ldap_search_st()--Perform an LDAP Search Operation (Timed Synchronous)



  Syntax
 #include <sys/time.h>
 #include <ldap.h>

 int ldap_search_st(
                LDAP            *ld,
                const char      *base,
                int              scope,
                const char      *filter,
                char           **attrs,
                int              attrsonly,
                struct timeval  *timeout,
                LDAPMessage    **res)

  Default Public Authority: *USE

  Library Name/Service Program: QSYS/QGLDCLNT

  Threadsafe: Yes

The ldap_search_st() function is used to perform an LDAP search operation.


Authorities and Locks

No i5/OS authority is required. All authority checking is done by the LDAP server.


Parameters

ld
(Input) Specifies the LDAP pointer returned by a previous call to ldap_init(), ldap_ssl_init(), or ldap_open().
base
(Input) Specifies the DN of the entry at which to start the search.
scope
(Input) Specifies the scope of the search. It can be LDAP_SCOPE_BASE (to search the object itself), or LDAP_SCOPE_ONELEVEL (to search the object's immediate children), or LDAP_SCOPE_SUBTREE (to search the object and all its descendents).
filter
(Input) Specifies a string representation of the filter to apply in the search. Simple filters can be specified as attributetype=attributevalue. More complex filters are specified using a prefix notation according to the following BNF:
      <filter>     ::= '(' <filtercomp> ')'
      <filtercomp> ::= <and> | <or> | <not> | <simple>
      <and>        ::= '&' <filterlist>
      <or>         ::= '|' <filterlist>
      <not>        ::= '!' <filter>
      <filterlist> ::= <filter> | <filter> <filterlist>
      <simple>     ::= <attributetype> <filtertype> <attributevalue>
      <filtertype> ::= '=' | '~=' | '<=' | '>='

The '~=' construct is used to specify approximate matching. The representation for <attributetype> and <attributevalue> are as described in RFC 2252, "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (v3): Attribute Syntax Definitions." In addition, <attributevalue> can be a single * to achieve an attribute existence test, or can contain text and *'s interspersed to achieve substring matching.

For example, the filter "(mail=*)" will find any entries that have a mail attribute. The filter "(mail=*@student.of.life.edu)" will find any entries that have a mail attribute ending in the specified string.

More complex filters are created using the & and | operators. For example, the filter "(&(objectclass=person)(mail=*))" will find any entries that have an objectclass of person and a mail attribute. To put parentheses or asterisks in a filter, escape them with a backslash '\' character. See RFC 2254, "A String Representation of LDAP Search Filters," for a more complete description of allowable filters.

attrs
(Input) Specifies a null-terminated array of character string attribute types to return from entries that match filter. If NULL is specified, all attributes will be returned.
attrsonly
(Input) Specifies attribute information. Attrsonly should be set to 1 to request attribute types only. Set to 0 to request both attributes types and attribute values.
timeout
(Input) The local search timeout value.
res
(Output) Contains the result of the synchronous search operation. This result should be passed to the LDAP parsing routines (see ldap_first_entry(), ldap_next_entry(), and so on). The caller is responsible for freeing res with ldap_msgfree().

Return Value

LDAP_SUCCESS
if the request was successful.

another LDAP error code
if the request was not successful.

Error Conditions

If ldap_search_st() is not successful, an error code will be returned. See LDAP Client API Error Conditions for possible LDAP error codes.


Error Messages

The following message may be sent from this function.

Message ID Error Message Text
CPF3CF2 E Error(s) occurred during running of ldap_search_st API.


Related Information



API introduced: V4R3
Top | LDAP APIs | APIs by category