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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-27 11:11:40 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-27 11:11:40 +0000
commit7731832751ab9f3c6ddeb66f186d3d7fa1934a6d (patch)
treee91015872543a59be2aad26c2fea02e41b57005d /doc/man/man5
parentInitial commit. (diff)
downloadopenldap-7731832751ab9f3c6ddeb66f186d3d7fa1934a6d.tar.xz
openldap-7731832751ab9f3c6ddeb66f186d3d7fa1934a6d.zip
Adding upstream version 2.4.57+dfsg.upstream/2.4.57+dfsgupstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/Makefile.in16
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/ldap.conf.5554
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/ldif.5277
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-bdb.5286
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-bdb.5.links1
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-config.52139
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-dnssrv.549
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-ldap.5802
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-ldif.554
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-mdb.5208
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-meta.51308
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-monitor.5126
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-ndb.5126
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-null.572
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-passwd.556
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-perl.5199
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-relay.5207
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-shell.5237
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-sock.5329
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-sock.5.links1
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd-sql.5699
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd.access.51183
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd.backends.5162
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd.conf.52085
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd.overlays.5174
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapd.plugin.5123
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-accesslog.5491
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-auditlog.560
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-chain.5152
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-collect.552
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-constraint.5149
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-dds.5271
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-dyngroup.549
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-dynlist.5212
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-memberof.5132
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-pbind.561
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-pcache.5323
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-ppolicy.5836
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-refint.578
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-retcode.5257
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-rwm.5675
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-sssvlv.557
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-syncprov.573
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-translucent.5133
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-unique.5175
-rw-r--r--doc/man/man5/slapo-valsort.597
46 files changed, 15806 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/Makefile.in b/doc/man/man5/Makefile.in
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..69745c0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/Makefile.in
@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
+# man5 Makefile.in for OpenLDAP
+# $OpenLDAP$
+## This work is part of OpenLDAP Software <http://www.openldap.org/>.
+##
+## Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation.
+## All rights reserved.
+##
+## Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
+## modification, are permitted only as authorized by the OpenLDAP
+## Public License.
+##
+## A copy of this license is available in the file LICENSE in the
+## top-level directory of the distribution or, alternatively, at
+## <http://www.OpenLDAP.org/license.html>.
+
+MANSECT=5
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/ldap.conf.5 b/doc/man/man5/ldap.conf.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c4d21ca
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/ldap.conf.5
@@ -0,0 +1,554 @@
+.TH LDAP.CONF 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.SH NAME
+ldap.conf, .ldaprc \- LDAP configuration file/environment variables
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/ldap.conf, ldaprc, .ldaprc, $LDAP<option-name>
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+If the environment variable \fBLDAPNOINIT\fP is defined, all
+defaulting is disabled.
+.LP
+The
+.I ldap.conf
+configuration file is used to set system-wide defaults to be applied when
+running
+.I ldap
+clients.
+.LP
+Users may create an optional configuration file,
+.I ldaprc
+or
+.IR .ldaprc ,
+in their home directory which will be used to override the system-wide
+defaults file.
+The file
+.I ldaprc
+in the current working directory is also used.
+.LP
+.LP
+Additional configuration files can be specified using
+the \fBLDAPCONF\fP and \fBLDAPRC\fP environment variables.
+\fBLDAPCONF\fP may be set to the path of a configuration file. This
+path can be absolute or relative to the current working directory.
+The \fBLDAPRC\fP, if defined, should be the basename of a file
+in the current working directory or in the user's home directory.
+.LP
+Environmental variables may also be used to augment the file based defaults.
+The name of the variable is the option name with an added prefix of \fBLDAP\fP.
+For example, to define \fBBASE\fP via the environment, set the variable
+\fBLDAPBASE\fP to the desired value.
+.LP
+Some options are user-only. Such options are ignored if present
+in the
+.I ldap.conf
+(or file specified by
+.BR LDAPCONF ).
+.LP
+Thus the following files and variables are read, in order:
+.nf
+ variable $LDAPNOINIT, and if that is not set:
+ system file ETCDIR/ldap.conf,
+ user files $HOME/ldaprc, $HOME/.ldaprc, ./ldaprc,
+ system file $LDAPCONF,
+ user files $HOME/$LDAPRC, $HOME/.$LDAPRC, ./$LDAPRC,
+ variables $LDAP<uppercase option name>.
+.fi
+Settings late in the list override earlier ones.
+.SH SYNTAX
+The configuration options are case-insensitive;
+their value, on a case by case basis, may be case-sensitive.
+.LP
+Blank lines are ignored.
+.br
+Lines beginning with a hash mark (`#') are comments, and ignored.
+.LP
+Valid lines are made of an option's name (a sequence of non-blanks,
+conventionally written in uppercase, although not required),
+followed by a value.
+The value starts with the first non-blank character after
+the option's name, and terminates at the end of the line,
+or at the last sequence of blanks before the end of the line.
+The tokenization of the value, if any, is delegated to the handler(s)
+for that option, if any. Quoting values that contain blanks
+may be incorrect, as the quotes would become part of the value.
+For example,
+
+.nf
+ # Wrong - erroneous quotes:
+ URI "ldap:// ldaps://"
+
+ # Right - space-separated list of URIs, without quotes:
+ URI ldap:// ldaps://
+
+ # Right - DN syntax needs quoting for Example, Inc:
+ BASE ou=IT staff,o="Example, Inc",c=US
+ # or:
+ BASE ou=IT staff,o=Example\\2C Inc,c=US
+
+ # Wrong - comment on same line as option:
+ DEREF never # Never follow aliases
+.fi
+.LP
+A line cannot be longer than LINE_MAX, which should be more than 2000 bytes
+on all platforms.
+There is no mechanism to split a long line on multiple lines, either for
+beautification or to overcome the above limit.
+.SH OPTIONS
+The different configuration options are:
+.TP
+.B URI <ldap[si]://[name[:port]] ...>
+Specifies the URI(s) of an LDAP server(s) to which the
+.I LDAP
+library should connect. The URI scheme may be any of
+.BR ldap ,
+.B ldaps
+or
+.BR ldapi ,
+which refer to LDAP over TCP, LDAP over SSL (TLS) and LDAP
+over IPC (UNIX domain sockets), respectively.
+Each server's name can be specified as a
+domain-style name or an IP address literal. Optionally, the
+server's name can followed by a ':' and the port number the LDAP
+server is listening on. If no port number is provided, the default
+port for the scheme is used (389 for ldap://, 636 for ldaps://).
+For LDAP over IPC,
+.B name
+is the name of the socket, and no
+.B port
+is required, nor allowed; note that directory separators must be
+URL-encoded, like any other characters that are special to URLs;
+so the socket
+
+ /usr/local/var/ldapi
+
+must be specified as
+
+ ldapi://%2Fusr%2Flocal%2Fvar%2Fldapi
+
+A space separated list of URIs may be provided.
+.TP
+.B BASE <base>
+Specifies the default base DN to use when performing ldap operations.
+The base must be specified as a Distinguished Name in LDAP format.
+.TP
+.B BINDDN <dn>
+Specifies the default bind DN to use when performing ldap operations.
+The bind DN must be specified as a Distinguished Name in LDAP format.
+.B This is a user-only option.
+.TP
+.B DEREF <when>
+Specifies how alias dereferencing is done when performing a search. The
+.B <when>
+can be specified as one of the following keywords:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B never
+Aliases are never dereferenced. This is the default.
+.TP
+.B searching
+Aliases are dereferenced in subordinates of the base object, but
+not in locating the base object of the search.
+.TP
+.B finding
+Aliases are only dereferenced when locating the base object of the search.
+.TP
+.B always
+Aliases are dereferenced both in searching and in locating the base object
+of the search.
+.RE
+.TP
+.TP
+.B HOST <name[:port] ...>
+Specifies the name(s) of an LDAP server(s) to which the
+.I LDAP
+library should connect. Each server's name can be specified as a
+domain-style name or an IP address and optionally followed by a ':' and
+the port number the ldap server is listening on. A space separated
+list of hosts may be provided.
+.B HOST
+is deprecated in favor of
+.BR URI .
+.TP
+.B NETWORK_TIMEOUT <integer>
+Specifies the timeout (in seconds) after which the poll(2)/select(2)
+following a connect(2) returns in case of no activity.
+.TP
+.B PORT <port>
+Specifies the default port used when connecting to LDAP servers(s).
+The port may be specified as a number.
+.B PORT
+is deprecated in favor of
+.BR URI.
+.TP
+.B REFERRALS <on/true/yes/off/false/no>
+Specifies if the client should automatically follow referrals returned
+by LDAP servers.
+The default is on.
+Note that the command line tools
+.BR ldapsearch (1)
+&co always override this option.
+.\" This should only be allowed via ldap_set_option(3)
+.\".TP
+.\".B RESTART <on/true/yes/off/false/no>
+.\"Determines whether the library should implicitly restart connections (FIXME).
+.TP
+.B SIZELIMIT <integer>
+Specifies a size limit (number of entries) to use when performing searches.
+The number should be a non-negative integer. \fISIZELIMIT\fP of zero (0)
+specifies a request for unlimited search size. Please note that the server
+may still apply any server-side limit on the amount of entries that can be
+returned by a search operation.
+.TP
+.B TIMELIMIT <integer>
+Specifies a time limit (in seconds) to use when performing searches.
+The number should be a non-negative integer. \fITIMELIMIT\fP of zero (0)
+specifies unlimited search time to be used. Please note that the server
+may still apply any server-side limit on the duration of a search operation.
+.TP
+.B VERSION {2|3}
+Specifies what version of the LDAP protocol should be used.
+.TP
+.B TIMEOUT <integer>
+Specifies a timeout (in seconds) after which calls to synchronous LDAP
+APIs will abort if no response is received. Also used for any
+.BR ldap_result (3)
+calls where a NULL timeout parameter is supplied.
+.SH SASL OPTIONS
+If OpenLDAP is built with Simple Authentication and Security Layer support,
+there are more options you can specify.
+.TP
+.B SASL_MECH <mechanism>
+Specifies the SASL mechanism to use.
+.TP
+.B SASL_REALM <realm>
+Specifies the SASL realm.
+.TP
+.B SASL_AUTHCID <authcid>
+Specifies the authentication identity.
+.B This is a user-only option.
+.TP
+.B SASL_AUTHZID <authcid>
+Specifies the proxy authorization identity.
+.B This is a user-only option.
+.TP
+.B SASL_SECPROPS <properties>
+Specifies Cyrus SASL security properties. The
+.B <properties>
+can be specified as a comma-separated list of the following:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B none
+(without any other properties) causes the properties
+defaults ("noanonymous,noplain") to be cleared.
+.TP
+.B noplain
+disables mechanisms susceptible to simple passive attacks.
+.TP
+.B noactive
+disables mechanisms susceptible to active attacks.
+.TP
+.B nodict
+disables mechanisms susceptible to passive dictionary attacks.
+.TP
+.B noanonymous
+disables mechanisms which support anonymous login.
+.TP
+.B forwardsec
+requires forward secrecy between sessions.
+.TP
+.B passcred
+requires mechanisms which pass client credentials (and allows
+mechanisms which can pass credentials to do so).
+.TP
+.B minssf=<factor>
+specifies the minimum acceptable
+.I security strength factor
+as an integer approximating the effective key length used for
+encryption. 0 (zero) implies no protection, 1 implies integrity
+protection only, 56 allows DES or other weak ciphers, 112
+allows triple DES and other strong ciphers, 128 allows RC4,
+Blowfish and other modern strong ciphers. The default is 0.
+.TP
+.B maxssf=<factor>
+specifies the maximum acceptable
+.I security strength factor
+as an integer (see
+.B minssf
+description). The default is
+.BR INT_MAX .
+.TP
+.B maxbufsize=<factor>
+specifies the maximum security layer receive buffer
+size allowed. 0 disables security layers. The default is 65536.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B SASL_NOCANON <on/true/yes/off/false/no>
+Do not perform reverse DNS lookups to canonicalize SASL host names. The default is off.
+.SH GSSAPI OPTIONS
+If OpenLDAP is built with Generic Security Services Application Programming Interface support,
+there are more options you can specify.
+.TP
+.B GSSAPI_SIGN <on/true/yes/off/false/no>
+Specifies if GSSAPI signing (GSS_C_INTEG_FLAG) should be used.
+The default is off.
+.TP
+.B GSSAPI_ENCRYPT <on/true/yes/off/false/no>
+Specifies if GSSAPI encryption (GSS_C_INTEG_FLAG and GSS_C_CONF_FLAG)
+should be used. The default is off.
+.TP
+.B GSSAPI_ALLOW_REMOTE_PRINCIPAL <on/true/yes/off/false/no>
+Specifies if GSSAPI based authentication should try to form the
+target principal name out of the ldapServiceName or dnsHostName
+attribute of the targets RootDSE entry. The default is off.
+.SH TLS OPTIONS
+If OpenLDAP is built with Transport Layer Security support, there
+are more options you can specify. These options are used when an
+.B ldaps:// URI
+is selected (by default or otherwise) or when the application
+negotiates TLS by issuing the LDAP StartTLS operation.
+.TP
+.B TLS_CACERT <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains certificates for all of the Certificate
+Authorities the client will recognize.
+.TP
+.B TLS_CACERTDIR <path>
+Specifies the path of a directory that contains Certificate Authority
+certificates in separate individual files. The
+.B TLS_CACERT
+is always used before
+.B TLS_CACERTDIR.
+This parameter is ignored with GnuTLS.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, <path> may contain a Mozilla NSS cert/key
+database. If <path> contains a Mozilla NSS cert/key database and
+CA cert files, OpenLDAP will use the cert/key database and will
+ignore the CA cert files.
+.TP
+.B TLS_CERT <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains the client certificate.
+.B This is a user-only option.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, if using a cert/key database (specified with
+TLS_CACERTDIR), TLS_CERT specifies the name of the certificate to use:
+.nf
+ TLS_CERT Certificate for Sam Carter
+.fi
+If using a token other than the internal built in token, specify the
+token name first, followed by a colon:
+.nf
+ TLS_CERT my hardware device:Certificate for Sam Carter
+.fi
+Use certutil \-L to list the certificates by name:
+.nf
+ certutil \-d /path/to/certdbdir \-L
+.fi
+.TP
+.B TLS_ECNAME <name>
+Specify the name of the curve(s) to use for Elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman
+ephemeral key exchange. This option is only used for OpenSSL.
+This option is not used with GnuTLS; the curves may be
+chosen in the GnuTLS ciphersuite specification.
+.TP
+.B TLS_KEY <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains the private key that matches the certificate
+stored in the
+.B TLS_CERT
+file. Currently, the private key must not be protected with a password, so
+it is of critical importance that the key file is protected carefully.
+.B This is a user-only option.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, TLS_KEY specifies the name of a file that contains
+the password for the key for the certificate specified with TLS_CERT. The
+modutil command can be used to turn off password protection for the cert/key
+database. For example, if TLS_CACERTDIR specifies /home/scarter/.moznss as
+the location of the cert/key database, use modutil to change the password
+to the empty string:
+.nf
+ modutil \-dbdir ~/.moznss \-changepw 'NSS Certificate DB'
+.fi
+You must have the old password, if any. Ignore the WARNING about the running
+browser. Press 'Enter' for the new password.
+
+.TP
+.B TLS_CIPHER_SUITE <cipher-suite-spec>
+Specifies acceptable cipher suite and preference order.
+<cipher-suite-spec> should be a cipher specification for
+the TLS library in use (OpenSSL, GnuTLS, or Mozilla NSS).
+Example:
+.RS
+.RS
+.TP
+.I OpenSSL:
+TLS_CIPHER_SUITE HIGH:MEDIUM:+SSLv2
+.TP
+.I GnuTLS:
+TLS_CIPHER_SUITE SECURE256:!AES-128-CBC
+.RE
+
+To check what ciphers a given spec selects in OpenSSL, use:
+
+.nf
+ openssl ciphers \-v <cipher-suite-spec>
+.fi
+
+With GnuTLS the available specs can be found in the manual page of
+.BR gnutls\-cli (1)
+(see the description of the
+option
+.BR \-\-priority ).
+
+In older versions of GnuTLS, where gnutls\-cli does not support the option
+\-\-priority, you can obtain the \(em more limited \(em list of ciphers by calling:
+
+.nf
+ gnutls\-cli \-l
+.fi
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, the OpenSSL cipher suite specifications are used and
+translated into the format used internally by Mozilla NSS. There isn't an easy
+way to list the cipher suites from the command line. The authoritative list
+is in the source code for Mozilla NSS in the file sslinfo.c in the structure
+.nf
+ static const SSLCipherSuiteInfo suiteInfo[]
+.fi
+.RE
+.TP
+.B TLS_PROTOCOL_MIN <major>[.<minor>]
+Specifies minimum SSL/TLS protocol version that will be negotiated.
+If the server doesn't support at least that version,
+the SSL handshake will fail.
+To require TLS 1.x or higher, set this option to 3.(x+1),
+e.g.,
+
+.nf
+ TLS_PROTOCOL_MIN 3.2
+.fi
+
+would require TLS 1.1.
+Specifying a minimum that is higher than that supported by the
+OpenLDAP implementation will result in it requiring the
+highest level that it does support.
+This parameter is ignored with GnuTLS.
+.TP
+.B TLS_RANDFILE <filename>
+Specifies the file to obtain random bits from when /dev/[u]random is
+not available. Generally set to the name of the EGD/PRNGD socket.
+The environment variable RANDFILE can also be used to specify the filename.
+This parameter is ignored with GnuTLS and Mozilla NSS.
+.TP
+.B TLS_REQCERT <level>
+Specifies what checks to perform on server certificates in a TLS session,
+if any. The
+.B <level>
+can be specified as one of the following keywords:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B never
+The client will not request or check any server certificate.
+.TP
+.B allow
+The server certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided,
+the session proceeds normally. If a bad certificate is provided, it will
+be ignored and the session proceeds normally.
+.TP
+.B try
+The server certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided,
+the session proceeds normally. If a bad certificate is provided,
+the session is immediately terminated.
+.TP
+.B demand | hard
+These keywords are equivalent. The server certificate is requested. If no
+certificate is provided, or a bad certificate is provided, the session
+is immediately terminated. This is the default setting.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B TLS_REQSAN <level>
+Specifies what checks to perform on the subjectAlternativeName
+(SAN) extensions in a server certificate when validating the certificate
+name against the specified hostname of the server. The
+.B <level>
+can be specified as one of the following keywords:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B never
+The client will not check any SAN in the certificate.
+.TP
+.B allow
+The SAN is checked against the specified hostname. If a SAN is
+present but none match the specified hostname, the SANs are ignored
+and the usual check against the certificate DN is used.
+This is the default setting.
+.TP
+.B try
+The SAN is checked against the specified hostname. If no SAN is present
+in the server certificate, the usual check against the certificate DN
+is used. If a SAN is present but doesn't match the specified hostname,
+the session is immediately terminated. This setting may be preferred
+when a mix of certs with and without SANs are in use.
+.TP
+.B demand | hard
+These keywords are equivalent. The SAN is checked against the specified
+hostname. If no SAN is present in the server certificate, or no SANs
+match, the session is immediately terminated. This setting should be
+used when only certificates with SANs are in use.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B TLS_CRLCHECK <level>
+Specifies if the Certificate Revocation List (CRL) of the CA should be
+used to verify if the server certificates have not been revoked. This
+requires
+.B TLS_CACERTDIR
+parameter to be set. This parameter is ignored with GnuTLS and Mozilla NSS.
+.B <level>
+can be specified as one of the following keywords:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B none
+No CRL checks are performed
+.TP
+.B peer
+Check the CRL of the peer certificate
+.TP
+.B all
+Check the CRL for a whole certificate chain
+.RE
+.TP
+.B TLS_CRLFILE <filename>
+Specifies the file containing a Certificate Revocation List to be used
+to verify if the server certificates have not been revoked. This
+parameter is only supported with GnuTLS and Mozilla NSS.
