Chapter 3. Managing Directory Entries
You can manage directory entries using the command line or the web console.
3.1. Managing Directory Entries Using the Command Line
To perform LDAP operations using the command line, install the openldap-clients package. The utilities installed by this package enable you to:
- Add new entries
- Add new attributes to existing entries
- Update existing entries and attributes
- Delete entries and attributes from entries
- Perform bulk operations
To install the openldap-clients package:
# yum install openldap-clients
Note
To perform LDAP operations, you need the appropriate permissions. For details about access control, see Chapter 18, Managing Access Control.
3.1.1. Providing Input to the ldapadd
, ldapmodify
, and ldapdelete
Utilities
When you add, update, or delete entries or attributes in your directory, you can either use the interactive mode of the utilities to enter LDAP Data Interchange Format (LDIF) statements or pass an LDIF file to them.
For further details about LDIF, see Section B.1, “About the LDIF File Format”.
3.1.1.1. Providing Input Using the Interactive Mode
In the interactive mode, the
ldapadd
, ldapmodify
, and ldapdelete
utilities read the input from the command line. To exit the interactive mode, press the Ctrl+D (^D
) key combination to send the End Of File (EOF) escape sequence.
In interactive mode, the utility sends the statements to the LDAP server when you press Enter twice or when you send the EOF sequence.
Use the interactive mode:
- To enter LDIF statements without creating a file:
Example 3.1. Using the
ldapmodify
Interactive Mode to Enter LDIF StatementsThe following example startsldapmodify
in interactive mode, deletes thetelephoneNumber
attribute, and adds the manager attribute with thecn=manager_name,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
value to theuid=user,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
entry. Press Ctrl+D after the last statement to exit the interactive mode.# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify delete: telephoneNumber - add: manager manager: cn=manager_name,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
^D
- To redirect LDIF statements, outputted by another command, to Directory Server:
Example 3.2. Using the
ldapmodify
Interactive Mode with Redirected ContentThe following example redirects the output of thecommand_that_outputs_LDIF
command toldapmodify
. The interactive mode exits automatically after the redirected command exits.# command_that_outputs_LDIF | ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" \ -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x
3.1.1.2. Providing Input Using an LDIF File
In the interactive mode, the
ldapadd
, ldapmodify
, and ldapdelete
utilities read the LDIF statements from a file. Use this mode to send a larger number of LDIF statements to Directory Server.
Example 3.3. Passing a File with LDIF Statements to ldapmodify
- Create a file with the LDIF statements. For example, create the
~/example.ldif
file with the following statements:dn: uid=user,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify delete: telephoneNumber - add: manager manager: cn=manager_name,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
This example deletes thetelephoneNumber
attribute and to adds the manager attribute with thecn=manager_name,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
value to theuid=user,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
entry. - Pass the file to the
ldapmodify
command using the-f file_name
option:# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x \ -f ~/example.ldif
3.1.2. The Continuous Operation Mode
If you send multiple LDIF statements to Directory Server and one operation fails, the process stops. However, entries processed before the error occurred were successfully added, modified, or deleted.
To ignore errors and continue processing further LDIF statements in a batch, pass the
-c
option to ldapadd
and ldapmodify
. For example:
# ldpamodify -c -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x
3.1.3. Adding an Entry
To add a new entry to the directory, use the
ldapadd
or ldapmodify
utility. Note that ldapadd
is a symbolic link to /bin/ldapmodify
. Therefore, ldapadd
performs the same operation as ldapmodify -a
.
Note
You can only add a new directory entry, if the parent entry already exists. For example, you cannot add the
cn=user,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
entry, if the ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
parent entry does not exist.
3.1.3.1. Adding an Entry Using ldapadd
To use the
ldapadd
utility to add, for example, the cn=user,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
user entry:
# ldapadd -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com uid: user givenName: given_name objectClass: top objectClass: person objectClass: organizationalPerson objectClass: inetorgperson sn: surname cn: user
Note
Running
ldapadd
automatically performs a changetype: add
operation. Therefore, you do not need to specify changetype: add
in the LDIF statement.
