ruby-net-ldap/lib/net/ldap/entry.rb

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# LDAP Entry (search-result) support classes
#
#----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# Copyright (C) 2006 by Francis Cianfrocca. All Rights Reserved.
#
# Gmail: garbagecat10
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
#
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
module Net
class LDAP
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# Objects of this class represent individual entries in an LDAP
# directory. User code generally does not instantiate this class.
# Net::LDAP#search provides objects of this class to user code,
# either as block parameters or as return values.
#
# In LDAP-land, an "entry" is a collection of attributes that are
# uniquely and globally identified by a DN ("Distinguished Name").
# Attributes are identified by short, descriptive words or phrases.
# Although a directory is
# free to implement any attribute name, most of them follow rigorous
# standards so that the range of commonly-encountered attribute
# names is not large.
#
# An attribute name is case-insensitive. Most directories also
# restrict the range of characters allowed in attribute names.
# To simplify handling attribute names, Net::LDAP::Entry
# internally converts them to a standard format. Therefore, the
# methods which take attribute names can take Strings or Symbols,
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# and work correctly regardless of case or capitalization.
#
# An attribute consists of zero or more data items called
# <i>values.</i> An entry is the combination of a unique DN, a set of attribute
# names, and a (possibly-empty) array of values for each attribute.
#
# Class Net::LDAP::Entry provides convenience methods for dealing
# with LDAP entries.
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# In addition to the methods documented below, you may access individual
# attributes of an entry simply by giving the attribute name as
# the name of a method call. For example:
# ldap.search( ... ) do |entry|
# puts "Common name: #{entry.cn}"
# puts "Email addresses:"
# entry.mail.each {|ma| puts ma}
# end
# If you use this technique to access an attribute that is not present
# in a particular Entry object, a NoMethodError exception will be raised.
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#
#--
# Ugly problem to fix someday: We key off the internal hash with
# a canonical form of the attribute name: convert to a string,
# downcase, then take the symbol. Unfortunately we do this in
# at least three places. Should do it in ONE place.
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class Entry
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# This constructor is not generally called by user code.
#--
# Originally, myhash took a block so we wouldn't have to
# make sure its elements returned empty arrays when necessary.
# Got rid of that to enable marshalling of Entry objects,
# but that doesn't work anyway, because Entry objects have
# singleton methods. So we define a custom dump and load.
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def initialize dn = nil # :nodoc:
@myhash = {} # originally: Hash.new {|k,v| k[v] = [] }
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@myhash[:dn] = [dn]
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end
def _dump depth
to_ldif
end
class << self
def _load entry
from_single_ldif_string entry
end
end
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#--
# Discovered bug, 26Aug06: I noticed that we're not converting the
# incoming value to an array if it isn't already one.
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def []= name, value # :nodoc:
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sym = name.to_s.downcase.intern
value = [value] unless value.is_a?(Array)
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@myhash[sym] = value
end
#--
# We have to deal with this one as we do with []=
# because this one and not the other one gets called
# in formulations like entry["CN"] << cn.
#
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def [] name # :nodoc:
name = name.to_s.downcase.intern unless name.is_a?(Symbol)
@myhash[name] || []
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end
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# Returns the dn of the Entry as a String.
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def dn
self[:dn][0].to_s
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end
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# Returns an array of the attribute names present in the Entry.
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def attribute_names
@myhash.keys
end
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# Accesses each of the attributes present in the Entry.
# Calls a user-supplied block with each attribute in turn,
# passing two arguments to the block: a Symbol giving
# the name of the attribute, and a (possibly empty)
# Array of data values.
#
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def each
if block_given?
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attribute_names.each {|a|
attr_name,values = a,self[a]
yield attr_name, values
}
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end
end
alias_method :each_attribute, :each
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# Converts the Entry to a String, representing the
# Entry's attributes in LDIF format.
#--
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def to_ldif
ary = []
ary << "dn: #{dn}\n"
v2 = "" # temp value, save on GC
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each_attribute do |k,v|
unless k == :dn
v.each {|v1|
v2 = if (k == :userpassword) || is_attribute_value_binary?(v1)
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": #{Base64.encode64(v1).chomp.gsub(/\n/m,"\n ")}"
else
" #{v1}"
end
ary << "#{k}:#{v2}\n"
}
end
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end
ary << "\n"
ary.join
end
#--
# TODO, doesn't support broken lines.
# It generates a SINGLE Entry object from an incoming LDIF stream
# which is of course useless for big LDIF streams that encode
# many objects.
# DO NOT DOCUMENT THIS METHOD UNTIL THESE RESTRICTIONS ARE LIFTED.
# As it is, it's useful for unmarshalling objects that we create,
# but not for reading arbitrary LDIF files.
# Eventually, we should have a class method that parses large LDIF
# streams into individual LDIF blocks (delimited by blank lines)
# and passes them here.
#
# There is one oddity, noticed by Matthias Tarasiewicz: as originally
# written, this code would return an Entry object in which the DN
# attribute consisted of a two-element array, and the first element was
# nil. That's because Entry#initialize doesn't like to create an object
# without a DN attribute so it adds one: nil. The workaround here is
# to wipe out the nil DN after creating the Entry object, and trust the
# LDIF string to fill it in. If it doesn't we return a nil at the end.
# (30Sep06, FCianfrocca)
#
class << self
def from_single_ldif_string ldif
entry = Entry.new
entry[:dn] = []
ldif.split(/\r?\n/m).each {|line|
break if line.length == 0
if line =~ /\A([\w]+):(:?)[\s]*/
entry[$1] <<= if $2 == ':'
Base64.decode64($')
else
$'
end
end
}
entry.dn ? entry : nil
end
end
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#--
# Convenience method to convert unknown method names
# to attribute references. Of course the method name
# comes to us as a symbol, so let's save a little time
# and not bother with the to_s.downcase two-step.
# Of course that means that a method name like mAIL
# won't work, but we shouldn't be encouraging that
# kind of bad behavior in the first place.
# Maybe we should thow something if the caller sends
# arguments or a block...
#
def method_missing *args, &block # :nodoc:
s = args[0].to_s.downcase.intern
if attribute_names.include?(s)
self[s]
elsif s.to_s[-1] == 61 and s.to_s.length > 1
value = args[1] or raise RuntimeError.new( "unable to set value" )
value = [value] unless value.is_a?(Array)
name = s.to_s[0..-2].intern
self[name] = value
else
raise NoMethodError.new( "undefined method '#{s}'" )
end
end
def write
end
#--
# Internal convenience method. It seems like the standard
# approach in most LDAP tools to base64 encode an attribute
# value if its first or last byte is nonprintable, or if
# it's a password. But that turns out to be not nearly good
# enough. There are plenty of A/D attributes that are binary
# in the middle. This is probably a nasty performance killer.
def is_attribute_value_binary? value
v = value.to_s
v.each_byte {|byt|
return true if (byt < 32) || (byt > 126)
}
if v[0..0] == ':' or v[0..0] == '<'
return true
end
false
end
private :is_attribute_value_binary?
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end # class Entry
end # class LDAP
end # module Net