+.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
+.TP
+LDAPNOINIT
+disable all defaulting
+.TP
+LDAPCONF
+path of a configuration file
+.TP
+LDAPRC
+basename of ldaprc file in $HOME or $CWD
+.TP
+LDAP<option-name>
+Set <option-name> as from ldap.conf
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+.I ETCDIR/ldap.conf
+system-wide ldap configuration file
+.TP
+.I $HOME/ldaprc, $HOME/.ldaprc
+user ldap configuration file
+.TP
+.I $CWD/ldaprc
+local ldap configuration file
+.SH "SEE ALSO"
+.BR ldap (3),
+.BR ldap_set_option (3),
+.BR ldap_result (3),
+.BR openssl (1),
+.BR sasl (3)
+.SH AUTHOR
+Kurt Zeilenga, The OpenLDAP Project
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/ldif.5 b/doc/man/man5/ldif.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ebb3030
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/ldif.5
@@ -0,0 +1,277 @@
+.TH LDIF 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.SH NAME
+ldif \- LDAP Data Interchange Format
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The LDAP Data Interchange Format (LDIF) is used to represent LDAP
+entries and change records in text form. LDAP tools, such as
+.BR ldapadd (1)
+and
+.BR ldapsearch (1),
+read and write LDIF entry
+records.
+.BR ldapmodify (1)
+reads LDIF change records.
+.LP
+This manual page provides a basic description of LDIF. A
+formal specification of LDIF is published in RFC 2849.
+.SH ENTRY RECORDS
+.LP
+LDIF entry records are used to represent directory entries. The basic
+form of an entry record is:
+.LP
+.nf
+.ft tt
+ dn: <distinguished name>
+ <attrdesc>: <attrvalue>
+ <attrdesc>: <attrvalue>
+ <attrdesc>:: <base64-encoded-value>
+ <attrdesc>:< <URL>
+ ...
+.ft
+.fi
+.LP
+The value may be specified as UTF-8 text or as base64 encoded data,
+or a URI may be provided to the location of the attribute value.
+.LP
+A line may be continued by starting the next line with a single space
+or tab, e.g.,
+.LP
+.nf
+.ft tt
+ dn: cn=Barbara J Jensen,dc=exam
+ ple,dc=com
+.ft
+.fi
+.LP
+Lines beginning with a sharp sign ('#') are ignored.
+.LP
+Multiple attribute values are specified on separate lines, e.g.,
+.LP
+.nf
+.ft tt
+ cn: Barbara J Jensen
+ cn: Babs Jensen
+.ft
+.fi
+.LP
+If an value contains a non-printing character, or begins
+with a space or a colon ':', the <attrtype> is followed by a
+double colon and the value is encoded in base 64 notation. e.g.,
+the value " begins with a space" would be encoded like this:
+.LP
+.nf
+.ft tt
+ cn:: IGJlZ2lucyB3aXRoIGEgc3BhY2U=
+.ft
+.fi
+.LP
+If the attribute value is located in a file, the <attrtype> is
+followed by a ':<' and a file: URI. e.g., the value contained
+in the file /tmp/value would be listed like this:
+.LP
+.nf
+.ft tt
+ cn:< file:///tmp/value
+.ft
+.fi
+Other URI schemes (ftp,http) may be supported as well.
+.LP
+Multiple entries within the same LDIF file are separated by blank
+lines.
+.SH ENTRY RECORD EXAMPLE
+Here is an example of an LDIF file containing three entries.
+.LP
+.nf
+.ft tt
+ dn: cn=Barbara J Jensen,dc=example,dc=com
+ cn: Barbara J Jensen
+ cn: Babs Jensen
+ objectclass: person
+ description:< file:///tmp/babs
+ sn: Jensen
+
+ dn: cn=Bjorn J Jensen,dc=example,dc=com
+ cn: Bjorn J Jensen
+ cn: Bjorn Jensen
+ objectclass: person
+ sn: Jensen
+
+ dn: cn=Jennifer J Jensen,dc=example,dc=com
+ cn: Jennifer J Jensen
+ cn: Jennifer Jensen
+ objectclass: person
+ sn: Jensen
+ jpegPhoto:: /9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAAAAAQABAAD/2wBDABALD
+ A4MChAODQ4SERATGCgaGBYWGDEjJR0oOjM9PDkzODdASFxOQ
+ ERXRTc4UG1RV19iZ2hnPk1xeXBkeFxlZ2P/2wBDARESEhgVG
+ ...
+.ft
+.fi
+.LP
+Note that the description in Barbara Jensen's entry is
+read from file:///tmp/babs and the jpegPhoto in Jennifer
+Jensen's entry is encoded using base 64.
+.SH CHANGE RECORDS
+LDIF change records are used to represent directory change requests.
+Each change record starts with line indicating the distinguished
+name of the entry being changed:
+.LP
+.nf
+ dn: <distinguishedname>
+.fi
+.LP
+.nf
+ changetype: <[modify|add|delete|modrdn]>
+.fi
+.LP
+Finally, the change information itself is given, the format of which
+depends on what kind of change was specified above. For a \fIchangetype\fP
+of \fImodify\fP, the format is one or more of the following:
+.LP
+.nf
+ add: <attributetype>
+ <attrdesc>: <value1>
+ <attrdesc>: <value2>
+ ...
+ \-
+.fi
+.LP
+Or, for a replace modification:
+.LP
+.nf
+ replace: <attributetype>
+ <attrdesc>: <value1>
+ <attrdesc>: <value2>
+ ...
+ \-
+.fi
+.LP
+If no \fIattributetype\fP lines are given to replace,
+the entire attribute is to be deleted (if present).
+.LP
+Or, for a delete modification:
+.LP
+.nf
+ delete: <attributetype>
+ <attrdesc>: <value1>
+ <attrdesc>: <value2>
+ ...
+ \-
+.fi
+.LP
+If no \fIattributetype\fP lines are given to delete,
+the entire attribute is to be deleted.
+.LP
+For a \fIchangetype\fP of \fIadd\fP, the format is:
+.LP
+.nf
+ <attrdesc1>: <value1>
+ <attrdesc1>: <value2>
+ ...
+ <attrdescN>: <value1>
+ <attrdescN>: <value2>
+.fi
+.LP
+For a \fIchangetype\fP of \fImodrdn\fP or \fImoddn\fP,
+the format is:
+.LP
+.nf
+ newrdn: <newrdn>
+ deleteoldrdn: 0 | 1
+ newsuperior: <DN>
+.fi
+.LP
+where a value of 1 for deleteoldrdn means to delete the values
+forming the old rdn from the entry, and a value of 0 means to
+leave the values as non-distinguished attributes in the entry.
+The newsuperior line is optional and, if present, specifies the
+new superior to move the entry to.
+.LP
+For a \fIchangetype\fP of \fIdelete\fP, no additional information
+is needed in the record.
+.LP
+Note that attribute values may be presented using base64 or in
+files as described for entry records. Lines in change records
+may be continued in the manner described for entry records as
+well.
+.SH CHANGE RECORD EXAMPLE
+The following sample LDIF file contains a change record
+of each type of change.
+.LP
+.nf
+ dn: cn=Babs Jensen,dc=example,dc=com
+ changetype: add
+ objectclass: person
+ objectclass: extensibleObject
+ cn: babs
+ cn: babs jensen
+ sn: jensen
+
+ dn: cn=Babs Jensen,dc=example,dc=com
+ changetype: modify
+ add: givenName
+ givenName: Barbara
+ givenName: babs
+ \-
+ replace: description
+ description: the fabulous babs
+ \-
+ delete: sn
+ sn: jensen
+ \-
+
+ dn: cn=Babs Jensen,dc=example,dc=com
+ changetype: modrdn
+ newrdn: cn=Barbara J Jensen
+ deleteoldrdn: 0
+ newsuperior: ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
+
+ dn: cn=Barbara J Jensen,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
+ changetype: delete
+.fi
+
+.SH INCLUDE STATEMENT
+The LDIF parser has been extended to support an
+.B include
+statement for referencing other LDIF files. The
+.B include
+statement must be separated from other records by a blank line.
+The referenced file is specified using a file: URI and all of its
+contents are incorporated as if they were part of the original
+LDIF file. As above, other URI schemes may be supported. For example:
+.LP
+.nf
+ dn: dc=example,dc=com
+ objectclass: domain
+ dc: example
+
+ include: file:///tmp/example.com.ldif
+
+ dn: dc=example,dc=org
+ objectclass: domain
+ dc: example
+.fi
+This feature is not part of the LDIF specification in RFC 2849 but
+is expected to appear in a future revision of this spec. It is supported
+by the
+.BR ldapadd (1),
+.BR ldapmodify (1),
+and
+.BR slapadd (8)
+commands.
+
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR ldap (3),
+.BR ldapsearch (1),
+.BR ldapadd (1),
+.BR ldapmodify (1),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapd\-ldif (5).
+.LP
+"LDAP Data Interchange Format," Good, G., RFC 2849.
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-bdb.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-bdb.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..15bc355
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-bdb.5
@@ -0,0 +1,286 @@
+.TH SLAPD-BDB 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-bdb, slapd\-hdb \- Berkeley DB backends to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+.B ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The \fBbdb\fP backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+uses the Oracle Berkeley DB (BDB) package to store data.
+It makes extensive use of indexing and caching to speed data access.
+.LP
+Note that BDB is deprecated and support will be dropped in future
+OpenLDAP releases. Installations should use the \fBmdb\fP
+backend instead.
+.LP
+\fBhdb\fP is a variant of
+the \fBbdb\fP backend that uses a hierarchical database layout which
+supports subtree renames. It is both more space-efficient and more
+execution-efficient than the \fBbdb\fP backend. It is otherwise identical
+to the \fBbdb\fP behavior, and all the same configuration options apply.
+.LP
+It is noted that these options are intended to complement
+Berkeley DB configuration options set in the environment's
+.B DB_CONFIG
+file. See Berkeley DB documentation for details on
+.B DB_CONFIG
+configuration options.
+Where there is overlap, settings in
+.B DB_CONFIG
+take precedence.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the \fBbdb\fP and \fBhdb\fP backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database bdb" or "database hdb" line and
+come before any subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.TP
+.BI cachesize \ <integer>
+Specify the size in entries of the in-memory entry cache maintained
+by the \fBbdb\fP or \fBhdb\fP backend database instance.
+The default is 1000 entries.
+.TP
+.BI cachefree \ <integer>
+Specify the number of entries to free from the entry cache when the
+cache reaches the \fBcachesize\fP limit.
+The default is 1 entry.
+.TP
+.BI checkpoint \ <kbyte>\ <min>
+Specify the frequency for checkpointing the database transaction log.
+A checkpoint operation flushes the database buffers to disk and writes
+a checkpoint record in the log.
+The checkpoint will occur if either \fI<kbyte>\fP data has been written or
+\fI<min>\fP minutes have passed since the last checkpoint.
+Both arguments default to zero, in which case they are ignored. When
+the \fI<min>\fP argument is non-zero, an internal task will run every
+\fI<min>\fP minutes to perform the checkpoint.
+See the Berkeley DB reference guide for more details.
+.TP
+.B checksum
+Enable checksum validation of DB pages whenever they are read from disk.
+This setting can only be configured before any database files are created.
+.TP
+.BI cryptfile \ <file>
+Specify the pathname of a file containing an encryption key to use for
+encrypting the database. Encryption is performed using Berkeley DB's
+implementation of AES. Note that encryption can only be configured before
+any database files are created, and changing the key can only be done
+after destroying the current database and recreating it. Encryption is
+not enabled by default, and some distributions of Berkeley DB do not
+support encryption.
+.TP
+.BI cryptkey \ <key>
+Specify an encryption key to use for encrypting the database. This option
+may be used when a separate
+.I cryptfile
+is not desired. Only one of
+.B cryptkey
+or
+.B cryptfile
+may be configured.
+.TP
+.BI dbconfig \ <Berkeley-DB-setting>
+Specify a configuration directive to be placed in the
+.B DB_CONFIG
+file of the database directory. The
+.B dbconfig
+directive is just a convenience
+to allow all necessary configuration to be set in the
+.B slapd.conf
+file.
+The options set using this directive will only be written to the
+.B DB_CONFIG
+file if no such file existed at server startup time, otherwise
+they are completely ignored. This allows one
+to set initial values without overwriting/destroying a
+.B DB_CONFIG
+file that was already customized through other means.
+This directive may be specified multiple times, as needed.
+For example:
+.RS
+.nf
+ dbconfig set_cachesize 0 1048576 0
+ dbconfig set_lg_bsize 2097152
+.fi
+.RE
+.TP
+.B dbnosync
+Specify that on-disk database contents should not be immediately
+synchronized with in memory changes.
+Enabling this option may improve performance at the expense of data
+security.
+See the Berkeley DB reference guide for more details.
+.TP
+\fBdbpagesize \fR \fI<dbfile> <size>\fR
+Specify the page size to use for a particular database file, in units
+of 1024 bytes. The default for the
+.B id2entry
+file is 16, the default for all other files depends on the size of the
+underlying filesystem's block size (typically 4 or 8).
+The maximum that BerkeleyDB supports is 64. This
+setting usually should not need to be changed, but if BerkeleyDB's
+"db_stat \-d" shows a large amount of overflow pages in use in a file,
+setting a larger size may increase performance at the expense of
+data integrity. This setting only takes effect when a database is
+being newly created. See the Berkeley DB reference guide for more details.
+.TP
+.BI directory \ <directory>
+Specify the directory where the BDB files containing this database and
+associated indexes live.
+A separate directory must be specified for each database.
+The default is
+.BR LOCALSTATEDIR/openldap\-data .
+.TP
+.B dirtyread
+Allow reads of modified but not yet committed data.
+Usually transactions are isolated to prevent other operations from
+accessing uncommitted data.
+This option may improve performance, but may also return inconsistent
+results if the data comes from a transaction that is later aborted.
+In this case, the modified data is discarded and a subsequent search
+will return a different result.
+.TP
+.BI dncachesize \ <integer>
+Specify the maximum number of DNs in the in-memory DN cache.
+Ideally this cache should be
+large enough to contain the DNs of every entry in the database. If
+set to a smaller value than the \fBcachesize\fP it will be silently
+increased to equal the \fBcachesize\fP. The default value is 0 which
+means unlimited, i.e. the DN cache will grow without bound.
+
+It should be noted that the \fBDN cache\fP is allowed to temporarily
+grow beyond the configured size. It does this if many entries are
+locked when it tries to do a purge, because that means they're
+legitimately in use. Also, the \fBDN cache\fP never purges entries
+that have cached children, so depending on the shape of the DIT, it
+could have lots of cached DNs over the defined limit.
+.TP
+.BI idlcachesize \ <integer>
+Specify the size of the in-memory index cache, in index slots. The
+default is zero. A larger value will speed up frequent searches of
+indexed entries. An \fBhdb\fP database needs a large \fBidlcachesize\fP
+for good search performance, typically three times the
+.B cachesize
+(entry cache size)
+or larger.
+.TP
+\fBindex \fR{\fI<attrlist>\fR|\fBdefault\fR} [\fBpres\fR,\fBeq\fR,\fBapprox\fR,\fBsub\fR,\fI<special>\fR]
+Specify the indexes to maintain for the given attribute (or
+list of attributes).
+Some attributes only support a subset of indexes.
+If only an \fI<attr>\fP is given, the indices specified for \fBdefault\fR
+are maintained.
+Note that setting a default does not imply that all attributes will be
+indexed. Also, for best performance, an
+.B eq
+index should always be configured for the
+.B objectClass
+attribute.
+
+A number of special index parameters may be specified.
+The index type
+.B sub
+can be decomposed into
+.BR subinitial ,
+.BR subany ,\ and
+.B subfinal
+indices.
+The special type
+.B nolang
+may be specified to disallow use of this index by language subtypes.
+The special type
+.B nosubtypes
+may be specified to disallow use of this index by named subtypes.
+Note: changing \fBindex\fP settings in
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+requires rebuilding indices, see
+.BR slapindex (8);
+changing \fBindex\fP settings
+dynamically by LDAPModifying "cn=config" automatically causes rebuilding
+of the indices online in a background task.
+.TP
+.B linearindex
+Tell
+.B slapindex
+to index one attribute at a time. By default, all indexed
+attributes in an entry are processed at the same time. With this option,
+each indexed attribute is processed individually, using multiple passes
+through the entire database. This option improves
+.B slapindex
+performance
+when the database size exceeds the \fBdbcache\fP size. When the \fBdbcache\fP is
+large enough, this option is not needed and will decrease performance.
+Also by default,
+.B slapadd
+performs full indexing and so a separate
+.B slapindex
+run is not needed. With this option,
+.B slapadd
+does no indexing and
+.B slapindex
+must be used.
+.TP
+.BR lockdetect \ { oldest | youngest | fewest | random | default }
+Specify which transaction to abort when a deadlock is detected.
+The default is
+.BR random .
+.TP
+.BI mode \ <integer>
+Specify the file protection mode that newly created database
+index files should have.
+The default is 0600.
+.TP
+.BI searchstack \ <depth>
+Specify the depth of the stack used for search filter evaluation.
+Search filters are evaluated on a stack to accommodate nested AND / OR
+clauses. An individual stack is assigned to each server thread.
+The depth of the stack determines how complex a filter can be
+evaluated without requiring any additional memory allocation. Filters that
+are nested deeper than the search stack depth will cause a separate
+stack to be allocated for that particular search operation. These
+allocations can have a major negative impact on server performance,
+but specifying too much stack will also consume a great deal of memory.
+Each search stack uses 512K bytes per level. The default stack depth
+is 16, thus 8MB per thread is used.
+.TP
+.BI shm_key \ <integer>
+Specify a key for a shared memory BDB environment. By default the
+BDB environment uses memory mapped files. If a non-zero value is
+specified, it will be used as the key to identify a shared memory
+region that will house the environment.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B bdb
+and
+.B hdb
+backends honor access control semantics as indicated in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+.B ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default
+.B slapd
+configuration file
+.TP
+.B DB_CONFIG
+Berkeley DB configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd\-mdb (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapindex (8),
+Berkeley DB documentation.
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
+Originally begun by Kurt Zeilenga. Caching mechanisms originally designed
+by Jong-Hyuk Choi. Completion and subsequent work, as well as
+back-hdb, by Howard Chu.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-bdb.5.links b/doc/man/man5/slapd-bdb.5.links
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3bc8c40
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-bdb.5.links
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+slapd-hdb.5
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-config.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-config.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0ac8202
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-config.5
@@ -0,0 +1,2139 @@
+.TH SLAPD-CONFIG 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-config \- configuration backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.d
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B config
+backend manages all of the configuration information for the
+.BR slapd (8)
+daemon. This configuration information is also used by the SLAPD tools
+.BR slapacl (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapauth (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapdn (8),
+.BR slapindex (8),
+and
+.BR slaptest (8).
+.LP
+The
+.B config
+backend is backward compatible with the older
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+file but provides the ability to change the configuration dynamically
+at runtime. If slapd is run with only a
+.B slapd.conf
+file dynamic changes will be allowed but they will not persist across
+a server restart. Dynamic changes are only saved when slapd is running
+from a
+.B slapd.d
+configuration directory.
+.LP
+
+Unlike other backends, there can only be one instance of the
+.B config
+backend, and most of its structure is predefined. The root of the
+database is hardcoded to
+.B "cn=config"
+and this root entry contains
+global settings for slapd. Multiple child entries underneath the
+root entry are used to carry various other settings:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B cn=Module
+dynamically loaded modules
+.TP
+.B cn=Schema
+schema definitions
+.TP
+.B olcBackend=xxx
+backend-specific settings
+.TP
+.B olcDatabase=xxx
+database-specific settings
+.RE
+
+The
+.B cn=Module
+entries will only appear in configurations where slapd
+was built with support for dynamically loaded modules. There can be
+multiple entries, one for each configured module path. Within each
+entry there will be values recorded for each module loaded on a
+given path. These entries have no children.
