName=tracks, dc=dunes, dc=aja, dc=com
+ objectClass: top
+ objectClass: nisObject
+ cn: Maxine
+ nisMapName: tracks
+ nisMapEntry: Nightfly$4
+
+ This entry represents the NIS map tracks, and a single map entry.
+
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+RFC 2307 Using LDAP as a Network Information Service March 1998
+
+
+Full Copyright Statement
+
+ Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved.
+
+ This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
+ others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
+ or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
+ and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
+ kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
+ included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
+ document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
+ the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
+ Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
+ developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
+ copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
+ followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
+ English.
+
+ The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
+ revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
+
+ This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
+ "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
+ TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
+ BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
+ HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
+ MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
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