Provided by: slapd_2.6.3+dfsg-1~exp1ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       slapo-constraint - Attribute Constraint Overlay to slapd

SYNOPSIS

       /etc/ldap/slapd.conf

DESCRIPTION

       The  constraint  overlay  is  used  to ensure that attribute values match some constraints
       beyond basic LDAP syntax.  Attributes can have multiple constraints placed upon them,  and
       all must be satisfied when modifying an attribute value under constraint.

       This  overlay  is  intended  to  be used to force syntactic regularity upon certain string
       represented data which have well known  canonical  forms,  like  telephone  numbers,  post
       codes, FQDNs, etc.

       It  constrains only LDAP add, modify and rename commands and only seeks to control the add
       and replace values of modify and rename requests.

       No constraints are applied for operations performed with the relax control set.

CONFIGURATION

       This slapd.conf option applies to the constraint overlay.   It  should  appear  after  the
       overlay directive.

       constraint_attribute <attribute_name>[,...] <type> <value> [<extra> [...]]
              Specifies  the  constraint which should apply to the comma-separated attribute list
              named as the first parameter.  Six types of constraint are  currently  supported  -
              regex, negregex, size, count, uri, and set.

              The  parameter  following  the  regex  or  negregex  type  is  a Unix style regular
              expression (See regex(7) ). The parameter following the uri type is  an  LDAP  URI.
              The  URI  will  be  evaluated  using  an  internal  search.   It must not include a
              hostname, and it must include a list of attributes to evaluate.

              The parameter following the set type is a string that is interpreted  according  to
              the  syntax in use for ACL sets.  This allows one to construct constraints based on
              the contents of the entry.

              The size type can be used to enforce a limit on an attribute length, and the  count
              type limits the number of values of an attribute.

              Extra parameters can occur in any order after those described above.

              <extra> : restrict=<uri>

              This  extra  parameter  allows one to restrict the application of the corresponding
              constraint only to entries that match the base, scope and filter  portions  of  the
              LDAP URI.  The base, if present, must be within the naming context of the database.
              The scope is only used when the base is present; it defaults to  base.   The  other
              parameters of the URI are not allowed.

       Any  attempt  to  add  or  modify  an  attribute  named  as part of the constraint overlay
       specification  which  does  not   fit   the   constraint   listed   will   fail   with   a
       LDAP_CONSTRAINT_VIOLATION error.

EXAMPLES

              overlay constraint
              constraint_attribute jpegPhoto size 131072
              constraint_attribute userPassword count 3
              constraint_attribute mail regex ^[[:alnum:]]+@mydomain.com$
              constraint_attribute mail negregex ^[[:alnum:]]+@notallowed.com$
              constraint_attribute title uri
                ldap:///dc=catalog,dc=example,dc=com?title?sub?(objectClass=titleCatalog)
              constraint_attribute cn,sn,givenName set
                "(this/givenName + [ ] + this/sn) & this/cn"
                restrict="ldap:///ou=People,dc=example,dc=com??sub?(objectClass=inetOrgPerson)"

       A  specification  like  the  above would reject any mail attribute which did not look like
       <alphanumeric    string>@mydomain.com     or     that     looks     like     <alphanumeric
       string>@notallowed.com.   It  would  also reject any title attribute whose values were not
       listed in the title attribute of any titleCatalog entries in the given scope.  (Note  that
       the  "dc=catalog,dc=example,dc=com"  subtree  ought  to  reside  in  a  separate database,
       otherwise the initial set of  titleCatalog  entries  could  not  be  populated  while  the
       constraint  is  in  effect.)   Finally,  it  requires the values of the attribute cn to be
       constructed by pairing values of the attributes sn and givenName, separated  by  a  space,
       but only for entries derived from the objectClass inetOrgPerson.

FILES

       /etc/ldap/slapd.conf
              default slapd configuration file

SEE ALSO

       slapd.conf(5), slapd-config(5),

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       This  module  was  written  in  2005  by  Neil  Dunbar of Hewlett-Packard and subsequently
       extended by  Howard  Chu  and  Emmanuel  Dreyfus.   OpenLDAP  Software  is  developed  and
       maintained  by  The  OpenLDAP  Project  <http://www.openldap.org/>.   OpenLDAP Software is
       derived from the University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release.