+
+The
+.B cn=Schema
+entry contains all of the hardcoded schema elements.
+The children of this entry contain all user-defined schema elements.
+In schema that were loaded from include files, the child entry will
+be named after the include file from which the schema was loaded.
+Typically the first child in this subtree will be
+.BR cn=core,cn=schema,cn=config .
+
+.B olcBackend
+entries are for storing settings specific to a single
+backend type (and thus global to all database instances of that type).
+At present there are no backends that implement settings of this
+nature, so usually there will not be any olcBackend entries.
+
+.B olcDatabase
+entries store settings specific to a single database
+instance. These entries may have
+.B olcOverlay
+child entries corresponding
+to any overlays configured on the database. The olcDatabase and
+olcOverlay entries may also have miscellaneous child entries for
+other settings as needed. There are two special database entries
+that are predefined \- one is an entry for the config database itself,
+and the other is for the "frontend" database. Settings in the
+frontend database are inherited by the other databases, unless
+they are explicitly overridden in a specific database.
+.LP
+The specific configuration options available are discussed below in the
+Global Configuration Options, General Backend Options, and General Database
+Options. Options are set by defining LDAP attributes with specific values.
+In general the names of the LDAP attributes are the same as the corresponding
+.B slapd.conf
+keyword, with an "olc" prefix added on.
+
+The parser for many of these attributes is the same as used for parsing
+the slapd.conf keywords. As such, slapd.conf keywords that allow multiple
+items to be specified on one line, separated by whitespace, will allow
+multiple items to be specified in one attribute value. However, when
+reading the attribute via LDAP, the items will be returned as individual
+attribute values.
+
+Backend-specific options are discussed in the
+.B slapd\-<backend>(5)
+manual pages. Refer to the "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" for more
+details on configuring slapd.
+.SH GLOBAL CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
+Options described in this section apply to the server as a whole.
+Arguments that should be replaced by
+actual text are shown in brackets <>.
+
+These options may only be specified in the
+.B cn=config
+entry. This entry must have an objectClass of
+.BR olcGlobal .
+
+.TP
+.B olcAllows: <features>
+Specify a set of features to allow (default none).
+.B bind_v2
+allows acceptance of LDAPv2 bind requests. Note that
+.BR slapd (8)
+does not truly implement LDAPv2 (RFC 1777), now Historic (RFC 3494).
+.B bind_anon_cred
+allows anonymous bind when credentials are not empty (e.g.
+when DN is empty).
+.B bind_anon_dn
+allows unauthenticated (anonymous) bind when DN is not empty.
+.B update_anon
+allows unauthenticated (anonymous) update operations to be processed
+(subject to access controls and other administrative limits).
+.B proxy_authz_anon
+allows unauthenticated (anonymous) proxy authorization control to be processed
+(subject to access controls, authorization and other administrative limits).
+.TP
+.B olcArgsFile: <filename>
+The (absolute) name of a file that will hold the
+.B slapd
+server's command line (program name and options).
+.TP
+.B olcAttributeOptions: <option-name>...
+Define tagging attribute options or option tag/range prefixes.
+Options must not end with `\-', prefixes must end with `\-'.
+The `lang\-' prefix is predefined.
+If you use the
+.B olcAttributeOptions
+directive, `lang\-' will no longer be defined and you must specify it
+explicitly if you want it defined.
+
+An attribute description with a tagging option is a subtype of that
+attribute description without the option.
+Except for that, options defined this way have no special semantics.
+Prefixes defined this way work like the `lang\-' options:
+They define a prefix for tagging options starting with the prefix.
+That is, if you define the prefix `x\-foo\-', you can use the option
+`x\-foo\-bar'.
+Furthermore, in a search or compare, a prefix or range name (with
+a trailing `\-') matches all options starting with that name, as well
+as the option with the range name sans the trailing `\-'.
+That is, `x\-foo\-bar\-' matches `x\-foo\-bar' and `x\-foo\-bar\-baz'.
+
+RFC 4520 reserves options beginning with `x\-' for private experiments.
+Other options should be registered with IANA, see RFC 4520 section 3.5.
+OpenLDAP also has the `binary' option built in, but this is a transfer
+option, not a tagging option.
+.TP
+.B olcAuthIDRewrite: <rewrite\-rule>
+Used by the authentication framework to convert simple user names
+to an LDAP DN used for authorization purposes.
+Its purpose is analogous to that of
+.BR olcAuthzRegexp
+(see below).
+The
+.B rewrite\-rule
+is a set of rules analogous to those described in
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5)
+for data rewriting (after stripping the \fIrwm\-\fP prefix).
+.B olcAuthIDRewrite
+and
+.B olcAuthzRegexp
+should not be intermixed.
+.TP
+.B olcAuthzPolicy: <policy>
+Used to specify which rules to use for Proxy Authorization. Proxy
+authorization allows a client to authenticate to the server using one
+user's credentials, but specify a different identity to use for authorization
+and access control purposes. It essentially allows user A to login as user
+B, using user A's password.
+The
+.B none
+flag disables proxy authorization. This is the default setting.
+The
+.B from
+flag will use rules in the
+.I authzFrom
+attribute of the authorization DN.
+The
+.B to
+flag will use rules in the
+.I authzTo
+attribute of the authentication DN.
+The
+.B any
+flag, an alias for the deprecated value of
+.BR both ,
+will allow any of the above, whatever succeeds first (checked in
+.BR to ,
+.B from
+sequence.
+The
+.B all
+flag requires both authorizations to succeed.
+.LP
+.RS
+The rules are mechanisms to specify which identities are allowed
+to perform proxy authorization.
+The
+.I authzFrom
+attribute in an entry specifies which other users
+are allowed to proxy login to this entry. The
+.I authzTo
+attribute in
+an entry specifies which other users this user can authorize as. Use of
+.I authzTo
+rules can be easily
+abused if users are allowed to write arbitrary values to this attribute.
+In general the
+.I authzTo
+attribute must be protected with ACLs such that
+only privileged users can modify it.
+The value of
+.I authzFrom
+and
+.I authzTo
+describes an
+.B identity
+or a set of identities; it can take five forms:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B ldap:///<base>??[<scope>]?<filter>
+.RE
+.RS
+.B dn[.<dnstyle>]:<pattern>
+.RE
+.RS
+.B u[<mech>[<realm>]]:<pattern>
+.RE
+.RS
+.B group[/objectClass[/attributeType]]:<pattern>
+.RE
+.RS
+.B <pattern>
+.RE
+.RS
+
+.B <dnstyle>:={exact|onelevel|children|subtree|regex}
+
+.RE
+The first form is a valid LDAP
+.B URI
+where the
+.IR <host>:<port> ,
+the
+.I <attrs>
+and the
+.I <extensions>
+portions must be absent, so that the search occurs locally on either
+.I authzFrom
+or
+.IR authzTo .
+The second form is a
+.BR DN ,
+with the optional style modifiers
+.IR exact ,
+.IR onelevel ,
+.IR children ,
+and
+.I subtree
+for exact, onelevel, children and subtree matches, which cause
+.I <pattern>
+to be normalized according to the DN normalization rules, or the special
+.I regex
+style, which causes the
+.I <pattern>
+to be treated as a POSIX (''extended'') regular expression, as
+discussed in
+.BR regex (7)
+and/or
+.BR re_format (7).
+A pattern of
+.I *
+means any non-anonymous DN.
+The third form is a SASL
+.BR id ,
+with the optional fields
+.I <mech>
+and
+.I <realm>
+that allow to specify a SASL
+.BR mechanism ,
+and eventually a SASL
+.BR realm ,
+for those mechanisms that support one.
+The need to allow the specification of a mechanism is still debated,
+and users are strongly discouraged to rely on this possibility.
+The fourth form is a group specification, consisting of the keyword
+.BR group ,
+optionally followed by the specification of the group
+.B objectClass
+and member
+.BR attributeType .
+The group with DN
+.B <pattern>
+is searched with base scope, and in case of match, the values of the
+member
+.B attributeType
+are searched for the asserted DN.
+For backwards compatibility, if no identity type is provided, i.e. only
+.B <pattern>
+is present, an
+.I exact DN
+is assumed; as a consequence,
+.B <pattern>
+is subjected to DN normalization.
+Since the interpretation of
+.I authzFrom
+and
+.I authzTo
+can impact security, users are strongly encouraged
+to explicitly set the type of identity specification that is being used.
+A subset of these rules can be used as third arg in the
+.B olcAuthzRegexp
+statement (see below); significantly, the
+.I URI
+and the
+.I dn.exact:<dn>
+forms.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcAuthzRegexp: <match> <replace>
+Used by the authentication framework to convert simple user names,
+such as provided by SASL subsystem, to an LDAP DN used for
+authorization purposes. Note that the resultant DN need not refer
+to an existing entry to be considered valid. When an authorization
+request is received from the SASL subsystem, the SASL
+.BR USERNAME ,
+.BR REALM ,
+and
+.B MECHANISM
+are taken, when available, and combined into a name of the form
+.RS
+.RS
+.TP
+.B UID=<username>[[,CN=<realm>],CN=<mechanism>],CN=auth
+
+.RE
+This name is then compared against the
+.B match
+POSIX (''extended'') regular expression, and if the match is successful,
+the name is replaced with the
+.B replace
+string. If there are wildcard strings in the
+.B match
+regular expression that are enclosed in parenthesis, e.g.
+.RS
+.TP
+.B UID=([^,]*),CN=.*
+
+.RE
+then the portion of the name that matched the wildcard will be stored
+in the numbered placeholder variable $1. If there are other wildcard strings
+in parenthesis, the matching strings will be in $2, $3, etc. up to $9. The
+placeholders can then be used in the
+.B replace
+string, e.g.
+.RS
+.TP
+.B UID=$1,OU=Accounts,DC=example,DC=com
+
+.RE
+The replaced name can be either a DN, i.e. a string prefixed by "dn:",
+or an LDAP URI.
+If the latter, the server will use the URI to search its own database(s)
+and, if the search returns exactly one entry, the name is
+replaced by the DN of that entry. The LDAP URI must have no
+hostport, attrs, or extensions components, but the filter is mandatory,
+e.g.
+.RS
+.TP
+.B ldap:///OU=Accounts,DC=example,DC=com??one?(UID=$1)
+
+.RE
+The protocol portion of the URI must be strictly
+.BR ldap .
+Note that this search is subject to access controls. Specifically,
+the authentication identity must have "auth" access in the subject.
+
+Multiple
+.B olcAuthzRegexp
+values can be specified to allow for multiple matching
+and replacement patterns. The matching patterns are checked in the order they
+appear in the attribute, stopping at the first successful match.
+
+.\".B Caution:
+.\"Because the plus sign + is a character recognized by the regular expression engine,
+.\"and it will appear in names that include a REALM, be careful to escape the
+.\"plus sign with a backslash \\+ to remove the character's special meaning.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcConcurrency: <integer>
+Specify a desired level of concurrency. Provided to the underlying
+thread system as a hint. The default is not to provide any hint. This setting
+is only meaningful on some platforms where there is not a one to one
+correspondence between user threads and kernel threads.
+.TP
+.B olcConnMaxPending: <integer>
+Specify the maximum number of pending requests for an anonymous session.
+If requests are submitted faster than the server can process them, they
+will be queued up to this limit. If the limit is exceeded, the session
+is closed. The default is 100.
+.TP
+.B olcConnMaxPendingAuth: <integer>
+Specify the maximum number of pending requests for an authenticated session.
+The default is 1000.
+.TP
+.B olcDisallows: <features>
+Specify a set of features to disallow (default none).
+.B bind_anon
+disables acceptance of anonymous bind requests. Note that this setting
+does not prohibit anonymous directory access (See "require authc").
+.B bind_simple
+disables simple (bind) authentication.
+.B tls_2_anon
+disables forcing session to anonymous status (see also
+.BR tls_authc )
+upon StartTLS operation receipt.
+.B tls_authc
+disallows the StartTLS operation if authenticated (see also
+.BR tls_2_anon ).
+.TP
+.B olcGentleHUP: { TRUE | FALSE }
+A SIGHUP signal will only cause a 'gentle' shutdown-attempt:
+.B Slapd
+will stop listening for new connections, but will not close the
+connections to the current clients. Future write operations return
+unwilling-to-perform, though. Slapd terminates when all clients
+have closed their connections (if they ever do), or \- as before \-
+if it receives a SIGTERM signal. This can be useful if you wish to
+terminate the server and start a new
+.B slapd
+server
+.B with another database,
+without disrupting the currently active clients.
+The default is FALSE. You may wish to use
+.B olcIdleTimeout
+along with this option.
+.TP
+.B olcIdleTimeout: <integer>
+Specify the number of seconds to wait before forcibly closing
+an idle client connection. A setting of 0 disables this
+feature. The default is 0. You may also want to set the
+.B olcWriteTimeout
+option.
+.TP
+.B olcIndexIntLen: <integer>
+Specify the key length for ordered integer indices. The most significant
+bytes of the binary integer will be used for index keys. The default
+value is 4, which provides exact indexing for 31 bit values.
+A floating point representation is used to index too large values.
+.TP
+.B olcIndexSubstrIfMaxlen: <integer>
+Specify the maximum length for subinitial and subfinal indices. Only
+this many characters of an attribute value will be processed by the
+indexing functions; any excess characters are ignored. The default is 4.
+.TP
+.B olcIndexSubstrIfMinlen: <integer>
+Specify the minimum length for subinitial and subfinal indices. An
+attribute value must have at least this many characters in order to be
+processed by the indexing functions. The default is 2.
+.TP
+.B olcIndexSubstrAnyLen: <integer>
+Specify the length used for subany indices. An attribute value must have
+at least this many characters in order to be processed. Attribute values
+longer than this length will be processed in segments of this length. The
+default is 4. The subany index will also be used in subinitial and
+subfinal index lookups when the filter string is longer than the
+.I olcIndexSubstrIfMaxlen
+value.
+.TP
+.B olcIndexSubstrAnyStep: <integer>
+Specify the steps used in subany index lookups. This value sets the offset
+for the segments of a filter string that are processed for a subany index
+lookup. The default is 2. For example, with the default values, a search
+using this filter "cn=*abcdefgh*" would generate index lookups for
+"abcd", "cdef", and "efgh".
+
+.LP
+Note: Indexing support depends on the particular backend in use. Also,
+changing these settings will generally require deleting any indices that
+depend on these parameters and recreating them with
+.BR slapindex (8).
+
+.TP
+.B olcListenerThreads: <integer>
+Specify the number of threads to use for the connection manager.
+The default is 1 and this is typically adequate for up to 16 CPU cores.
+The value should be set to a power of 2.
+.TP
+.B olcLocalSSF: <SSF>
+Specifies the Security Strength Factor (SSF) to be given local LDAP sessions,
+such as those to the ldapi:// listener. For a description of SSF values,
+see
+.BR olcSaslSecProps 's
+.B minssf
+option description. The default is 71.
+.TP
+.B olcLogFile: <filename>
+Specify a file for recording debug log messages. By default these messages
+only go to stderr and are not recorded anywhere else. Specifying a logfile
+copies messages to both stderr and the logfile.
+.TP
+.B olcLogLevel: <integer> [...]
+Specify the level at which debugging statements and operation
+statistics should be syslogged (currently logged to the
+.BR syslogd (8)
+LOG_LOCAL4 facility).
+They must be considered subsystems rather than increasingly verbose
+log levels.
+Some messages with higher priority are logged regardless
+of the configured loglevel as soon as any logging is configured.
+Log levels are additive, and available levels are:
+.RS
+.RS
+.PD 0
+.TP
+.B 1
+.B (0x1 trace)
+trace function calls
+.TP
+.B 2
+.B (0x2 packets)
+debug packet handling
+.TP
+.B 4
+.B (0x4 args)
+heavy trace debugging (function args)
+.TP
+.B 8
+.B (0x8 conns)
+connection management
+.TP
+.B 16
+.B (0x10 BER)
+print out packets sent and received
+.TP
+.B 32
+.B (0x20 filter)
+search filter processing
+.TP
+.B 64
+.B (0x40 config)
+configuration file processing
+.TP
+.B 128
+.B (0x80 ACL)
+access control list processing
+.TP
+.B 256
+.B (0x100 stats)
+stats log connections/operations/results
+.TP
+.B 512
+.B (0x200 stats2)
+stats log entries sent
+.TP
+.B 1024
+.B (0x400 shell)
+print communication with shell backends
+.TP
+.B 2048
+.B (0x800 parse)
+entry parsing
+\".TP
+\".B 4096
+\".B (0x1000 cache)
+\"caching (unused)
+\".TP
+\".B 8192
+\".B (0x2000 index)
+\"data indexing (unused)
+.TP
+.B 16384
+.B (0x4000 sync)
+LDAPSync replication
+.TP
+.B 32768
+.B (0x8000 none)
+only messages that get logged whatever log level is set
+.PD
+.RE
+The desired log level can be input as a single integer that combines
+the (ORed) desired levels, both in decimal or in hexadecimal notation,
+as a list of integers (that are ORed internally),
+or as a list of the names that are shown between parenthesis, such that
+.LP
+.nf
+ olcLogLevel: 129
+ olcLogLevel: 0x81
+ olcLogLevel: 128 1
+ olcLogLevel: 0x80 0x1
+ olcLogLevel: acl trace
+.fi
+.LP
+are equivalent.
+The keyword
+.B any
+can be used as a shortcut to enable logging at all levels (equivalent to \-1).
+The keyword
+.BR none ,
+or the equivalent integer representation, causes those messages
+that are logged regardless of the configured olcLogLevel to be logged.
+In fact, if no olcLogLevel (or a 0 level) is defined, no logging occurs,
+so at least the
+.B none
+level is required to have high priority messages logged.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcPasswordCryptSaltFormat: <format>
+Specify the format of the salt passed to
+.BR crypt (3)
+when generating {CRYPT} passwords (see
+.BR olcPasswordHash )
+during processing of LDAP Password Modify Extended Operations (RFC 3062).
+
+This string needs to be in
+.BR sprintf (3)
+format and may include one (and only one) %s conversion.
+This conversion will be substituted with a string of random
+characters from [A\-Za\-z0\-9./]. For example, "%.2s"
+provides a two character salt and "$1$%.8s" tells some
+versions of crypt(3) to use an MD5 algorithm and provides
+8 random characters of salt. The default is "%s", which
+provides 31 characters of salt.
+.TP
+.B olcPidFile: <filename>
+The (absolute) name of a file that will hold the
+.B slapd
+server's process ID (see
+.BR getpid (2)).
+.TP
+.B olcPluginLogFile: <filename>
+The ( absolute ) name of a file that will contain log
+messages from
+.B SLAPI
+plugins. See
+.BR slapd.plugin (5)
+for details.
+.TP
+.B olcReferral: <url>
+Specify the referral to pass back when
+.BR slapd (8)
+cannot find a local database to handle a request.
+If multiple values are specified, each url is provided.
+.TP
+.B olcReverseLookup: TRUE | FALSE
+Enable/disable client name unverified reverse lookup (default is
+.BR FALSE
+if compiled with \-\-enable\-rlookups).
+.TP
+.B olcRootDSE: <file>
+Specify the name of an LDIF(5) file containing user defined attributes
+for the root DSE. These attributes are returned in addition to the
+attributes normally produced by slapd.
+
+The root DSE is an entry with information about the server and its
+capabilities, in operational attributes.
+It has the empty DN, and can be read with e.g.:
+.ti +4
+ldapsearch \-x \-b "" \-s base "+"
+.br
+See RFC 4512 section 5.1 for details.