For further details on the parameters used in the command, see the ldapadd(1) man page.
3.1.3.2. Adding an Entry Using ldapmodify
To use the
ldapmodify
utility to add, for example, the cn=user,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com
user entry:
# ldapmodify -a -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x
dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
uid: user
givenName: given_name
objectClass: top
objectClass: person
objectClass: organizationalPerson
objectClass: inetorgperson
sn: surname
cn: user
Note
When passing the
-a
option to the ldapmodify
command, the utility automatically performs a changetype: add
operation. Therefore, you do not need to specify changetype: add
in the LDIF statement.
For further details on the parameters used in the command, see the ldapmodify(1) man page.
3.1.3.3. Creating a Root Entry
To create the root entry of a database suffix, such as
dc=example,dc=com
, bind as the cn=Directory Manager
user and add the entry.
The DN corresponds to the DN of the root or sub-suffix of the database.
For example, to add the
dc=example,dc=com
suffix:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: dc=example,dc=com changetype: add objectClass: top objectClass: domain dc: example
Note
You can add root objects only if you have one database per suffix. If you create a suffix that is stored in several databases, you must use the
ldif2db
utility with the -n back_end
option to set the database that will hold the new entries. For details, see Section 6.1.2, “Importing Using the Command Line”.
3.1.4. Updating a Directory Entry
When you modify a directory entry, use the
changetype: modify
statement. Depending on the change operation, you can add, change, or delete attributes from the entry.
Use the
ldapmodify
utility to send the LDIF statements to Directory Server. For example, in interactive mode:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x
For further details on the parameters used in
ldapmodify
commands, see the ldapmodify(1) man page.
3.1.4.1. Adding Attributes to an Entry
To add an attribute to an entry, use the
add
operation.
For example, to add the
telephoneNumber
attribute with the 555-1234567
value to the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify add: telephoneNumber telephoneNumber: 555-1234567
If an attribute is multi-valued, you can specify the attribute name multiple times to add all the values in a single operation. For example, to add two
telephoneNumber
attributes at once to the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify add: telephoneNumber telephoneNumber: 555-1234567 telephoneNumber: 555-7654321
3.1.4.2. Updating an Attribute's Value
The procedure for updating an attribute's value depends on if the attribute is single-valued or multi-valued.
Updating a Single-value Attribute
When updating a single-value attribute, use the
replace
operation to override the existing value. The following command updates the manager
attribute of the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify replace: manager manager: uid=manager_name,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
Updating a Specific Value of a Multi-value Attribute
To update a specific value of a multi-value attribute, you must first delete the entry you want to replace, and then add the new value. The following command updates only the
telephoneNumber
attribute that is currently set to 555-1234567
in the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify delete: telephoneNumber telephoneNumber: 555-1234567 - add: telephoneNumber telephoneNumber: 555-9876543
3.1.4.3. Deleting Attributes from an Entry
To delete an attribute from an entry, use the
delete
operation.
Deleting an Attribute
For example, to delete the
manager
attribute from the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify delete: manager
Note
If the attribute contains multiple values, this operation deletes all of them.
Deleting a Specific Value of a Multi-value Attribute
If you want to delete a specific value from a multi-value attribute, list the attribute and its value in the LDIF statement. For example, to delete only the
telephoneNumber
attribute that is set to 555-1234567
from the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify delete: telephoneNumber telephoneNumber: 555-1234567
3.1.5. Deleting an Entry
Deleting an entry removes the entry from the directory.
Note
You can only delete entries that have no child entries. For example, you cannot delete the
ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry, if the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry still exists.
3.1.5.1. Deleting an Entry Using ldapdelete
The
ldapdelete
utility enables you to delete one or multiple entries. For example, to delete the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry:
# ldapdelete -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x "uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com"
To delete multiple entries in one operation, append them to the command. For example:
# ldapdelete -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x \ "uid=user1,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com" \ "uid=user2,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com"
For further details on the parameters used, see the ldapdelete(1) man page.
