Net::LDAP::Util(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Net::LDAP::Util(3)
NAME
Net::LDAP::Util - Utility functions
SYNOPSIS
use Net::LDAP::Util qw(ldap_error_text
ldap_error_name
ldap_error_desc
);
$mesg = $ldap->search( .... );
die "Error ",ldap_error_name($mesg) if $mesg->code;
DESCRIPTION
Net::LDAP::Util is a collection of utility functions for use with the Net::LDAP modules.
FUNCTIONS
ldap_error_name ( ERR )
Returns the name corresponding with ERR. ERR can either be an LDAP error number, or a "Net::LDAP::Message" object containing an error
code. If the error is not known the a string in the form "LDAP error code %d(0x%02X)" is returned.
ldap_error_text ( ERR )
Returns the text from the POD description for the given error. ERR can either be an LDAP error code, or a "Net::LDAP::Message" object
containing an LDAP error code. If the error code given is unknown then "undef" is returned.
ldap_error_desc ( ERR )
Returns a short text description of the error. ERR can either be an LDAP error code or a "Net::LDAP::Message" object containing an LDAP
error code.
canonical_dn ( DN [ , OPTIONS ] )
Returns the given DN in a canonical form. Returns undef if DN is not a valid Distinguished Name. (Note: The empty string "" is a valid
DN.) DN can either be a string or reference to an array of hashes as returned by ldap_explode_dn, which is useful when constructing a
DN.
It performs the following operations on the given DN:
o Removes the leading 'OID.' characters if the type is an OID instead of a name.
o Escapes all RFC 4514 special characters (",", "+", """, "", "<", ">", ";", "#", "=", " "), slashes ("/"), and any other character
where the ASCII code is < 32 as hexpair.
o Converts all leading and trailing spaces in values to be 20.
o If an RDN contains multiple parts, the parts are re-ordered so that the attribute type names are in alphabetical order.
OPTIONS is a list of name/value pairs, valid options are:
casefold
Controls case folding of attribute type names. Attribute values are not affected by this option. The default is to uppercase. Valid
values are:
lower
Lowercase attribute type names.
upper
Uppercase attribute type names. This is the default.
none
Do not change attribute type names.
mbcescape
If TRUE, characters that are encoded as a multi-octet UTF-8 sequence will be escaped as (hexpair){2,*}.
reverse
If TRUE, the RDN sequence is reversed.
separator
Separator to use between RDNs. Defaults to comma (',').
ldap_explode_dn ( DN [ , OPTIONS ] )
Explodes the given DN into an array of hashes and returns a reference to this array. Returns undef if DN is not a valid Distinguished
Name.
A Distinguished Name is a sequence of Relative Distinguished Names (RDNs), which themselves are sets of Attributes. For each RDN a hash
is constructed with the attribute type names as keys and the attribute values as corresponding values. These hashes are then stored in
an array in the order in which they appear in the DN.
For example, the DN 'OU=Sales+CN=J. Smith,DC=example,DC=net' is exploded to:
[
{
'OU' => 'Sales',
'CN' => 'J. Smith'
},
{
'DC' => 'example'
},
{
'DC' => 'net'
}
]
(RFC4514 string) DNs might also contain values, which are the bytes of the BER encoding of the X.500 AttributeValue rather than some
LDAP string syntax. These values are hex-encoded and prefixed with a #. To distinguish such BER values, ldap_explode_dn uses
references to the actual values, e.g. '1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.0=#04024869,DC=example,DC=com' is exploded to:
[
{
'1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.0' => "