+.TP
+.B olcSaslAuxprops: <plugin> [...]
+Specify which auxprop plugins to use for authentication lookups. The
+default is empty, which just uses slapd's internal support. Usually
+no other auxprop plugins are needed.
+.TP
+.B olcSaslHost: <fqdn>
+Used to specify the fully qualified domain name used for SASL processing.
+.TP
+.B olcSaslRealm: <realm>
+Specify SASL realm. Default is empty.
+.TP
+.B olcSaslSecProps: <properties>
+Used to specify Cyrus SASL security properties.
+The
+.B none
+flag (without any other properties) causes the flag properties
+default, "noanonymous,noplain", to be cleared.
+The
+.B noplain
+flag disables mechanisms susceptible to simple passive attacks.
+The
+.B noactive
+flag disables mechanisms susceptible to active attacks.
+The
+.B nodict
+flag disables mechanisms susceptible to passive dictionary attacks.
+The
+.B noanonymous
+flag disables mechanisms which support anonymous login.
+The
+.B forwardsec
+flag require forward secrecy between sessions.
+The
+.B passcred
+require mechanisms which pass client credentials (and allow
+mechanisms which can pass credentials to do so).
+The
+.B minssf=<factor>
+property specifies the minimum acceptable
+.I security strength factor
+as an integer approximate to effective key length used for
+encryption. 0 (zero) implies no protection, 1 implies integrity
+protection only, 56 allows DES or other weak ciphers, 112
+allows triple DES and other strong ciphers, 128 allows RC4,
+Blowfish and other modern strong ciphers. The default is 0.
+The
+.B maxssf=<factor>
+property specifies the maximum acceptable
+.I security strength factor
+as an integer (see minssf description). The default is INT_MAX.
+The
+.B maxbufsize=<size>
+property specifies the maximum security layer receive buffer
+size allowed. 0 disables security layers. The default is 65536.
+.TP
+.B olcServerID: <integer> [<URL>]
+Specify an integer ID from 0 to 4095 for this server (limited
+to 3 hexadecimal digits). The ID may also be specified as a
+hexadecimal ID by prefixing the value with "0x".
+Non-zero IDs are
+required when using multi-provider replication and each provider must have a
+unique non-zero ID. Note that this requirement also applies to separate providers
+contributing to a glued set of databases.
+If the URL is provided, this directive may be specified
+multiple times, providing a complete list of participating servers
+and their IDs. The fully qualified hostname of each server should be
+used in the supplied URLs. The IDs are used in the "replica id" field
+of all CSNs generated by the specified server. The default value is zero, which
+is only valid for single provider replication.
+Example:
+.LP
+.nf
+ olcServerID: 1 ldap://ldap1.example.com
+ olcServerID: 2 ldap://ldap2.example.com
+.fi
+.TP
+.B olcSockbufMaxIncoming: <integer>
+Specify the maximum incoming LDAP PDU size for anonymous sessions.
+The default is 262143.
+.TP
+.B olcSockbufMaxIncomingAuth: <integer>
+Specify the maximum incoming LDAP PDU size for authenticated sessions.
+The default is 4194303.
+.TP
+.B olcTCPBuffer [listener=<URL>] [{read|write}=]<size>
+Specify the size of the TCP buffer.
+A global value for both read and write TCP buffers related to any listener
+is defined, unless the listener is explicitly specified,
+or either the read or write qualifiers are used.
+See
+.BR tcp (7)
+for details.
+Note that some OS-es implement automatic TCP buffer tuning.
+.TP
+.B olcThreads: <integer>
+Specify the maximum size of the primary thread pool.
+The default is 16; the minimum value is 2.
+.TP
+.B olcToolThreads: <integer>
+Specify the maximum number of threads to use in tool mode.
+This should not be greater than the number of CPUs in the system.
+The default is 1.
+.TP
+.B olcWriteTimeout: <integer>
+Specify the number of seconds to wait before forcibly closing
+a connection with an outstanding write. This allows recovery from
+various network hang conditions. A setting of 0 disables this
+feature. The default is 0.
+.SH TLS OPTIONS
+If
+.B slapd
+is built with support for Transport Layer Security, there are more options
+you can specify.
+.TP
+.B olcTLSCipherSuite: <cipher-suite-spec>
+Permits configuring what ciphers will be accepted and the preference order.
+<cipher-suite-spec> should be a cipher specification for
+the TLS library in use (OpenSSL, GnuTLS, or Mozilla NSS).
+Example:
+.RS
+.RS
+.TP
+.I OpenSSL:
+olcTLSCipherSuite: HIGH:MEDIUM:+SSLv2
+.TP
+.I GnuTLS:
+olcTLSCiphersuite: SECURE256:!AES-128-CBC
+.RE
+
+To check what ciphers a given spec selects in OpenSSL, use:
+
+.nf
+ openssl ciphers \-v <cipher-suite-spec>
+.fi
+
+With GnuTLS the available specs can be found in the manual page of
+.BR gnutls\-cli (1)
+(see the description of the
+option
+.BR \-\-priority ).
+
+In older versions of GnuTLS, where gnutls\-cli does not support the option
+\-\-priority, you can obtain the \(em more limited \(em list of ciphers by calling:
+
+.nf
+ gnutls\-cli \-l
+.fi
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, the OpenSSL cipher suite specifications are used and
+translated into the format used internally by Mozilla NSS. There isn't an easy
+way to list the cipher suites from the command line. The authoritative list
+is in the source code for Mozilla NSS in the file sslinfo.c in the structure
+.nf
+ static const SSLCipherSuiteInfo suiteInfo[]
+.fi
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcTLSCACertificateFile: <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains certificates for all of the Certificate
+Authorities that
+.B slapd
+will recognize.
+.TP
+.B olcTLSCACertificatePath: <path>
+Specifies the path of a directory that contains Certificate Authority
+certificates in separate individual files. Usually only one of this
+or the olcTLSCACertificateFile is defined. If both are specified, both
+locations will be used. This directive is not supported
+when using GnuTLS.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, <path> may contain a Mozilla NSS cert/key
+database. If <path> contains a Mozilla NSS cert/key database and
+CA cert files, OpenLDAP will use the cert/key database and will
+ignore the CA cert files.
+.TP
+.B olcTLSCertificateFile: <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains the
+.B slapd
+server certificate.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, if using a cert/key database (specified with
+olcTLSCACertificatePath), olcTLSCertificateFile specifies
+the name of the certificate to use:
+.nf
+ olcTLSCertificateFile: Server-Cert
+.fi
+If using a token other than the internal built in token, specify the
+token name first, followed by a colon:
+.nf
+ olcTLSCertificateFile: my hardware device:Server-Cert
+.fi
+Use certutil \-L to list the certificates by name:
+.nf
+ certutil \-d /path/to/certdbdir \-L
+.fi
+.TP
+.B olcTLSCertificateKeyFile: <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains the
+.B slapd
+server private key that matches the certificate stored in the
+.B olcTLSCertificateFile
+file. If the private key is protected with a password, the password must
+be manually typed in when slapd starts. Usually the private key is not
+protected with a password, to allow slapd to start without manual
+intervention, so
+it is of critical importance that the file is protected carefully.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, olcTLSCertificateKeyFile specifies the name of
+a file that contains the password for the key for the certificate specified with
+olcTLSCertificateFile. The modutil command can be used to turn off password
+protection for the cert/key database. For example, if olcTLSCACertificatePath
+specifes /etc/openldap/certdb as the location of the cert/key database, use
+modutil to change the password to the empty string:
+.nf
+ modutil \-dbdir /etc/openldap/certdb \-changepw 'NSS Certificate DB'
+.fi
+You must have the old password, if any. Ignore the WARNING about the running
+browser. Press 'Enter' for the new password.
+
+.TP
+.B olcTLSDHParamFile: <filename>
+This directive specifies the file that contains parameters for Diffie-Hellman
+ephemeral key exchange. This is required in order to use a DSA certificate on
+the server, or an RSA certificate missing the "key encipherment" key usage.
+Note that setting this option may also enable
+Anonymous Diffie-Hellman key exchanges in certain non-default cipher suites.
+Anonymous key exchanges should generally be avoided since they provide no
+actual client or server authentication and provide no protection against
+man-in-the-middle attacks.
+You should append "!ADH" to your cipher suites to ensure that these suites
+are not used.
+When using Mozilla NSS these parameters are always generated randomly
+so this directive is ignored.
+.TP
+.B olcTLSECName: <name>
+Specify the name of the curve(s) to use for Elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman
+ephemeral key exchange. This option is only used for OpenSSL.
+This option is not used with GnuTLS; the curves may be
+chosen in the GnuTLS ciphersuite specification. This option is also
+ignored for Mozilla NSS.
+.TP
+.B olcTLSProtocolMin: <major>[.<minor>]
+Specifies minimum SSL/TLS protocol version that will be negotiated.
+If the server doesn't support at least that version,
+the SSL handshake will fail.
+To require TLS 1.x or higher, set this option to 3.(x+1),
+e.g.,
+
+.nf
+ olcTLSProtocolMin: 3.2
+.fi
+
+would require TLS 1.1.
+Specifying a minimum that is higher than that supported by the
+OpenLDAP implementation will result in it requiring the
+highest level that it does support.
+This directive is ignored with GnuTLS.
+.TP
+.B olcTLSRandFile: <filename>
+Specifies the file to obtain random bits from when /dev/[u]random
+is not available. Generally set to the name of the EGD/PRNGD socket.
+The environment variable RANDFILE can also be used to specify the filename.
+This directive is ignored with GnuTLS and Mozilla NSS.
+.TP
+.B olcTLSVerifyClient: <level>
+Specifies what checks to perform on client certificates in an
+incoming TLS session, if any.
+The
+.B <level>
+can be specified as one of the following keywords:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B never
+This is the default.
+.B slapd
+will not ask the client for a certificate.
+.TP
+.B allow
+The client certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided,
+the session proceeds normally. If a bad certificate is provided,
+it will be ignored and the session proceeds normally.
+.TP
+.B try
+The client certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided,
+the session proceeds normally. If a bad certificate is provided,
+the session is immediately terminated.
+.TP
+.B demand | hard | true
+These keywords are all equivalent, for compatibility reasons.
+The client certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided,
+or a bad certificate is provided, the session is immediately terminated.
+
+Note that a valid client certificate is required in order to use the
+SASL EXTERNAL authentication mechanism with a TLS session. As such,
+a non-default
+.B olcTLSVerifyClient
+setting must be chosen to enable SASL EXTERNAL authentication.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcTLSCRLCheck: <level>
+Specifies if the Certificate Revocation List (CRL) of the CA should be
+used to verify if the client certificates have not been revoked. This
+requires
+.B olcTLSCACertificatePath
+parameter to be set. This parameter is ignored with GnuTLS and Mozilla NSS.
+.B <level>
+can be specified as one of the following keywords:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B none
+No CRL checks are performed
+.TP
+.B peer
+Check the CRL of the peer certificate
+.TP
+.B all
+Check the CRL for a whole certificate chain
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcTLSCRLFile: <filename>
+Specifies a file containing a Certificate Revocation List to be used
+for verifying that certificates have not been revoked. This parameter
+is only valid when using GnuTLS or Mozilla NSS.
+.SH DYNAMIC MODULE OPTIONS
+If
+.B slapd
+is compiled with \-\-enable\-modules then the module-related entries will
+be available. These entries are named
+.B cn=module{x},cn=config
+and
+must have the olcModuleList objectClass. One entry should be created
+per
+.B olcModulePath.
+Normally the config engine generates the "{x}" index in the RDN
+automatically, so it can be omitted when initially loading these entries.
+.TP
+.B olcModuleLoad: <filename>
+Specify the name of a dynamically loadable module to load. The filename
+may be an absolute path name or a simple filename. Non-absolute names
+are searched for in the directories specified by the
+.B olcModulePath
+option.
+.TP
+.B olcModulePath: <pathspec>
+Specify a list of directories to search for loadable modules. Typically
+the path is colon-separated but this depends on the operating system.
+The default is MODULEDIR, which is where the standard OpenLDAP install
+will place its modules.
+.SH SCHEMA OPTIONS
+Schema definitions are created as entries in the
+.B cn=schema,cn=config
+subtree. These entries must have the olcSchemaConfig objectClass.
+As noted above, the actual
+.B cn=schema,cn=config
+entry is predefined and any values specified for it are ignored.
+
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B olcAttributetypes: "(\ <oid>\
+ [NAME\ <name>]\
+ [DESC\ <description>]\
+ [OBSOLETE]\
+ [SUP\ <oid>]\
+ [EQUALITY\ <oid>]\
+ [ORDERING\ <oid>]\
+ [SUBSTR\ <oid>]\
+ [SYNTAX\ <oidlen>]\
+ [SINGLE\-VALUE]\
+ [COLLECTIVE]\
+ [NO\-USER\-MODIFICATION]\
+ [USAGE\ <attributeUsage>]\ )"
+.RS
+Specify an attribute type using the LDAPv3 syntax defined in RFC 4512.
+The slapd parser extends the RFC 4512 definition by allowing string
+forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the attribute OID and
+attribute syntax OID.
+(See the
+.B olcObjectIdentifier
+description.)
+.RE
+
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B olcDitContentRules: "(\ <oid>\
+ [NAME\ <name>]\
+ [DESC\ <description>]\
+ [OBSOLETE]\
+ [AUX\ <oids>]\
+ [MUST\ <oids>]\
+ [MAY\ <oids>]\
+ [NOT\ <oids>]\ )"
+.RS
+Specify an DIT Content Rule using the LDAPv3 syntax defined in RFC 4512.
+The slapd parser extends the RFC 4512 definition by allowing string
+forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the attribute OID and
+attribute syntax OID.
+(See the
+.B olcObjectIdentifier
+description.)
+.RE
+
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B olcObjectClasses: "(\ <oid>\
+ [NAME\ <name>]\
+ [DESC\ <description>]\
+ [OBSOLETE]\
+ [SUP\ <oids>]\
+ [{ ABSTRACT | STRUCTURAL | AUXILIARY }]\
+ [MUST\ <oids>] [MAY\ <oids>] )"
+.RS
+Specify an objectclass using the LDAPv3 syntax defined in RFC 4512.
+The slapd parser extends the RFC 4512 definition by allowing string
+forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the object class OID.
+(See the
+.B
+olcObjectIdentifier
+description.) Object classes are "STRUCTURAL" by default.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcObjectIdentifier: <name> "{ <oid> | <name>[:<suffix>] }"
+Define a string name that equates to the given OID. The string can be used
+in place of the numeric OID in objectclass and attribute definitions. The
+name can also be used with a suffix of the form ":xx" in which case the
+value "oid.xx" will be used.
+
+.SH GENERAL BACKEND OPTIONS
+Options in these entries only apply to the configuration of a single
+type of backend. All backends may support this class of options, but
+currently none do.
+The entry must be named
+.B olcBackend=<databasetype>,cn=config
+and must have the olcBackendConfig objectClass.
+<databasetype>
+should be one of
+.BR bdb ,
+.BR config ,
+.BR dnssrv ,
+.BR hdb ,
+.BR ldap ,
+.BR ldif ,
+.BR mdb ,
+.BR meta ,
+.BR monitor ,
+.BR ndb ,
+.BR null ,
+.BR passwd ,
+.BR perl ,
+.BR relay ,
+.BR shell ,
+or
+.BR sql .
+At present, no backend implements any options of this type, so this
+entry should not be used.
+
+.SH DATABASE OPTIONS
+Database options are set in entries named
+.B olcDatabase={x}<databasetype>,cn=config
+and must have the olcDatabaseConfig objectClass. Normally the config
+engine generates the "{x}" index in the RDN automatically, so it
+can be omitted when initially loading these entries.
+
+The special frontend database is always numbered "{\-1}" and the config
+database is always numbered "{0}".
+
+.SH GLOBAL DATABASE OPTIONS
+Options in this section may be set in the special "frontend" database
+and inherited in all the other databases. These options may be altered
+by further settings in each specific database. The frontend entry must
+be named
+.B olcDatabase=frontend,cn=config
+and must have the olcFrontendConfig objectClass.
+.TP
+.B olcAccess: to <what> "[ by <who> <access> <control> ]+"
+Grant access (specified by <access>) to a set of entries and/or
+attributes (specified by <what>) by one or more requestors (specified
+by <who>).
+If no access controls are present, the default policy
+allows anyone and everyone to read anything but restricts
+updates to rootdn. (e.g., "olcAccess: to * by * read").
+See
+.BR slapd.access (5)
+and the "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" for details.
+
+Access controls set in the frontend are appended to any access
+controls set on the specific databases.
+The rootdn of a database can always read and write EVERYTHING
+in that database.
+
+Extra special care must be taken with the access controls on the
+config database. Unlike other databases, the default policy for the
+config database is to only allow access to the rootdn. Regular users
+should not have read access, and write access should be granted very
+carefully to privileged administrators.
+
+.TP
+.B olcDefaultSearchBase: <dn>
+Specify a default search base to use when client submits a
+non-base search request with an empty base DN.
+Base scoped search requests with an empty base DN are not affected.
+This setting is only allowed in the frontend entry.
+.TP
+.B olcExtraAttrs: <attr>
+Lists what attributes need to be added to search requests.
+Local storage backends return the entire entry to the frontend.
+The frontend takes care of only returning the requested attributes
+that are allowed by ACLs.
+However, features like access checking and so may need specific
+attributes that are not automatically returned by remote storage
+backends, like proxy backends and so on.
+.B <attr>
+is an attribute that is needed for internal purposes
+and thus always needs to be collected, even when not explicitly
+requested by clients.
+This attribute is multi-valued.
+.TP
+.B olcPasswordHash: <hash> [<hash>...]
+This option configures one or more hashes to be used in generation of user
+passwords stored in the userPassword attribute during processing of
+LDAP Password Modify Extended Operations (RFC 3062).
+The <hash> must be one of
+.BR {SSHA} ,
+.BR {SHA} ,
+.BR {SMD5} ,
+.BR {MD5} ,
+.BR {CRYPT} ,
+and
+.BR {CLEARTEXT} .
+The default is
+.BR {SSHA} .
+
+.B {SHA}
+and
+.B {SSHA}
+use the SHA-1 algorithm (FIPS 160-1), the latter with a seed.
+
+.B {MD5}
+and
+.B {SMD5}
+use the MD5 algorithm (RFC 1321), the latter with a seed.
+
+.B {CRYPT}
+uses the
+.BR crypt (3).
+
+.B {CLEARTEXT}
+indicates that the new password should be
+added to userPassword as clear text.
+
+Note that this option does not alter the normal user applications
+handling of userPassword during LDAP Add, Modify, or other LDAP operations.
+This setting is only allowed in the frontend entry.
+.TP
+.B olcReadOnly: TRUE | FALSE
+This option puts the database into "read-only" mode. Any attempts to
+modify the database will return an "unwilling to perform" error. By
+default, olcReadOnly is FALSE. Note that when this option is set
+TRUE on the frontend, it cannot be reset without restarting the
+server, since further writes to the config database will be rejected.
+.TP
+.B olcRequires: <conditions>
+Specify a set of conditions to require (default none).
+The directive may be specified globally and/or per-database;
+databases inherit global conditions, so per-database specifications
+are additive.
+.B bind
+requires bind operation prior to directory operations.
+.B LDAPv3
+requires session to be using LDAP version 3.
+.B authc
+requires authentication prior to directory operations.
+.B SASL
+requires SASL authentication prior to directory operations.
+.B strong
+requires strong authentication prior to directory operations.
+The strong keyword allows protected "simple" authentication
+as well as SASL authentication.
+.B none
+may be used to require no conditions (useful to clear out globally
+set conditions within a particular database); it must occur first
+in the list of conditions.