3.1.5.2. Deleting an Entry Using ldapmodify
To delete an entry using the
ldapmodify
utility, use the changetype: delete
operation. For example, to delete the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: delete
3.1.6. Renaming and Moving an Entry
This section explains how to rename or move entries.
Note
Use the
moddn
Access Control List (ACL) to grant permissions to move entries. For details, see Section 18.9.2.1, “Targeting Source and Destination DNs”.
The following rename operations exist:
- Renaming an Entry
- If you rename an entry, the
modrdn
operation changes the Relative Distinguished Name (RDN) of the entry: - Renaming a Subentry
- For subtree entries, the
modrdn
operation renames the subtree and also the DN components of child entries:Note that for large subtrees, this process can take a lot of time and resources. - Moving an Entry to a New Parent
- A similar action to renaming a subtree is moving an entry from one subtree to another. This is an expanded type of the
modrdn
operation, which simultaneously renames the entry and sets anewSuperior
attribute which moves the entry from one parent to another:
3.1.6.1. Considerations for Renaming Entries
Keep the following in mind when performing rename operations:
- You cannot rename the root suffix.
- Subtree rename operations have minimal effect on replication. Replication agreements are applied to an entire database, not a subtree within the database. Therefore, a subtree rename operation does not require reconfiguring a replication agreement. All name changes after a subtree rename operation are replicated as normal.
- Renaming a subtree might require any synchronization agreements to be reconfigured. Synchronization agreements are set at the suffix or subtree level. Therefore, renaming a subtree might break synchronization.
- Renaming a subtree requires that any subtree-level Access Control Instructions (ACI) set for the subtree be reconfigured manually, as well as any entry-level ACIs set for child entries of the subtree.
- Trying to change the component of a subtree, such as moving from
ou
todc
, might fail with a schema violation. For example, theorganizationalUnit
object class requires theou
attribute. If that attribute is removed as part of renaming the subtree, the operation fails. - If you move a group, the MemberOf plug-in automatically updates the
memberOf
attributes. However, if you move a subtree that contain groups, you must manually create a task in thecn=memberof task
entry or use thefixup-memberof.pl
to update the relatedmemberOf
attributes.For details about cleaning upmemberOf
attribute references, see Section 8.1.4.8, “RegeneratingmemberOf
Values”.
3.1.6.2. Renaming Users, Groups, POSIX Groups, and OUs
The
dsidm
utility can rename several types of objects:
- Users:
# dsidm -D "cn=Directory Manager" ldap://server.example.com -b "dc=example,dc=com" user rename current_user_name new_user_name
Note that thedsidm user rename
command automatically placesou=People
in front of the base DN you have specified. - Groups:
# dsidm -D "cn=Directory Manager" ldap://server.example.com -b "dc=example,dc=com" group rename current_group_name new_group_name
Note that thedsidm group rename
command automatically placesou=Groups
in front of the base DN you have specified. - POSIX Groups:
# dsidm -D "cn=Directory Manager" ldap://server.example.com -b "dc=example,dc=com" posixgroup rename current_posix_group_name new_posix_group_name
Note that thedsidm posixgroup rename
command automatically placesou=Groups
in front of the base DN you have specified. - Organizational Units (OU)
# dsidm -D "cn=Directory Manager" ldap://server.example.com -b "dc=example,dc=com" organizationalunit rename current_ou_name new_ou_name
Thedsidm organizationalunit rename
command performs the rename operation directly in the base DN you have specified.
