================================================= Common LDAP operation (for YunoHost but not only) ================================================= Moulinette is deeply integrated with LDAP which is used for a series of things like: * storing users * storing domains (for users emails) * SSO This page document how to uses it on a programming side in YunoHost. Getting access to LDAP in a command =================================== To get access to LDAP you need to authenticate against it, for that you need to declare you command with requiring authentication in the :ref:`actionsmap` this way: :: configuration: authenticate: all Here is a complete example: :: somecommand: category_help: .. actions: ### somecommand_stuff() stuff: action_help: ... api: GET /... configuration: authenticate: all This will prompt the user for a password in CLI. If you only need to **read** LDAP (and not modify it, for example by listing domains), then you prevent the need for a password by using the :file:`ldap-anonymous` authenticator this way: :: configuration: authenticate: all authenticator: ldap-anonymous Once you have declared your command like that, your python function will received the :file:`auth` object as first argument, it will be used to talk to LDAP, so you need to declare your function this way: :: def somecommand_stuff(auth, ...): ... Reading from LDAP ================= Reading data from LDAP is done using the :file:`auth` object received as first argument of the python function. To see how to get this object read the previous section. The API looks like this: :: auth.search(ldap_path, ldap_query) This will return a list of dictionary with strings as keys and list as values. You can also specify a list of attributes you want to access from LDAP using a list of string (on only one string apparently): :: auth.search(ldap_path, ldap_query, ['first_attribute', 'another_attribute']) For example, if we request the user :file:`alice` with its :file:`homeDirectory`, this would look like this: :: auth.search('ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org', '(&(objectclass=person)(uid=alice))', ['homeDirectory', 'another_attribute']) And as a result we will get: :: [{'homeDirectory': ['/home/alice']}] Notice that even for a single result we get a **list** of result and that every value in the dictionary is also a **list** of values. This is not really convenient and it would be better to have a real ORM, but for now we are stuck with that. Apparently if we don't specify the list of attributes it seems that we get all attributes (need to be confirmed). Users LDAP schema ----------------- According to :file:`ldapvi` this is the user schema (on YunoHost 2.7): :: # path: uid=the_unix_username,ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org uid: the_unix_username objectClass: mailAccount objectClass: inetOrgPerson objectClass: posixAccount loginShell: /bin/false uidNumber: 80833 maildrop: the_unix_username # why? cn: first_name last_name displayName: first_name last_name mailuserquota: some_value gidNumber: 80833 sn: last_name homeDirectory: /home/the_unix_username mail: the_unix_username@domain.com # if the user is the admin he will also have the following mails mail: root@domain.com mail: admin@domain.com mail: webmaster@domain.com mail: postmaster@domain.com givenName: first_name The admin user is a special case that looks like this: :: # path: cn=admin,dc=yunohost,dc=org gidNumber: 1007 cn: admin homeDirectory: /home/admin objectClass: organizationalRole objectClass: posixAccount objectClass: simpleSecurityObject loginShell: /bin/bash description: LDAP Administrator uidNumber: 1007 uid: admin Reading users from LDAP ----------------------- The user schema is located at this path: :file:`ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org` According to already existing code, the queries we uses are: * :file:`'(&(objectclass=person)(!(uid=root))(!(uid=nobody)))'` to get all users (not that I've never encountered users with :file:`root` or :file:`nobody` uid in the ldap database, those might be there for historical reason) * :file:`'(&(objectclass=person)(uid=%s))' % username` to access one user data This give us the 2 following python calls: :: # all users auth.search('ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org', '(&(objectclass=person)(!(uid=root))(!(uid=nobody)))') # one user auth.search('ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org', '(&(objectclass=person)(uid=some_username))') Apparently we could also access one user using the following path (and not query): :file:`uid=user_username,ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org` but I haven't test it. If you want specific attributes look at the general documentation on how to read from LDAP a bit above of this section. Updating LDAP data ================== Update a user from LDAP looks like a simplified version of searching. The syntax is the following one: :: auth.update(exact_path_to_object, {'attribute_to_modify': 'new_value', 'another_attribute_to_modify': 'another_value', ...}) For example this will update a user :file:`loginShell`: :: auth.update('uid=some_username,ou=users', {'loginShell': '/bin/bash'}) I don't know how this call behave if it fails and what it returns. Updating a user in LDAP ------------------------- This is done this way: :: auth.update('uid=some_username,ou=users', {'attribute': 'new_value', ...}) Refer to the user schema to know which attributes you can modify.