+.TP
+.B olcRestrict: <oplist>
+Specify a list of operations that are restricted.
+Restrictions on a specific database override any frontend setting.
+Operations can be any of
+.BR add ,
+.BR bind ,
+.BR compare ,
+.BR delete ,
+.BR extended[=<OID>] ,
+.BR modify ,
+.BR rename ,
+.BR search ,
+or the special pseudo-operations
+.B read
+and
+.BR write ,
+which respectively summarize read and write operations.
+The use of
+.I restrict write
+is equivalent to
+.I olcReadOnly: TRUE
+(see above).
+The
+.B extended
+keyword allows one to indicate the OID of the specific operation
+to be restricted.
+.TP
+.B olcSchemaDN: <dn>
+Specify the distinguished name for the subschema subentry that
+controls the entries on this server. The default is "cn=Subschema".
+.TP
+.B olcSecurity: <factors>
+Specify a set of security strength factors (separated by white space)
+to require (see
+.BR olcSaslSecprops 's
+.B minssf
+option for a description of security strength factors).
+The directive may be specified globally and/or per-database.
+.B ssf=<n>
+specifies the overall security strength factor.
+.B transport=<n>
+specifies the transport security strength factor.
+.B tls=<n>
+specifies the TLS security strength factor.
+.B sasl=<n>
+specifies the SASL security strength factor.
+.B update_ssf=<n>
+specifies the overall security strength factor to require for
+directory updates.
+.B update_transport=<n>
+specifies the transport security strength factor to require for
+directory updates.
+.B update_tls=<n>
+specifies the TLS security strength factor to require for
+directory updates.
+.B update_sasl=<n>
+specifies the SASL security strength factor to require for
+directory updates.
+.B simple_bind=<n>
+specifies the security strength factor required for
+.I simple
+username/password authentication.
+Note that the
+.B transport
+factor is measure of security provided by the underlying transport,
+e.g. ldapi:// (and eventually IPSEC). It is not normally used.
+.TP
+.B olcSizeLimit: {<integer>|unlimited}
+.TP
+.B olcSizeLimit: size[.{soft|hard|unchecked}]=<integer> [...]
+Specify the maximum number of entries to return from a search operation.
+The default size limit is 500.
+Use
+.B unlimited
+to specify no limits.
+The second format allows a fine grain setting of the size limits.
+Extra args can be added in the same value or as additional values.
+See
+.BR olcLimits
+for an explanation of the different flags.
+.TP
+.B olcSortVals: <attr> [...]
+Specify a list of multi-valued attributes whose values will always
+be maintained in sorted order. Using this option will allow Modify,
+Compare, and filter evaluations on these attributes to be performed
+more efficiently. The resulting sort order depends on the
+attributes' syntax and matching rules and may not correspond to
+lexical order or any other recognizable order.
+This setting is only allowed in the frontend entry.
+.TP
+.B olcTimeLimit: {<integer>|unlimited}
+.TP
+.B olcTimeLimit: time[.{soft|hard}]=<integer> [...]
+Specify the maximum number of seconds (in real time)
+.B slapd
+will spend answering a search request. The default time limit is 3600.
+Use
+.B unlimited
+to specify no limits.
+The second format allows a fine grain setting of the time limits.
+Extra args can be added in the same value or as additional values.
+See
+.BR olcLimits
+for an explanation of the different flags.
+
+.SH GENERAL DATABASE OPTIONS
+Options in this section only apply to the specific database for
+which they are defined. They are supported by every
+type of backend. All of the Global Database Options may also be
+used here.
+.TP
+.B olcAddContentAcl: TRUE | FALSE
+Controls whether Add operations will perform ACL checks on
+the content of the entry being added. This check is off
+by default. See the
+.BR slapd.access (5)
+manual page for more details on ACL requirements for
+Add operations.
+.TP
+.B olcHidden: TRUE | FALSE
+Controls whether the database will be used to answer
+queries. A database that is hidden will never be
+selected to answer any queries, and any suffix configured
+on the database will be ignored in checks for conflicts
+with other databases. By default, olcHidden is FALSE.
+.TP
+.B olcLastMod: TRUE | FALSE
+Controls whether
+.B slapd
+will automatically maintain the
+modifiersName, modifyTimestamp, creatorsName, and
+createTimestamp attributes for entries. It also controls
+the entryCSN and entryUUID attributes, which are needed
+by the syncrepl provider. By default, olcLastMod is TRUE.
+.TP
+.B olcLimits: <selector> <limit> [<limit> [...]]
+Specify time and size limits based on the operation's initiator or
+base DN.
+The argument
+.B <selector>
+can be any of
+.RS
+.RS
+.TP
+anonymous | users | [<dnspec>=]<pattern> | group[/oc[/at]]=<pattern>
+
+.RE
+with
+.RS
+.TP
+<dnspec> ::= dn[.<type>][.<style>]
+.TP
+<type> ::= self | this
+.TP
+<style> ::= exact | base | onelevel | subtree | children | regex | anonymous
+
+.RE
+DN type
+.B self
+is the default and means the bound user, while
+.B this
+means the base DN of the operation.
+The term
+.B anonymous
+matches all unauthenticated clients.
+The term
+.B users
+matches all authenticated clients;
+otherwise an
+.B exact
+dn pattern is assumed unless otherwise specified by qualifying
+the (optional) key string
+.B dn
+with
+.B exact
+or
+.B base
+(which are synonyms), to require an exact match; with
+.BR onelevel ,
+to require exactly one level of depth match; with
+.BR subtree ,
+to allow any level of depth match, including the exact match; with
+.BR children ,
+to allow any level of depth match, not including the exact match;
+.BR regex
+explicitly requires the (default) match based on POSIX (''extended'')
+regular expression pattern.
+Finally,
+.B anonymous
+matches unbound operations; the
+.B pattern
+field is ignored.
+The same behavior is obtained by using the
+.B anonymous
+form of the
+.B <selector>
+clause.
+The term
+.BR group ,
+with the optional objectClass
+.B oc
+and attributeType
+.B at
+fields, followed by
+.BR pattern ,
+sets the limits for any DN listed in the values of the
+.B at
+attribute (default
+.BR member )
+of the
+.B oc
+group objectClass (default
+.BR groupOfNames )
+whose DN exactly matches
+.BR pattern .
+
+The currently supported limits are
+.B size
+and
+.BR time .
+
+The syntax for time limits is
+.BR time[.{soft|hard}]=<integer> ,
+where
+.I integer
+is the number of seconds slapd will spend answering a search request.
+If no time limit is explicitly requested by the client, the
+.BR soft
+limit is used; if the requested time limit exceeds the
+.BR hard
+.\"limit, an
+.\".I "Administrative limit exceeded"
+.\"error is returned.
+limit, the value of the limit is used instead.
+If the
+.BR hard
+limit is set to the keyword
+.IR soft ,
+the soft limit is used in either case; if it is set to the keyword
+.IR unlimited ,
+no hard limit is enforced.
+Explicit requests for time limits smaller or equal to the
+.BR hard
+limit are honored.
+If no limit specifier is set, the value is assigned to the
+.BR soft
+limit, and the
+.BR hard
+limit is set to
+.IR soft ,
+to preserve the original behavior.
+
+The syntax for size limits is
+.BR size[.{soft|hard|unchecked}]=<integer> ,
+where
+.I integer
+is the maximum number of entries slapd will return answering a search
+request.
+If no size limit is explicitly requested by the client, the
+.BR soft
+limit is used; if the requested size limit exceeds the
+.BR hard
+.\"limit, an
+.\".I "Administrative limit exceeded"
+.\"error is returned.
+limit, the value of the limit is used instead.
+If the
+.BR hard
+limit is set to the keyword
+.IR soft ,
+the soft limit is used in either case; if it is set to the keyword
+.IR unlimited ,
+no hard limit is enforced.
+Explicit requests for size limits smaller or equal to the
+.BR hard
+limit are honored.
+The
+.BR unchecked
+specifier sets a limit on the number of candidates a search request is allowed
+to examine.
+The rationale behind it is that searches for non-properly indexed
+attributes may result in large sets of candidates, which must be
+examined by
+.BR slapd (8)
+to determine whether they match the search filter or not.
+The
+.B unchecked
+limit provides a means to drop such operations before they are even
+started.
+If the selected candidates exceed the
+.BR unchecked
+limit, the search will abort with
+.IR "Unwilling to perform" .
+If it is set to the keyword
+.IR unlimited ,
+no limit is applied (the default).
+If it is set to
+.IR disable ,
+the search is not even performed; this can be used to disallow searches
+for a specific set of users.
+If no limit specifier is set, the value is assigned to the
+.BR soft
+limit, and the
+.BR hard
+limit is set to
+.IR soft ,
+to preserve the original behavior.
+
+In case of no match, the global limits are used.
+The default values are the same as for
+.B olcSizeLimit
+and
+.BR olcTimeLimit ;
+no limit is set on
+.BR unchecked .
+
+If
+.B pagedResults
+control is requested, the
+.B hard
+size limit is used by default, because the request of a specific page size
+is considered an explicit request for a limitation on the number
+of entries to be returned.
+However, the size limit applies to the total count of entries returned within
+the search, and not to a single page.
+Additional size limits may be enforced; the syntax is
+.BR size.pr={<integer>|noEstimate|unlimited} ,
+where
+.I integer
+is the max page size if no explicit limit is set; the keyword
+.I noEstimate
+inhibits the server from returning an estimate of the total number
+of entries that might be returned
+(note: the current implementation does not return any estimate).
+The keyword
+.I unlimited
+indicates that no limit is applied to the pagedResults control page size.
+The syntax
+.B size.prtotal={<integer>|unlimited|disabled}
+allows one to set a limit on the total number of entries that the pagedResults
+control will return.
+By default it is set to the
+.B hard
+limit.
+When set,
+.I integer
+is the max number of entries that the whole search with pagedResults control
+can return.
+Use
+.I unlimited
+to allow unlimited number of entries to be returned, e.g. to allow
+the use of the pagedResults control as a means to circumvent size
+limitations on regular searches; the keyword
+.I disabled
+disables the control, i.e. no paged results can be returned.
+Note that the total number of entries returned when the pagedResults control
+is requested cannot exceed the
+.B hard
+size limit of regular searches unless extended by the
+.B prtotal
+switch.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcMaxDerefDepth: <depth>
+Specifies the maximum number of aliases to dereference when trying to
+resolve an entry, used to avoid infinite alias loops. The default is 15.
+.TP
+.B olcMirrorMode: TRUE | FALSE
+This option puts a consumer database into "mirror" mode. Update
+operations will be accepted from any user, not just the updatedn. The
+database must already be configured as syncrepl consumer
+before this keyword may be set. This mode also requires a
+.B olcServerID
+(see above) to be configured.
+By default, this setting is FALSE.
+.TP
+.B olcPlugin: <plugin_type> <lib_path> <init_function> [<arguments>]
+Configure a SLAPI plugin. See the
+.BR slapd.plugin (5)
+manpage for more details.
+.TP
+.B olcRootDN: <dn>
+Specify the distinguished name that is not subject to access control
+or administrative limit restrictions for operations on this database.
+This DN may or may not be associated with an entry. An empty root
+DN (the default) specifies no root access is to be granted. It is
+recommended that the rootdn only be specified when needed (such as
+when initially populating a database). If the rootdn is within
+a namingContext (suffix) of the database, a simple bind password
+may also be provided using the
+.B olcRootPW
+directive. Note that the rootdn is always needed when using syncrepl.
+The
+.B olcRootDN
+of the
+.B cn=config
+database defaults to
+.B cn=config
+itself.
+.TP
+.B olcRootPW: <password>
+Specify a password (or hash of the password) for the rootdn. The
+password can only be set if the rootdn is within the namingContext
+(suffix) of the database.
+This option accepts all RFC 2307 userPassword formats known to
+the server (see
+.B olcPasswordHash
+description) as well as cleartext.
+.BR slappasswd (8)
+may be used to generate a hash of a password. Cleartext
+and \fB{CRYPT}\fP passwords are not recommended. If empty
+(the default), authentication of the root DN is by other means
+(e.g. SASL). Use of SASL is encouraged.
+.TP
+.B olcSubordinate: [TRUE | FALSE | advertise]
+Specify that the current backend database is a subordinate of another
+backend database. A subordinate database may have only one suffix. This
+option may be used to glue multiple databases into a single namingContext.
+If the suffix of the current database is within the namingContext of a
+superior database, searches against the superior database will be
+propagated to the subordinate as well. All of the databases
+associated with a single namingContext should have identical rootdns.
+Behavior of other LDAP operations is unaffected by this setting. In
+particular, it is not possible to use moddn to move an entry from
+one subordinate to another subordinate within the namingContext.
+
+If the optional \fBadvertise\fP flag is supplied, the naming context of
+this database is advertised in the root DSE. The default is to hide this
+database context, so that only the superior context is visible.
+
+If the slap tools
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+or
+.BR slapindex (8)
+are used on the superior database, any glued subordinates that support
+these tools are opened as well.
+
+Databases that are glued together should usually be configured with the
+same indices (assuming they support indexing), even for attributes that
+only exist in some of these databases. In general, all of the glued
+databases should be configured as similarly as possible, since the intent
+is to provide the appearance of a single directory.
+
+Note that the subordinate functionality is implemented internally
+by the \fIglue\fP overlay and as such its behavior will interact with other
+overlays in use. By default, the glue overlay is automatically configured as
+the last overlay on the superior database. Its position on the database
+can be explicitly configured by setting an \fBoverlay glue\fP directive
+at the desired position. This explicit configuration is necessary e.g.
+when using the \fIsyncprov\fP overlay, which needs to follow \fIglue\fP
+in order to work over all of the glued databases. E.g.
+.RS
+.nf
+ dn: olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config
+ olcSuffix: dc=example,dc=com
+ ...
+
+ dn: olcOverlay={0}glue,olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config
+ ...
+
+ dn: olcOverlay={1}syncprov,olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config
+ ...
+.fi
+.RE
+See the Overlays section below for more details.
+.TP
+.B olcSuffix: <dn suffix>
+Specify the DN suffix of queries that will be passed to this
+backend database. Multiple suffix lines can be given and at least one is
+required for each database definition.
+
+If the suffix of one database is "inside" that of another, the database
+with the inner suffix must come first in the configuration file.
+You may also want to glue such databases together with the
+.B olcSubordinate
+attribute.
+.TP
+.B olcSyncUseSubentry: TRUE | FALSE
+Store the syncrepl contextCSN in a subentry instead of the context entry
+of the database. The subentry's RDN will be "cn=ldapsync". The default is
+FALSE, meaning the contextCSN is stored in the context entry.
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B olcSyncrepl: rid=<replica ID>
+.B provider=ldap[s]://<hostname>[:port]
+.B searchbase=<base DN>
+.B [type=refreshOnly|refreshAndPersist]
+.B [interval=dd:hh:mm:ss]
+.B [retry=[<retry interval> <# of retries>]+]
+.B [filter=<filter str>]
+.B [scope=sub|one|base|subord]
+.B [attrs=<attr list>]
+.B [exattrs=<attr list>]
+.B [attrsonly]
+.B [sizelimit=<limit>]
+.B [timelimit=<limit>]
+.B [schemachecking=on|off]
+.B [network\-timeout=<seconds>]
+.B [timeout=<seconds>]
+.B [bindmethod=simple|sasl]
+.B [binddn=<dn>]
+.B [saslmech=<mech>]
+.B [authcid=<identity>]
+.B [authzid=<identity>]
+.B [credentials=<passwd>]
+.B [realm=<realm>]
+.B [secprops=<properties>]
+.B [keepalive=<idle>:<probes>:<interval>]
+.B [starttls=yes|critical]
+.B [tls_cert=<file>]
+.B [tls_key=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacert=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacertdir=<path>]
+.B [tls_reqcert=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_reqsan=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_cipher_suite=<ciphers>]
+.B [tls_ecname=<names>]
+.B [tls_crlcheck=none|peer|all]
+.B [tls_protocol_min=<major>[.<minor>]]
+.B [suffixmassage=<real DN>]
+.B [logbase=<base DN>]
+.B [logfilter=<filter str>]
+.B [syncdata=default|accesslog|changelog]
+.RS
+Specify the current database as a consumer which is kept up-to-date with the
+provider content by establishing the current
+.BR slapd (8)
+as a replication consumer site running a
+.B syncrepl
+replication engine.
+The consumer content is kept synchronized to the provider content using
+the LDAP Content Synchronization protocol. Refer to the
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" for detailed information on
+setting up a replicated
+.B slapd
+directory service using the
+.B syncrepl
+replication engine.
+
+.B rid
+identifies the current
+.B syncrepl
+directive within the replication consumer site.
+It is a non-negative integer having no more than three decimal digits.
+
+.B provider
+specifies the replication provider site containing the provider content
+as an LDAP URI. If <port> is not given, the standard LDAP port number
+(389 or 636) is used.
+
+The content of the
+.B syncrepl
+consumer is defined using a search
+specification as its result set. The consumer
+.B slapd
+will send search requests to the provider
+.B slapd
+according to the search specification. The search specification includes
+.B searchbase, scope, filter, attrs, attrsonly, sizelimit,
+and
+.B timelimit
+parameters as in the normal search specification. The
+.B exattrs
+option may also be used to specify attributes that should be omitted
+from incoming entries.
+The \fBscope\fP defaults to \fBsub\fP, the \fBfilter\fP defaults to
+\fB(objectclass=*)\fP, and there is no default \fBsearchbase\fP. The
+\fBattrs\fP list defaults to \fB"*,+"\fP to return all user and operational
+attributes, and \fBattrsonly\fP and \fBexattrs\fP are unset by default.
+The \fBsizelimit\fP and \fBtimelimit\fP only
+accept "unlimited" and positive integers, and both default to "unlimited".
+Note, however, that any provider-side limits for the replication identity
+will be enforced by the provider regardless of the limits requested
+by the LDAP Content Synchronization operation, much like for any other
+search operation.
+
+The LDAP Content Synchronization protocol has two operation types.
+In the
+.B refreshOnly
+operation, the next synchronization search operation
+is periodically rescheduled at an interval time (specified by
+.B interval
+parameter; 1 day by default)
+after each synchronization operation finishes.
+In the
+.B refreshAndPersist
+operation, a synchronization search remains persistent in the provider slapd.
+Further updates to the provider will generate
+.B searchResultEntry
+to the consumer slapd as the search responses to the persistent
+synchronization search. If the initial search fails due to an error, the
+next synchronization search operation is periodically rescheduled at an
+interval time (specified by
+.B interval
+parameter; 1 day by default)
+
+If an error occurs during replication, the consumer will attempt to
+reconnect according to the
+.B retry
+parameter which is a list of the <retry interval> and <# of retries> pairs.
+For example, retry="60 10 300 3" lets the consumer retry every 60 seconds
+for the first 10 times and then retry every 300 seconds for the next 3
+times before stop retrying. The `+' in <# of retries> means indefinite
+number of retries until success.
+
+The schema checking can be enforced at the LDAP Sync
+consumer site by turning on the
+.B schemachecking
+parameter. The default is off.
+
+The
+.B network\-timeout
+parameter sets how long the consumer will wait to establish a
+network connection to the provider. Once a connection is
+established, the
+.B timeout
+parameter determines how long the consumer will wait for the initial
+Bind request to complete. The defaults for these parameters come
+from
+.BR ldap.conf (5).
+
+A
+.B bindmethod
+of
+.B simple
+requires the options
+.B binddn
+and
+.B credentials
+and should only be used when adequate security services
+(e.g. TLS or IPSEC) are in place.
+A
+.B bindmethod
+of
+.B sasl
+requires the option
+.B saslmech.
+Depending on the mechanism, an authentication identity and/or
+credentials can be specified using
+.B authcid
+and
+.B credentials.
+The
+.B authzid
+parameter may be used to specify an authorization identity.