3.1.6.3. The deleteOldRDN
Parameter When Renaming Entries Using LDIF Statements
When you rename an entry, the
deleteOldRDN
parameter controls whether the old RDN will be deleted or retained.
deleteOldRDN
:0
- The existing RDN is retained as a value in the new entry. The resulting entry contains two
cn
attributes: one with the old and one with the new common name (CN).For example, the following attributes belong to a group that was renamed fromcn=old_group,dc=example,dc=com
tocn=new_group,dc=example,dc=com
with thedeleteOldRDN: 0
parameter set.dn: cn=new_group,ou=Groups,dc=example,dc=com objectClass: top objectClass: groupOfUniqueNames cn: old_group cn: new_group
deleteOldRDN
:1
- Directory Server deletes the old entry and creates a new entry using the new RDN. The new entry only contains the
cn
attribute of the new entry.For example, the following group was renamed tocn=new_group,dc=example,dc=com
with thedeleteOldRDN: 1
parameter set:dn: cn=new_group,ou=Groups,dc=example,dc=com objectClass: top objectClass: groupofuniquenames cn: new_group
3.1.6.4. Renaming an Entry or Subtree Using LDIF Statements
To rename an entry or subtree, use the
changetype: modrdn
operation and, set the new RDN in the newrdn
attribute.
For example, to rename the
cn=demo1,dc=example,dc=com
entry to cn=example_user,dc=example,dc=com
:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: cn=example_user,cn=ldap_connect,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modrdn newrdn: cn=example_user deleteOldRDN: 1 newSuperior: dc=example,dc=com
For details about the
deleteOldRDN
, see Section 3.1.6.3, “The deleteOldRDN
Parameter When Renaming Entries Using LDIF Statements”.
3.1.6.5. Moving an Entry to a New Parent Using LDIF Statements
To move an entry to a new parent, use the
changetype: modrdn
operation and set the following to attributes:
newrdn
- Sets the RDN of the moved entry. You must set this entry, even if the RDN remains the same.
newSuperior
- Sets the DN of the new parent entry.
For example, to move the
cn=demo
entry from ou=Germany,dc=example,dc=com
to ou=France,dc=example,dc=com
:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: cn=demo,ou=Germany,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modrdn newrdn: cn=demo deleteOldRDN: 1 newSuperior: ou=France,dc=example,dc=com
For details about the
deleteOldRDN
, see Section 3.1.6.3, “The deleteOldRDN
Parameter When Renaming Entries Using LDIF Statements”.
3.1.7. Using Special Characters
When using the command line, enclose characters that have a special meaning to the command-line interpreter, such as space ( ), asterisk (*), or backslash (\), with quotation marks. Depending on the command-line interpreter, use single or double quotation marks.
For example, to authenticate as the
cn=Directory Manager
user, enclose the user's DN in quotation marks:
# ldapmodify -a -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x
Additionally, if a DN contains a comma in a component, escape it using a backslash. For example, to authenticate as the
uid=user,ou=People,dc=example.com Chicago, IL
user:
# ldapmodify -a -D "cn=uid=user,ou=People,dc=example.com Chicago\, IL" \
-W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x
3.1.8. Using Binary Attributes
Certain attributes support binary values, such as the
jpegPhoto
attribute. When you add or update such an attribute, the utility reads the value for the attribute from a file. To add or update such an attribute, you can use the ldapmodify
utility.
For example, to add the
jpegPhoto
attribute to the uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
entry, and read the value for the attribute from the /home/user_name/photo.jpg
file, enter:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify add: jpegPhoto jpegPhoto:< file:///home/user_name/photo.jpg
Important
Note that there is no space between
:
and <
.
3.1.9. Updating an Entry in an Internationalized Directory
To use attribute values with languages other than English, associate the attribute's value with a language tag.
When using
ldapmodify
to update an attribute that has a language tag set, you must match the value and language tag exactly or the operation will fail.
For example, to modify an attribute value that has the
lang-fr
language tag set, include the tag in the modify
operation:
# ldapmodify -D "cn=Directory Manager" -W -p 389 -h server.example.com -x dn: uid=user,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com changetype: modify replace: homePostalAddress;lang-fr homePostalAddress;lang-fr: 34 rue de Seine