+Specific security properties (as with the
+.B sasl\-secprops
+keyword above) for a SASL bind can be set with the
+.B secprops
+option. A non default SASL realm can be set with the
+.B realm
+option.
+The provider, other than allow authentication of the syncrepl identity,
+should grant that identity appropriate access privileges to the data
+that is being replicated (\fBaccess\fP directive), and appropriate time
+and size limits (\fBlimits\fP directive).
+
+The
+.B keepalive
+parameter sets the values of \fIidle\fP, \fIprobes\fP, and \fIinterval\fP
+used to check whether a socket is alive;
+.I idle
+is the number of seconds a connection needs to remain idle before TCP
+starts sending keepalive probes;
+.I probes
+is the maximum number of keepalive probes TCP should send before dropping
+the connection;
+.I interval
+is interval in seconds between individual keepalive probes.
+Only some systems support the customization of these values;
+the
+.B keepalive
+parameter is ignored otherwise, and system-wide settings are used.
+
+The
+.B starttls
+parameter specifies use of the StartTLS extended operation
+to establish a TLS session before Binding to the provider. If the
+.B critical
+argument is supplied, the session will be aborted if the StartTLS request
+fails. Otherwise the syncrepl session continues without TLS. The
+.B tls_reqcert
+setting defaults to "demand", the
+.B tls_reqsan
+setting defaults to "allow", and the other TLS settings default to the same
+as the main slapd TLS settings.
+
+The
+.B suffixmassage
+parameter allows the consumer to pull entries from a remote directory
+whose DN suffix differs from the local directory. The portion of the
+remote entries' DNs that matches the \fIsearchbase\fP will be replaced
+with the suffixmassage DN.
+
+Rather than replicating whole entries, the consumer can query logs of
+data modifications. This mode of operation is referred to as \fIdelta
+syncrepl\fP. In addition to the above parameters, the
+.B logbase
+and
+.B logfilter
+parameters must be set appropriately for the log that will be used. The
+.B syncdata
+parameter must be set to either "accesslog" if the log conforms to the
+.BR slapo\-accesslog (5)
+log format, or "changelog" if the log conforms
+to the obsolete \fIchangelog\fP format. If the
+.B syncdata
+parameter is omitted or set to "default" then the log parameters are
+ignored.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B olcUpdateDN: <dn>
+This option is only applicable in a replica
+database.
+It specifies the DN permitted to update (subject to access controls)
+the replica. It is only needed in certain push-mode
+replication scenarios. Generally, this DN
+.I should not
+be the same as the
+.B rootdn
+used at the provider.
+.TP
+.B olcUpdateRef: <url>
+Specify the referral to pass back when
+.BR slapd (8)
+is asked to modify a replicated local database.
+If multiple values are specified, each url is provided.
+
+.SH DATABASE-SPECIFIC OPTIONS
+Each database may allow specific configuration options; they are
+documented separately in the backends' manual pages. See the
+.BR slapd.backends (5)
+manual page for an overview of available backends.
+.SH OVERLAYS
+An overlay is a piece of
+code that intercepts database operations in order to extend or change
+them. Overlays are pushed onto
+a stack over the database, and so they will execute in the reverse
+of the order in which they were configured and the database itself
+will receive control last of all.
+
+Overlays must be configured as child entries of a specific database. The
+entry's RDN must be of the form
+.B olcOverlay={x}<overlaytype>
+and the entry must have the olcOverlayConfig objectClass. Normally the
+config engine generates the "{x}" index in the RDN automatically, so
+it can be omitted when initially loading these entries.
+
+See the
+.BR slapd.overlays (5)
+manual page for an overview of available overlays.
+.SH EXAMPLES
+.LP
+Here is a short example of a configuration in LDIF suitable for use with
+.BR slapadd (8)
+:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+dn: cn=config
+objectClass: olcGlobal
+cn: config
+olcPidFile: LOCALSTATEDIR/run/slapd.pid
+olcAttributeOptions: x\-hidden lang\-
+
+dn: cn=schema,cn=config
+objectClass: olcSchemaConfig
+cn: schema
+
+include: file://SYSCONFDIR/schema/core.ldif
+
+dn: olcDatabase=frontend,cn=config
+objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
+objectClass: olcFrontendConfig
+olcDatabase: frontend
+# Subtypes of "name" (e.g. "cn" and "ou") with the
+# option ";x\-hidden" can be searched for/compared,
+# but are not shown. See \fBslapd.access\fP(5).
+olcAccess: to attrs=name;x\-hidden by * =cs
+# Protect passwords. See \fBslapd.access\fP(5).
+olcAccess: to attrs=userPassword by * auth
+# Read access to other attributes and entries.
+olcAccess: to * by * read
+
+# set a rootpw for the config database so we can bind.
+# deny access to everyone else.
+dn: olcDatabase=config,cn=config
+objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
+olcDatabase: config
+olcRootPW: {SSHA}XKYnrjvGT3wZFQrDD5040US592LxsdLy
+olcAccess: to * by * none
+
+dn: olcDatabase=bdb,cn=config
+objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
+objectClass: olcBdbConfig
+olcDatabase: bdb
+olcSuffix: "dc=our\-domain,dc=com"
+# The database directory MUST exist prior to
+# running slapd AND should only be accessible
+# by the slapd/tools. Mode 0700 recommended.
+olcDbDirectory: LOCALSTATEDIR/openldap\-data
+# Indices to maintain
+olcDbIndex: objectClass eq
+olcDbIndex: cn,sn,mail pres,eq,approx,sub
+
+# We serve small clients that do not handle referrals,
+# so handle remote lookups on their behalf.
+dn: olcDatabase=ldap,cn=config
+objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
+objectClass: olcLdapConfig
+olcDatabase: ldap
+olcSuffix: ""
+olcDbUri: ldap://ldap.some\-server.com/
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+Assuming the above data was saved in a file named "config.ldif" and the
+ETCDIR/slapd.d directory has been created, this command will initialize
+the configuration:
+.RS
+.nf
+slapadd \-F ETCDIR/slapd.d \-n 0 \-l config.ldif
+.fi
+.RE
+
+.LP
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" contains a longer annotated
+example of a slapd configuration.
+
+Alternatively, an existing slapd.conf file can be converted to the new
+format using slapd or any of the slap tools:
+.RS
+.nf
+slaptest \-f ETCDIR/slapd.conf \-F ETCDIR/slapd.d
+.fi
+.RE
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.d
+default slapd configuration directory
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR ldap (3),
+.BR ldif (5),
+.BR gnutls\-cli (1),
+.BR slapd.access (5),
+.BR slapd.backends (5),
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd.overlays (5),
+.BR slapd.plugin (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR slapacl (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapauth (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapdn (8),
+.BR slapindex (8),
+.BR slappasswd (8),
+.BR slaptest (8).
+.LP
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-dnssrv.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-dnssrv.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ab2a9c1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-dnssrv.5
@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
+.TH SLAPD-DNSSRV 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-dnssrv \- DNS SRV referral backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The DNSSRV backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+serves up referrals based upon SRV resource records held in
+the Domain Name System.
+.LP
+This backend is experimental.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+The DNSSRV backend has no backend nor database specific options.
+It is configured simply by "database dnssrv" followed a suffix
+directive, e.g. suffix "".
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B dnssrv
+backend does not honor all ACL semantics as described in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+In fact, this backend only implements the
+.B search
+operation when the
+.B manageDSAit
+control (RFC 3296) is used, otherwise for every operation a referral,
+whenever appropriate, or an error is returned.
+Currently, there is no means to condition the returning of the referral
+by means of ACLs; no access control is implemented, except for
+.B read (=r)
+access to the returned entries, which is actually provided by the frontend.
+Note, however, that the information returned by this backend is collected
+through the DNS, so it is public by definition.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.br
+.SH SEE ALSO
+\fB"OpenLDAP Root Service - An experimental LDAP referral
+service"\fR [RFC 3088],
+.br
+\fB"OpenLDAP LDAP Root Service"\fR <http://www.openldap.org/faq/?file=393)>,
+.br
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd (8)
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-ldap.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-ldap.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8a24d07
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-ldap.5
@@ -0,0 +1,802 @@
+.TH SLAPD-LDAP 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-ldap \- LDAP backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The LDAP backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+is not an actual database; instead it acts as a proxy to forward incoming
+requests to another LDAP server. While processing requests it will also
+chase referrals, so that referrals are fully processed instead of being
+returned to the slapd client.
+
+Sessions that explicitly Bind to the back-ldap database always create their
+own private connection to the remote LDAP server. Anonymous sessions will
+share a single anonymous connection to the remote server. For sessions bound
+through other mechanisms, all sessions with the same DN will share the
+same connection. This connection pooling strategy can enhance the proxy's
+efficiency by reducing the overhead of repeatedly making/breaking multiple
+connections.
+
+The ldap database can also act as an information service, i.e. the identity
+of locally authenticated clients is asserted to the remote server, possibly
+in some modified form.
+For this purpose, the proxy binds to the remote server with some
+administrative identity, and, if required, authorizes the asserted identity.
+See the
+.IR idassert\- *
+rules below.
+The administrative identity of the proxy, on the remote server, must be
+allowed to authorize by means of appropriate
+.B authzTo
+rules; see
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details.
+
+The proxy instance of
+.BR slapd (8)
+must contain schema information for the attributes and objectClasses
+used in filters, request DNs and request-related data in general.
+It should also contain schema information for the data returned
+by the proxied server.
+It is the responsibility of the proxy administrator to keep the schema
+of the proxy lined up with that of the proxied server.
+
+.LP
+Note: When looping back to the same instance of
+.BR slapd (8),
+each connection requires a new thread; as a consequence,
+.BR slapd (8)
+must be compiled with thread support, and the \fBthreads\fP parameter
+may need some tuning; in those cases, one may consider using
+.BR slapd\-relay (5)
+instead, which performs the relayed operation
+internally and thus reuses the same connection.
+
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the LDAP backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database ldap" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+
+.LP
+Note: In early versions of back-ldap it was recommended to always set
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+lastmod off
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+for
+.B ldap
+and
+.B meta
+databases.
+This was required because operational attributes related to entry creation
+and modification should not be proxied, as they could be mistakenly written
+to the target server(s), generating an error.
+The current implementation automatically sets lastmod to \fBoff\fP,
+so its use is redundant and should be omitted.
+
+.TP
+.B uri <ldapurl>
+LDAP server to use. Multiple URIs can be set in a single
+.B ldapurl
+argument, resulting in the underlying library automatically
+calling the first server of the list that responds, e.g.
+
+\fBuri "ldap://host/ ldap://backup\-host/"\fP
+
+The URI list is space- or comma-separated.
+Whenever the server that responds is not the first one in the list,
+the list is rearranged and the responsive server is moved to the head,
+so that it will be first contacted the next time a connection
+needs to be created.
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B acl\-bind
+.B bindmethod=simple|sasl [binddn=<simple DN>] [credentials=<simple password>]
+.B [saslmech=<SASL mech>] [secprops=<properties>] [realm=<realm>]
+.B [authcId=<authentication ID>] [authzId=<authorization ID>]
+.B [starttls=no|yes|critical]
+.B [tls_cert=<file>]
+.B [tls_key=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacert=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacertdir=<path>]
+.B [tls_reqcert=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_reqsan=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_cipher_suite=<ciphers>]
+.B [tls_ecname=<names>]
+.B [tls_protocol_min=<major>[.<minor>]]
+.B [tls_crlcheck=none|peer|all]
+.RS
+Allows one to define the parameters of the authentication method that is
+internally used by the proxy to collect info related to access control,
+and whenever an operation occurs with the identity of the rootdn
+of the LDAP proxy database.
+The identity defined by this directive, according to the properties
+associated to the authentication method, is supposed to have read access
+on the target server to attributes used on the proxy for ACL checking.
+
+There is no risk of giving away such values; they are only used to
+check permissions.
+The default is to use
+.BR simple
+bind, with empty \fIbinddn\fP and \fIcredentials\fP,
+which means that the related operations will be performed anonymously.
+If not set, and if \fBidassert\-bind\fP is defined, this latter identity
+is used instead. See \fBidassert\-bind\fP for details.
+
+The connection between the proxy database and the remote server
+associated to this identity is cached regardless of the lifespan
+of the client-proxy connection that first established it.
+
+.B This identity is not implicitly used by the proxy
+.B when the client connects anonymously.
+The
+.B idassert\-bind
+feature, instead, in some cases can be crafted to implement that behavior,
+which is \fIintrinsically unsafe and should be used with extreme care\fP.
+This directive obsoletes
+.BR acl\-authcDN ,
+and
+.BR acl\-passwd .
+
+The TLS settings default to the same as the main slapd TLS settings,
+except for
+.B tls_reqcert
+which defaults to "demand", and
+.B tls_reqsan
+which defaults to "allow".
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B cancel {ABANDON|ignore|exop[\-discover]}
+Defines how to handle operation cancellation.
+By default,
+.B abandon
+is invoked, so the operation is abandoned immediately.
+If set to
+.BR ignore ,
+no action is taken and any further response is ignored; this may result
+in further response messages to be queued for that connection, so it is
+recommended that long lasting connections are timed out either by
+.I idle\-timeout
+or
+.IR conn\-ttl ,
+so that resources eventually get released.
+If set to
+.BR exop ,
+a
+.I cancel
+operation (RFC 3909) is issued, resulting in the cancellation
+of the current operation; the
+.I cancel
+operation waits for remote server response, so its use
+may not be recommended.
+If set to
+.BR exop\-discover ,
+support of the
+.I cancel
+extended operation is detected by reading the remote server's root DSE.
+
+.TP
+.B chase\-referrals {YES|no}
+enable/disable automatic referral chasing, which is delegated to the
+underlying libldap, with rebinding eventually performed if the
+\fBrebind\-as\-user\fP directive is used. The default is to chase referrals.
+
+.TP
+.B conn\-ttl <time>
+This directive causes a cached connection to be dropped and recreated
+after a given ttl, regardless of being idle or not.
+
+.TP
+.B idassert\-authzFrom <authz-regexp>
+if defined, selects what
+.I local
+identities are authorized to exploit the identity assertion feature.
+The string
+.B <authz-regexp>
+mostly follows the rules defined for the
+.I authzFrom
+attribute.
+See
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+section related to
+.BR authz\-policy ,
+for details on the syntax of this field. This parameter differs from
+the documented behavior in relation to the meaning of *, which in this
+case allows anonymous rather than denies.
+
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B idassert\-bind
+.B bindmethod=none|simple|sasl [binddn=<simple DN>] [credentials=<simple password>]
+.B [saslmech=<SASL mech>] [secprops=<properties>] [realm=<realm>]
+.B [authcId=<authentication ID>] [authzId=<authorization ID>]
+.B [authz={native|proxyauthz}] [mode=<mode>] [flags=<flags>]
+.B [starttls=no|yes|critical]
+.B [tls_cert=<file>]
+.B [tls_key=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacert=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacertdir=<path>]
+.B [tls_reqcert=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_reqsan=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_cipher_suite=<ciphers>]
+.B [tls_ecname=<names>]
+.B [tls_protocol_min=<version>]
+.B [tls_crlcheck=none|peer|all]
+.RS
+Allows one to define the parameters of the authentication method that is
+internally used by the proxy to authorize connections that are
+authenticated by other databases.
+Direct binds are always proxied without any idassert handling.
+
+The identity defined by this directive, according to the properties
+associated to the authentication method, is supposed to have auth access
+on the target server to attributes used on the proxy for authentication
+and authorization, and to be allowed to authorize the users.
+This requires to have
+.B proxyAuthz
+privileges on a wide set of DNs, e.g.
+.BR authzTo=dn.subtree:"" ,
+and the remote server to have
+.B authz\-policy
+set to
+.B to
+or
+.BR both .
+See
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details on these statements and for remarks and drawbacks about
+their usage.
+The supported bindmethods are
+
+\fBnone|simple|sasl\fP
+
+where
+.B none
+is the default, i.e. no \fIidentity assertion\fP is performed.
+
+The authz parameter is used to instruct the SASL bind to exploit
+.B native
+SASL authorization, if available; since connections are cached,
+this should only be used when authorizing with a fixed identity
+(e.g. by means of the
+.B authzDN
+or
+.B authzID
+parameters).
+Otherwise, the default
+.B proxyauthz
+is used, i.e. the proxyAuthz control (Proxied Authorization, RFC 4370)
+is added to all operations.
+
+The supported modes are:
+
+\fB<mode> := {legacy|anonymous|none|self}\fP
+
+If
+.B <mode>
+is not present, and
+.B authzId
+is given, the proxy always authorizes that identity.
+.B <authorization ID>
+can be
+
+\fBu:<user>\fP
+
+\fB[dn:]<DN>\fP
+
+The former is supposed to be expanded by the remote server according
+to the authz rules; see
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details.
+In the latter case, whether or not the
+.B dn:
+prefix is present, the string must pass DN validation and normalization.
+
+The default mode is
+.BR legacy ,
+which implies that the proxy will either perform a simple bind as the
+.I authcDN
+or a SASL bind as the
+.I authcID
+and assert the client's identity when it is not anonymous.
+The other modes imply that the proxy will always either perform a simple bind
+as the
+.IR authcDN
+or a SASL bind as the
+.IR authcID ,
+unless restricted by
+.BR idassert\-authzFrom
+rules (see below), in which case the operation will fail;
+eventually, it will assert some other identity according to
+.BR <mode> .
+Other identity assertion modes are
+.BR anonymous
+and
+.BR self ,
+which respectively mean that the
+.I empty
+or the
+.IR client 's
+identity
+will be asserted;
+.BR none ,
+which means that no proxyAuthz control will be used, so the
+.I authcDN
+or the
+.I authcID
+identity will be asserted.
+For all modes that require the use of the
+.I proxyAuthz
+control, on the remote server the proxy identity must have appropriate
+.I authzTo
+permissions, or the asserted identities must have appropriate
+.I authzFrom
+permissions. Note, however, that the ID assertion feature is mostly
+useful when the asserted identities do not exist on the remote server.
+
+Flags can be
+
+\fBoverride,[non\-]prescriptive,proxy\-authz\-[non\-]critical\fP
+
+When the
+.B override
+flag is used, identity assertion takes place even when the database
+is authorizing for the identity of the client, i.e. after binding
+with the provided identity, and thus authenticating it, the proxy
+performs the identity assertion using the configured identity and
+authentication method.
+
+When the
+.B prescriptive
+flag is used (the default), operations fail with
+\fIinappropriateAuthentication\fP
+for those identities whose assertion is not allowed by the
+.B idassert\-authzFrom
+patterns.
+If the
+.B non\-prescriptive
+flag is used, operations are performed anonymously for those identities
+whose assertion is not allowed by the
+.B idassert\-authzFrom
+patterns.
+
+When the
+.B proxy\-authz\-non\-critical
+flag is used (the default), the proxyAuthz control is not marked as critical,
+in violation of RFC 4370. Use of
+.B proxy\-authz\-critical
+is recommended.
+
+The TLS settings default to the same as the main slapd TLS settings,
+except for
+.B tls_reqcert
+which defaults to "demand", and
+.B tls_reqsan
+which defaults to "allow".
+
+The identity associated to this directive is also used for privileged
+operations whenever \fBidassert\-bind\fP is defined and \fBacl\-bind\fP
+is not. See \fBacl\-bind\fP for details.
+
+This directive obsoletes
+.BR idassert\-authcDN ,
+.BR idassert\-passwd ,
+.BR idassert\-mode ,
+and
+.BR idassert\-method .
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B idassert-passthru <authz-regexp>
+if defined, selects what
+.I local
+identities bypass the identity assertion feature.
+Those identities need to be known by the remote host.
+The string
+.B <authz-regexp>
+follows the rules defined for the
+.I authzFrom
+attribute.
+See
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+section related to
+.BR authz\-policy ,
+for details on the syntax of this field.
+
+
+.TP
+.B idle\-timeout <time>
+This directive causes a cached connection to be dropped an recreated
+after it has been idle for the specified time.
+
+.TP
+.B keepalive <idle>:<probes>:<interval>
+The
+.B keepalive
+parameter sets the values of \fIidle\fP, \fIprobes\fP, and \fIinterval\fP
+used to check whether a socket is alive;
+.I idle
+is the number of seconds a connection needs to remain idle before TCP
+starts sending keepalive probes;
+.I probes
+is the maximum number of keepalive probes TCP should send before dropping
+the connection;
+.I interval
+is interval in seconds between individual keepalive probes.
+Only some systems support the customization of these values;
+the
+.B keepalive
+parameter is ignored otherwise, and system-wide settings are used.
+
+.TP
+.B network\-timeout <time>
+Sets the network timeout value after which
+.BR poll (2)/ select (2)
+following a
+.BR connect (2)
+returns in case of no activity.
+The value is in seconds, and it can be specified as for
+.BR idle\-timeout .
+
+.TP
+.B norefs <NO|yes>
+If
+.BR yes ,
+do not return search reference responses.
+By default, they are returned unless request is LDAPv2.
+
+.TP
+.B omit-unknown-schema <NO|yes>
+If
+.BR yes ,
+do not return objectClasses or attributes that are not known to the local server.
+The default is to return all schema elements.
+
+.TP
+.B noundeffilter <NO|yes>
+If
+.BR yes ,
+return success instead of searching if a filter is undefined or contains
+undefined portions.
+By default, the search is propagated after replacing undefined portions
+with
+.BR (!(objectClass=*)) ,
+which corresponds to the empty result set.
+
+.TP
+.B onerr {CONTINUE|stop}
+This directive allows one to select the behavior in case an error is returned
+by the remote server during a search.
+The default, \fBcontinue\fP, consists in returning success.
+If the value is set to \fBstop\fP, the error is returned to the client.
+
+.TP
+.B protocol\-version {0,2,3}
+This directive indicates what protocol version must be used to contact
+the remote server.
+If set to 0 (the default), the proxy uses the same protocol version
+used by the client, otherwise the requested protocol is used.
+The proxy returns \fIunwillingToPerform\fP if an operation that is
+incompatible with the requested protocol is attempted.
+
+.TP
+.B proxy\-whoami {NO|yes}
+Turns on proxying of the WhoAmI extended operation. If this option is
+given, back-ldap will replace slapd's original WhoAmI routine with its
+own. On slapd sessions that were authenticated by back-ldap, the WhoAmI
+request will be forwarded to the remote LDAP server. Other sessions will
+be handled by the local slapd, as before. This option is mainly useful
+in conjunction with Proxy Authorization.
+
+.TP
+.B quarantine <interval>,<num>[;<interval>,<num>[...]]
+Turns on quarantine of URIs that returned
+.IR LDAP_UNAVAILABLE ,
+so that an attempt to reconnect only occurs at given intervals instead
+of any time a client requests an operation.
+The pattern is: retry only after at least
+.I interval
+seconds elapsed since last attempt, for exactly
+.I num
+times; then use the next pattern.
+If
+.I num
+for the last pattern is "\fB+\fP", it retries forever; otherwise,
+no more retries occur.
+The process can be restarted by resetting the \fIolcDbQuarantine\fP
+attribute of the database entry in the configuration backend.
+
+.TP
+.B rebind\-as\-user {NO|yes}
+If this option is given, the client's bind credentials are remembered
+for rebinds, when trying to re-establish a broken connection,
+or when chasing a referral, if
+.B chase\-referrals
+is set to
+.IR yes .
+
+.TP
+.B session\-tracking\-request {NO|yes}
+Adds session tracking control for all requests.
+The client's IP and hostname, and the identity associated to each request,
+if known, are sent to the remote server for informational purposes.
+This directive is incompatible with setting \fIprotocol\-version\fP to 2.
+
+.TP
+.B single\-conn {NO|yes}
+Discards current cached connection when the client rebinds.
+
+.TP
+.B t\-f\-support {NO|yes|discover}
+enable if the remote server supports absolute filters
+(see \fIRFC 4526\fP for details).
+If set to
+.BR discover ,
+support is detected by reading the remote server's root DSE.
+
+.TP
+.B timeout [<op>=]<val> [...]
+This directive allows one to set per-operation timeouts.
+Operations can be
+
+\fB<op> ::= bind, add, delete, modrdn, modify, compare, search\fP
+
+The overall duration of the \fBsearch\fP operation is controlled either
+by the \fBtimelimit\fP parameter or by server-side enforced
+time limits (see \fBtimelimit\fP and \fBlimits\fP in
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details).
+This \fBtimeout\fP parameter controls how long the target can be
+irresponsive before the operation is aborted.
+Timeout is meaningless for the remaining operations,
+\fBunbind\fP and \fBabandon\fP, which do not imply any response,
+while it is not yet implemented in currently supported \fBextended\fP
+operations.
+If no operation is specified, the timeout \fBval\fP affects all
+supported operations.
+
+Note: if the timelimit is exceeded, the operation is cancelled
+(according to the \fBcancel\fP directive);
+the protocol does not provide any means to rollback operations,
+so the client will not be notified about the result of the operation,
+which may eventually succeeded or not.
+In case the timeout is exceeded during a bind operation, the connection
+is destroyed, according to RFC4511.
+
+Note: in some cases, this backend may issue binds prior
+to other operations (e.g. to bind anonymously or with some prescribed
+identity according to the \fBidassert\-bind\fP directive).
+In this case, the timeout of the operation that resulted in the bind
+is used.
+
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B tls {none|[try\-]start|[try\-]propagate|ldaps}
+.B [starttls=no]
+.B [tls_cert=<file>]
+.B [tls_key=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacert=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacertdir=<path>]
+.B [tls_reqcert=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_reqsan=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_cipher_suite=<ciphers>]
+.B [tls_ecname=<names>]
+.B [tls_crlcheck=none|peer|all]
+.RS
+Specify TLS settings for regular connections.
+
+The first parameter only applies to \fBldap://\fP connections and so
+at the moment, \fBnone\fP and \fBldaps\fP are equivalent.
+
+With \fBpropagate\fP, the proxy issues StartTLS operation only if
+the original connection has a TLS layer set up.
+The \fBtry\-\fP prefix instructs the proxy to continue operations
+if the StartTLS operation failed; its use is \fBnot\fP recommended.
+
+The TLS settings default to the same as the main slapd TLS settings,
+except for
+.B tls_reqcert
+which defaults to "demand",
+.B tls_reqsan
+which defaults to "allow", and
+.B starttls
+which is overshadowed by the first keyword and thus ignored.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B use\-temporary\-conn {NO|yes}
+when set to
+.BR yes ,
+create a temporary connection whenever competing with other threads
+for a shared one; otherwise, wait until the shared connection is available.
+
+.SH BACKWARD COMPATIBILITY
+The LDAP backend has been heavily reworked between releases 2.2 and 2.3,
+and subsequently between 2.3 and 2.4.
+As a side-effect, some of the traditional directives have been
+deprecated and should be no longer used, as they might disappear
+in future releases.
+
+.TP
+.B acl\-authcDN "<administrative DN for access control purposes>"
+Formerly known as the
+.BR binddn ,
+it is the DN that is used to query the target server for acl checking;
+it is supposed to have read access on the target server to attributes used
+on the proxy for acl checking.
+There is no risk of giving away such values; they are only used to
+check permissions.
+
+.B The acl\-authcDN identity is by no means implicitly used by the proxy
+.B when the client connects anonymously.
+The
+.B idassert\-*
+feature can be used (at own risk) for that purpose instead.
+
+This directive is obsoleted by the
+.B binddn
+arg of
+.B acl\-bind
+when \fIbindmethod\fP=\fBsimple\fP, and will be dismissed in the future.
+
+.TP
+.B acl\-passwd <password>
+Formerly known as the
+.BR bindpw ,
+it is the password used with the above
+.B acl\-authcDN
+directive.
+This directive is obsoleted by the
+.B credentials
+arg of
+.B acl\-bind
+when \fIbindmethod\fP=\fBsimple\fP, and will be dismissed in the future.
+
+.TP
+.B idassert\-authcDN "<administrative DN for proxyAuthz purposes>"
+DN which is used to propagate the client's identity to the target
+by means of the proxyAuthz control when the client does not
+belong to the DIT fragment that is being proxied by back-ldap.
+This directive is obsoleted by the
+.B binddn
+arg of
+.BR idassert\-bind
+when \fIbindmethod\fP=\fBsimple\fP, and will be dismissed in the future.
+
+.TP
+.B idassert\-passwd <password>
+Password used with the
+.B idassert\-authcDN
+above.
+This directive is obsoleted by the
+.B crendentials
+arg of
+.B idassert\-bind
+when \fIbindmethod\fP=\fBsimple\fP, and will be dismissed in the future.
+
+.TP
+.B idassert\-mode <mode> [<flags>]
+defines what type of
+.I identity assertion
+is used.
+This directive is obsoleted by the
+.B mode
+arg of
+.BR idassert\-bind ,
+and will be dismissed in the future.
+
+.TP
+.B idassert\-method <method> [<saslargs>]
+This directive is obsoleted by the
+.B bindmethod
+arg of
+.BR idassert\-bind ,
+and will be dismissed in the future.
+
+.TP
+.B port <port>
+this directive is no longer supported. Use the
+.B uri
+directive as described above.
+
+.TP
+.B server <hostname[:port]>
+this directive is no longer supported. Use the
+.B uri
+directive as described above.
+
+.TP
+.B suffixmassage, map, rewrite*
+These directives are no longer supported by back-ldap; their
+functionality is now delegated to the
+.B rwm
+overlay. Essentially, add a statement
+
+.B overlay rwm
+
+first, and prefix all rewrite/map statements with
+.B rwm\-
+to obtain the original behavior.
+See
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5)
+for details.
+.\" However, to ease update from existing configurations, back-ldap still
+.\" recognizes them and automatically instantiates the
+.\" .B rwm
+.\" overlay if available and not instantiated yet.
+.\" This behavior may change in the future.
+
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B ldap
+backend does not honor all ACL semantics as described in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+In general, access checking is delegated to the remote server(s).
+Only
+.B read (=r)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute and to the other attribute values of the entries
+returned by the
+.B search
+operation is honored, which is performed by the frontend.
+
+.SH OVERLAYS
+The LDAP backend provides basic proxying functionalities to many overlays.
+The
+.B chain
+overlay, described in
+.BR slapo\-chain (5),
+and the
+.B translucent
+overlay, described in
+.BR slapo\-translucent (5),
+deserve a special mention.
+
+Conversely, there are many overlays that are best used in conjunction
+with the LDAP backend.
+The
+.B proxycache
+overlay allows caching of LDAP search requests (queries)
+in a local database.
+See
+.BR slapo\-pcache (5)
+for details.
+The
+.B rwm
+overlay provides DN rewrite and attribute/objectClass mapping
+capabilities to the underlying database.
+See
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5)
+for details.
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd\-meta (5),
+.BR slapo\-chain (5),
+.BR slapo\-pcache (5),
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5),
+.BR slapo\-translucent (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR ldap (3).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Howard Chu, with enhancements by Pierangelo Masarati
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-ldif.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-ldif.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..df18a61
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-ldif.5
@@ -0,0 +1,54 @@
+.TH SLAPD-LDIF 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-ldif \- LDIF backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The LDIF backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+is a basic storage backend that stores entries in text files in LDIF format,
+and exploits the filesystem to create the tree structure of the database.
+It is intended as a cheap, low performance easy to use backend, and it is
+exploited by higher-level internal structures to provide a permanent
+storage.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the LDIF backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database ldif" line and come before
+any subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.TP
+.B directory <dir>
+Specify the directory where the database tree starts. The directory
+must exist and grant appropriate permissions (rwx) to the identity slapd
+is running with.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B LDIF
+backend does not honor any of the access control semantics described in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+Only
+.B read (=r)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute and to the other attribute values of the entries
+returned by the
+.B search
+operation is honored, which is performed by the frontend.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR ldif (5).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Eric Stokes
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-mdb.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-mdb.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..55fced7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-mdb.5
@@ -0,0 +1,208 @@
+.TH SLAPD-MDB 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2011-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-mdb \- Memory-Mapped DB backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+.B ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The \fBmdb\fP backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+uses OpenLDAP's Lightning Memory-Mapped DB (LMDB) library to store data.
+It relies completely on the underlying operating system for memory
+management and does no caching of its own. It is the recommended
+primary database backend.
+.LP
+The \fBmdb\fP backend is similar to the \fBhdb\fP backend in that
+it uses a hierarchical database layout which
+supports subtree renames. It is both more space-efficient and more
+execution-efficient than the \fBbdb\fP backend, while being overall
+much simpler to manage.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the \fBmdb\fP backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database mdb" line and
+come before any subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.TP
+.BI checkpoint \ <kbyte>\ <min>
+Specify the frequency for flushing the database disk buffers.
+This setting is only needed if the \fBdbnosync\fP option is used.
+The checkpoint will occur if either \fI<kbyte>\fP data has been written or
+\fI<min>\fP minutes have passed since the last checkpoint.
+Both arguments default to zero, in which case they are ignored. When
+the \fI<min>\fP argument is non-zero, an internal task will run every
+\fI<min>\fP minutes to perform the checkpoint.
+Note: currently the \fI<kbyte>\fP setting is unimplemented.
+.TP
+.B dbnosync
+Specify that on-disk database contents should not be immediately
+synchronized with in memory changes.
+Enabling this option may improve performance at the expense of data
+security. In particular, if the operating system crashes before changes are
+flushed, some number of transactions may be lost.
+By default, a full data flush/sync is performed when each
+transaction is committed.
+.TP
+.BI directory \ <directory>
+Specify the directory where the LMDB files containing this database and
+associated indexes live.
+A separate directory must be specified for each database.
+The default is
+.BR LOCALSTATEDIR/openldap\-data .
+.TP
+\fBenvflags \fR{\fBnosync\fR,\fBnometasync\fR,\fBwritemap\fR,\fBmapasync\fR,\fBnordahead\fR}
+Specify flags for finer-grained control of the LMDB library's operation.
+.RS
+.TP
+.B nosync
+This is exactly the same as the
+.I dbnosync
+directive.
+.RE
+.RS
+.TP
+.B nometasync
+Flush the data on a commit, but skip the sync of the meta page. This mode is
+slightly faster than doing a full sync, but can potentially lose the last
+committed transaction if the operating system crashes. If both
+.I nometasync
+and
+.I nosync
+are set, the
+.I nosync
+flag takes precedence.
+.RE
+.RS
+.TP
+.B writemap
+Use a writable memory map instead of just read-only. This speeds up write operations
+but makes the database vulnerable to corruption in case any bugs in slapd
+cause stray writes into the mmap region.
+.RE
+.RS
+.TP
+.B mapasync
+When using a writable memory map and performing flushes on each commit, use an
+asynchronous flush instead of a synchronous flush (the default). This option
+has no effect if
+.I writemap
+has not been set. It also has no effect if
+.I nosync
+is set.
+.RE
+.RS
+.TP
+.B nordahead
+Turn off file readahead. Usually the OS performs readahead on every read
+request. This usually boosts read performance but can be harmful to
+random access read performance if the system's memory is full and the DB
+is larger than RAM. This option is not implemented on Windows.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+\fBindex \fR{\fI<attrlist>\fR|\fBdefault\fR} [\fBpres\fR,\fBeq\fR,\fBapprox\fR,\fBsub\fR,\fI<special>\fR]
+Specify the indexes to maintain for the given attribute (or
+list of attributes).
+Some attributes only support a subset of indexes.
+If only an \fI<attr>\fP is given, the indices specified for \fBdefault\fR
+are maintained.
+Note that setting a default does not imply that all attributes will be
+indexed. Also, for best performance, an
+.B eq
+index should always be configured for the
+.B objectClass
+attribute.
+
+A number of special index parameters may be specified.
+The index type
+.B sub
+can be decomposed into
+.BR subinitial ,
+.BR subany ,\ and
+.B subfinal
+indices.
+The special type
+.B nolang
+may be specified to disallow use of this index by language subtypes.
+The special type
+.B nosubtypes
+may be specified to disallow use of this index by named subtypes.
+Note: changing \fBindex\fP settings in
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+requires rebuilding indices, see
+.BR slapindex (8);
+changing \fBindex\fP settings
+dynamically by LDAPModifying "cn=config" automatically causes rebuilding
+of the indices online in a background task.
+.TP
+.BI maxreaders \ <integer>
+Specify the maximum number of threads that may have concurrent read access
+to the database. Tools such as slapcat count as a single thread,
+in addition to threads in any active slapd processes. The
+default is 126.
+.TP
+.BI maxsize \ <bytes>
+Specify the maximum size of the database in bytes. A memory map of this
+size is allocated at startup time and the database will not be allowed
+to grow beyond this size. The default is 10485760 bytes. This setting
+may be changed upward if the configured limit needs to be increased.
+
+Note: It is important to set this to as large a value as possible,
+(relative to anticipated growth of the actual data over time) since
+growing the size later may not be practical when the system is under
+heavy load.
+.TP
+.BI mode \ <integer>
+Specify the file protection mode that newly created database
+files should have.
+The default is 0600.
+.TP
+.BI rtxnsize \ <entries>
+Specify the maximum number of entries to process in a single read
+transaction when executing a large search. Long-lived read transactions
+prevent old database pages from being reused in write transactions, and
+so can cause significant growth of the database file when there is
+heavy write traffic. This setting causes the read transaction in
+large searches to be released and reacquired after the given number
+of entries has been read, to give writers the opportunity to
+reclaim old database pages. The default is 10000.
+.TP
+.BI searchstack \ <depth>
+Specify the depth of the stack used for search filter evaluation.
+Search filters are evaluated on a stack to accommodate nested AND / OR
+clauses. An individual stack is assigned to each server thread.
+The depth of the stack determines how complex a filter can be
+evaluated without requiring any additional memory allocation. Filters that
+are nested deeper than the search stack depth will cause a separate
+stack to be allocated for that particular search operation. These
+allocations can have a major negative impact on server performance,
+but specifying too much stack will also consume a great deal of memory.
+Each search stack uses 512K bytes per level. The default stack depth
+is 16, thus 8MB per thread is used.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B mdb
+backend honors access control semantics as indicated in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+.B ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default
+.B slapd
+configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapindex (8),
+OpenLDAP LMDB documentation.
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
+Written by Howard Chu.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-meta.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-meta.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b6e7b3f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-meta.5
@@ -0,0 +1,1308 @@
+.TH SLAPD-META 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" Copyright 2001, Pierangelo Masarati, All rights reserved. <ando@sys-net.it>
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.\"
+.\" Portions of this document should probably be moved to slapd-ldap(5)
+.\" and maybe manual pages for librewrite.
+.\"
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-meta \- metadirectory backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B meta
+backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+performs basic LDAP proxying with respect to a set of remote LDAP
+servers, called "targets".
+The information contained in these servers can be presented as
+belonging to a single Directory Information Tree (DIT).
+.LP
+A basic knowledge of the functionality of the
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5)
+backend is recommended.
+This backend has been designed as an enhancement of the ldap backend.
+The two backends share many features (actually they also share
+portions of code).
+While the
+.B ldap
+backend is intended to proxy operations directed to a single server, the
+.B meta
+backend is mainly intended for proxying of multiple servers and possibly
+naming context masquerading.
+These features, although useful in many scenarios, may result in
+excessive overhead for some applications, so its use should be
+carefully considered.
+In the examples section, some typical scenarios will be discussed.
+
+The proxy instance of
+.BR slapd (8)
+must contain schema information for the attributes and objectClasses
+used in filters, request DN and request-related data in general.
+It should also contain schema information for the data returned
+by the proxied server.
+It is the responsibility of the proxy administrator to keep the schema
+of the proxy lined up with that of the proxied server.
+
+.LP
+Note: When looping back to the same instance of \fBslapd\fP(8),
+each connection requires a new thread; as a consequence, \fBslapd\fP(8)
+must be compiled with thread support, and the \fBthreads\fP parameter
+may need some tuning; in those cases, unless the multiple target feature
+is required, one may consider using \fBslapd\-relay\fP(5) instead,
+which performs the relayed operation internally and thus reuses
+the same connection.
+
+.SH EXAMPLES
+There are examples in various places in this document, as well as in the
+slapd/back\-meta/data/ directory in the OpenLDAP source tree.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the META backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database meta" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.LP
+Note: In early versions of back-ldap and back-meta it was recommended to always set
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+lastmod off
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+for
+.B ldap
+and
+.B meta
+databases.
+This was required because operational attributes related to entry creation
+and modification should not be proxied, as they could be mistakenly written
+to the target server(s), generating an error.
+The current implementation automatically sets lastmod to \fBoff\fP,
+so its use is redundant and should be omitted.
+
+.SH SPECIAL CONFIGURATION DIRECTIVES
+Target configuration starts with the "uri" directive.
+All the configuration directives that are not specific to targets
+should be defined first for clarity, including those that are common
+to all backends.
+They are:
+
+.TP
+.B conn\-ttl <time>
+This directive causes a cached connection to be dropped an recreated
+after a given ttl, regardless of being idle or not.
+
+.TP
+.B default\-target none
+This directive forces the backend to reject all those operations
+that must resolve to a single target in case none or multiple
+targets are selected.
+They include: add, delete, modify, modrdn; compare is not included, as
+well as bind since, as they don't alter entries, in case of multiple
+matches an attempt is made to perform the operation on any candidate
+target, with the constraint that at most one must succeed.
+This directive can also be used when processing targets to mark a
+specific target as default.
+
+.TP
+.B dncache\-ttl {DISABLED|forever|<ttl>}
+This directive sets the time-to-live of the DN cache.
+This caches the target that holds a given DN to speed up target
+selection in case multiple targets would result from an uncached
+search; forever means cache never expires; disabled means no DN
+caching; otherwise a valid ( > 0 ) ttl is required, in the format
+illustrated for the
+.B idle\-timeout
+directive.
+
+.TP
+.B onerr {CONTINUE|report|stop}
+This directive allows one to select the behavior in case an error is returned
+by one target during a search.
+The default, \fBcontinue\fP, consists in continuing the operation,
+trying to return as much data as possible.
+If the value is set to \fBstop\fP, the search is terminated as soon
+as an error is returned by one target, and the error is immediately
+propagated to the client.
+If the value is set to \fBreport\fP, the search is continuated to the end
+but, in case at least one target returned an error code, the first
+non-success error code is returned.
+
+.TP
+.B norefs <NO|yes>
+If
+.BR yes ,
+do not return search reference responses.
+By default, they are returned unless request is LDAPv2.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B noundeffilter <NO|yes>
+If
+.BR yes ,
+return success instead of searching if a filter is undefined or contains
+undefined portions.
+By default, the search is propagated after replacing undefined portions
+with
+.BR (!(objectClass=*)) ,
+which corresponds to the empty result set.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B protocol\-version {0,2,3}
+This directive indicates what protocol version must be used to contact
+the remote server.
+If set to 0 (the default), the proxy uses the same protocol version
+used by the client, otherwise the requested protocol is used.
+The proxy returns \fIunwillingToPerform\fP if an operation that is
+incompatible with the requested protocol is attempted.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B pseudoroot\-bind\-defer {YES|no}
+This directive, when set to
+.BR yes ,
+causes the authentication to the remote servers with the pseudo-root
+identity (the identity defined in each
+.B idassert-bind
+directive) to be deferred until actually needed by subsequent operations.
+Otherwise, all binds as the rootdn are propagated to the targets.
+
+.TP
+.B quarantine <interval>,<num>[;<interval>,<num>[...]]
+Turns on quarantine of URIs that returned
+.IR LDAP_UNAVAILABLE ,
+so that an attempt to reconnect only occurs at given intervals instead
+of any time a client requests an operation.
+The pattern is: retry only after at least
+.I interval
+seconds elapsed since last attempt, for exactly
+.I num
+times; then use the next pattern.
+If
+.I num
+for the last pattern is "\fB+\fP", it retries forever; otherwise,
+no more retries occur.
+This directive must appear before any target specification;
+it affects all targets with the same pattern.
+
+.TP
+.B rebind\-as\-user {NO|yes}
+If this option is given, the client's bind credentials are remembered
+for rebinds, when trying to re-establish a broken connection,
+or when chasing a referral, if
+.B chase\-referrals
+is set to
+.IR yes .
+
+.TP
+.B session\-tracking\-request {NO|yes}
+Adds session tracking control for all requests.
+The client's IP and hostname, and the identity associated to each request,
+if known, are sent to the remote server for informational purposes.
+This directive is incompatible with setting \fIprotocol\-version\fP to 2.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B single\-conn {NO|yes}
+Discards current cached connection when the client rebinds.
+
+.TP
+.B use\-temporary\-conn {NO|yes}
+when set to
+.BR yes ,
+create a temporary connection whenever competing with other threads
+for a shared one; otherwise, wait until the shared connection is available.
+
+.SH TARGET SPECIFICATION
+Target specification starts with a "uri" directive:
+
+.TP
+.B uri <protocol>://[<host>]/<naming context> [...]
+The <protocol> part can be anything
+.BR ldap_initialize (3)
+accepts ({ldap|ldaps|ldapi} and variants); the <host> may be
+omitted, defaulting to whatever is set in
+.BR ldap.conf (5).
+The <naming context> part is \fImandatory\fP for the first URI,
+but it \fImust be omitted\fP for subsequent ones, if any.
+The naming context part must be within the naming context defined for the backend,
+e.g.:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+suffix "\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+uri "ldap://x.foo.com/dc=x,\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+.fi
+
+.RE
+.RS
+The <naming context> part doesn't need to be unique across the targets;
+it may also match one of the values of the "suffix" directive.
+Multiple URIs may be defined in a single URI statement.
+The additional URIs must be separate arguments and must not have any
+<naming context> part. This causes the underlying library
+to contact the first server of the list that responds.
+For example, if \fIl1.foo.com\fP and \fIl2.foo.com\fP are shadows
+of the same server, the directive
+.LP
+.nf
+suffix "\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+uri "ldap://l1.foo.com/\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP" "ldap://l2.foo.com/"
+.fi
+
+.RE
+.RS
+causes \fIl2.foo.com\fP to be contacted whenever \fIl1.foo.com\fP
+does not respond.
+In that case, the URI list is internally rearranged, by moving unavailable
+URIs to the end, so that further connection attempts occur with respect to
+the last URI that succeeded.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B acl\-authcDN "<administrative DN for access control purposes>"
+DN which is used to query the target server for acl checking,
+as in the LDAP backend; it is supposed to have read access
+on the target server to attributes used on the proxy for acl checking.
+There is no risk of giving away such values; they are only used to
+check permissions.
+.B The acl\-authcDN identity is by no means implicitly used by the proxy
+.B when the client connects anonymously.
+
+.TP
+.B acl\-passwd <password>
+Password used with the
+.B
+acl\-authcDN
+above.
+
+.TP
+.B bind\-timeout <microseconds>
+This directive defines the timeout, in microseconds, used when polling
+for response after an asynchronous bind connection. The initial call
+to ldap_result(3) is performed with a trade-off timeout of 100000 us;
+if that results in a timeout exceeded, subsequent calls use the value
+provided with
+.BR bind\-timeout .
+The default value is used also for subsequent calls if
+.B bind\-timeout
+is not specified.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B chase\-referrals {YES|no}
+enable/disable automatic referral chasing, which is delegated to the
+underlying libldap, with rebinding eventually performed if the
+\fBrebind\-as\-user\fP directive is used. The default is to chase referrals.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B default\-target [<target>]
+The "default\-target" directive can also be used during target specification.
+With no arguments it marks the current target as the default.
+The optional number marks target <target> as the default one, starting
+from 1.
+Target <target> must be defined.
+
+.TP
+.B filter <pattern>
+This directive allows specifying a
+.BR regex (5)
+pattern to indicate what search filter terms are actually served by a target.
+
+In a search request, if the search filter matches the \fIpattern\fP
+the target is considered while fulfilling the request; otherwise
+the target is ignored. There may be multiple occurrences of
+the
+.B filter
+directive for each target.
+
+.TP
+.B idassert\-authzFrom <authz-regexp>
+if defined, selects what
+.I local
+identities are authorized to exploit the identity assertion feature.
+The string
+.B <authz-regexp>
+follows the rules defined for the
+.I authzFrom
+attribute.
+See
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+section related to
+.BR authz\-policy ,
+for details on the syntax of this field.
+
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B idassert\-bind
+.B bindmethod=none|simple|sasl [binddn=<simple DN>] [credentials=<simple password>]
+.B [saslmech=<SASL mech>] [secprops=<properties>] [realm=<realm>]
+.B [authcId=<authentication ID>] [authzId=<authorization ID>]
+.B [authz={native|proxyauthz}] [mode=<mode>] [flags=<flags>]
+.B [starttls=no|yes|critical]
+.B [tls_cert=<file>]
+.B [tls_key=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacert=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacertdir=<path>]
+.B [tls_reqcert=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_reqsan=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_cipher_suite=<ciphers>]
+.B [tls_ecname=<ciphers>]
+.B [tls_protocol_min=<major>[.<minor>]]
+.B [tls_crlcheck=none|peer|all]
+.RS
+Allows one to define the parameters of the authentication method that is
+internally used by the proxy to authorize connections that are
+authenticated by other databases.
+The identity defined by this directive, according to the properties
+associated to the authentication method, is supposed to have auth access
+on the target server to attributes used on the proxy for authentication
+and authorization, and to be allowed to authorize the users.
+This requires to have
+.B proxyAuthz
+privileges on a wide set of DNs, e.g.
+.BR authzTo=dn.subtree:"" ,
+and the remote server to have
+.B authz\-policy
+set to
+.B to
+or
+.BR both .
+See
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details on these statements and for remarks and drawbacks about
+their usage.
+The supported bindmethods are
+
+\fBnone|simple|sasl\fP
+
+where
+.B none
+is the default, i.e. no \fIidentity assertion\fP is performed.
+
+The authz parameter is used to instruct the SASL bind to exploit
+.B native
+SASL authorization, if available; since connections are cached,
+this should only be used when authorizing with a fixed identity
+(e.g. by means of the
+.B authzDN
+or
+.B authzID
+parameters).
+Otherwise, the default
+.B proxyauthz
+is used, i.e. the proxyAuthz control (Proxied Authorization, RFC 4370)
+is added to all operations.
+
+The supported modes are:
+
+\fB<mode> := {legacy|anonymous|none|self}\fP
+
+If
+.B <mode>
+is not present, and
+.B authzId
+is given, the proxy always authorizes that identity.
+.B <authorization ID>
+can be
+
+\fBu:<user>\fP
+
+\fB[dn:]<DN>\fP
+
+The former is supposed to be expanded by the remote server according
+to the authz rules; see
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details.
+In the latter case, whether or not the
+.B dn:
+prefix is present, the string must pass DN validation and normalization.
+
+The default mode is
+.BR legacy ,
+which implies that the proxy will either perform a simple bind as the
+.I authcDN
+or a SASL bind as the
+.I authcID
+and assert the client's identity when it is not anonymous.
+Direct binds are always proxied.
+The other modes imply that the proxy will always either perform a simple bind
+as the
+.IR authcDN
+or a SASL bind as the
+.IR authcID ,
+unless restricted by
+.BR idassert\-authzFrom
+rules (see below), in which case the operation will fail;
+eventually, it will assert some other identity according to
+.BR <mode> .
+Other identity assertion modes are
+.BR anonymous
+and
+.BR self ,
+which respectively mean that the
+.I empty
+or the
+.IR client 's
+identity
+will be asserted;
+.BR none ,
+which means that no proxyAuthz control will be used, so the
+.I authcDN
+or the
+.I authcID
+identity will be asserted.
+For all modes that require the use of the
+.I proxyAuthz
+control, on the remote server the proxy identity must have appropriate
+.I authzTo
+permissions, or the asserted identities must have appropriate
+.I authzFrom
+permissions. Note, however, that the ID assertion feature is mostly
+useful when the asserted identities do not exist on the remote server.
+
+Flags can be
+
+\fBoverride,[non\-]prescriptive,proxy\-authz\-[non\-]critical\fP
+
+When the
+.B override
+flag is used, identity assertion takes place even when the database
+is authorizing for the identity of the client, i.e. after binding
+with the provided identity, and thus authenticating it, the proxy
+performs the identity assertion using the configured identity and
+authentication method.
+
+When the
+.B prescriptive
+flag is used (the default), operations fail with
+\fIinappropriateAuthentication\fP
+for those identities whose assertion is not allowed by the
+.B idassert\-authzFrom
+patterns.
+If the
+.B non\-prescriptive
+flag is used, operations are performed anonymously for those identities
+whose assertion is not allowed by the
+.B idassert\-authzFrom
+patterns.
+
+When the
+.B proxy\-authz\-non\-critical
+flag is used (the default), the proxyAuthz control is not marked as critical,
+in violation of RFC 4370. Use of
+.B proxy\-authz\-critical
+is recommended.
+
+The TLS settings default to the same as the main slapd TLS settings,
+except for
+.B tls_reqcert
+which defaults to "demand", and
+.B tls_reqsan
+which defaults to "allow"..
+
+The identity associated to this directive is also used for privileged
+operations whenever \fBidassert\-bind\fP is defined and \fBacl\-bind\fP
+is not. See \fBacl\-bind\fP for details.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B idle\-timeout <time>
+This directive causes a cached connection to be dropped an recreated
+after it has been idle for the specified time.
+The value can be specified as
+
+[<d>d][<h>h][<m>m][<s>[s]]
+
+where <d>, <h>, <m> and <s> are respectively treated as days, hours,
+minutes and seconds.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B keepalive <idle>:<probes>:<interval>
+The
+.B keepalive
+parameter sets the values of \fIidle\fP, \fIprobes\fP, and \fIinterval\fP
+used to check whether a socket is alive;
+.I idle
+is the number of seconds a connection needs to remain idle before TCP
+starts sending keepalive probes;
+.I probes
+is the maximum number of keepalive probes TCP should send before dropping
+the connection;
+.I interval
+is interval in seconds between individual keepalive probes.
+Only some systems support the customization of these values;
+the
+.B keepalive
+parameter is ignored otherwise, and system-wide settings are used.
+
+.TP
+.B map "{attribute|objectclass} [<local name>|*] {<foreign name>|*}"
+This maps object classes and attributes as in the LDAP backend.
+See
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5).
+
+.TP
+.B network\-timeout <time>
+Sets the network timeout value after which
+.BR poll (2)/ select (2)
+following a
+.BR connect (2)
+returns in case of no activity.
+The value is in seconds, and it can be specified as for
+.BR idle\-timeout .
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B nretries {forever|never|<nretries>}
+This directive defines how many times a bind should be retried
+in case of temporary failure in contacting a target. If defined
+before any target specification, it applies to all targets (by default,
+.BR 3
+times);
+the global value can be overridden by redefinitions inside each target
+specification.
+
+.TP
+.B rewrite* ...
+The rewrite options are described in the "REWRITING" section.
+
+.TP
+.B subtree\-{exclude|include} "<rule>"
+This directive allows one to indicate what subtrees are actually served
+by a target.
+The syntax of the supported rules is
+
+\fB<rule>: [dn[.<style>]:]<pattern>\fP
+
+\fB<style>: subtree|children|regex\fP
+
+When \fB<style>\fP is either \fBsubtree\fP or \fBchildren\fP
+the \fB<pattern>\fP is a DN that must be within the naming context
+served by the target.
+When \fB<style>\fP is \fBregex\fP the \fB<pattern>\fP is a
+.BR regex (5)
+pattern.
+If the \fBdn.<style>:\fP prefix is omitted, \fBdn.subtree:\fP
+is implicitly assumed for backward compatibility.
+
+In the
+.B subtree\-exclude
+form if the \fIrequest DN\fP matches at least one rule,
+the target is not considered while fulfilling the request;
+otherwise, the target is considered based on the value of the \fIrequest DN\fP.
+When the request is a search, also the \fIscope\fP is considered.
+
+In the
+.B subtree\-include
+form if the \fIrequest DN\fP matches at least one rule,
+the target is considered while fulfilling the request;
+otherwise the target is ignored.
+
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+ | match | exclude |
+ +---------+---------+-------------------+
+ | T | T | not candidate |
+ | F | T | continue checking |
+ +---------+---------+-------------------+
+ | T | F | candidate |
+ | F | F | not candidate |
+ +---------+---------+-------------------+
+.fi
+
+.RE
+.RS
+There may be multiple occurrences of the
+.B subtree\-exclude
+or
+.B subtree\-include
+directive for each of the targets, but they are mutually exclusive.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B suffixmassage "<virtual naming context>" "<real naming context>"
+All the directives starting with "rewrite" refer to the rewrite engine
+that has been added to slapd.
+The "suffixmassage" directive was introduced in the LDAP backend to
+allow suffix massaging while proxying.
+It has been obsoleted by the rewriting tools.
+However, both for backward compatibility and for ease of configuration
+when simple suffix massage is required, it has been preserved.
+It wraps the basic rewriting instructions that perform suffix
+massaging. See the "REWRITING" section for a detailed list
+of the rewrite rules it implies.
+
+.TP
+.B t\-f\-support {NO|yes|discover}
+enable if the remote server supports absolute filters
+(see \fIRFC 4526\fP for details).
+If set to
+.BR discover ,
+support is detected by reading the remote server's root DSE.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.TP
+.B timeout [<op>=]<val> [...]
+This directive allows one to set per-operation timeouts.
+Operations can be
+
+\fB<op> ::= bind, add, delete, modrdn, modify, compare, search\fP
+
+The overall duration of the \fBsearch\fP operation is controlled either
+by the \fBtimelimit\fP parameter or by server-side enforced
+time limits (see \fBtimelimit\fP and \fBlimits\fP in
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details).
+This \fBtimeout\fP parameter controls how long the target can be
+irresponsive before the operation is aborted.
+Timeout is meaningless for the remaining operations,
+\fBunbind\fP and \fBabandon\fP, which do not imply any response,
+while it is not yet implemented in currently supported \fBextended\fP
+operations.
+If no operation is specified, the timeout \fBval\fP affects all
+supported operations.
+If specified before any target definition, it affects all targets
+unless overridden by per-target directives.
+
+Note: if the timeout is exceeded, the operation is cancelled
+(according to the \fBcancel\fP directive);
+the protocol does not provide any means to rollback operations,
+so the client will not be notified about the result of the operation,
+which may eventually succeeded or not.
+In case the timeout is exceeded during a bind operation, the connection
+is destroyed, according to RFC4511.
+
+.TP
+.B tls {[try\-]start|[try\-]propagate}
+execute the StartTLS extended operation when the connection is initialized;
+only works if the URI directive protocol scheme is not \fBldaps://\fP.
+\fBpropagate\fP issues the StartTLS operation only if the original
+connection did.
+The \fBtry\-\fP prefix instructs the proxy to continue operations
+if the StartTLS operation failed; its use is highly deprecated.
+If set before any target specification, it affects all targets, unless
+overridden by any per-target directive.
+
+.SH SCENARIOS
+A powerful (and in some sense dangerous) rewrite engine has been added
+to both the LDAP and Meta backends.
+While the former can gain limited beneficial effects from rewriting
+stuff, the latter can become an amazingly powerful tool.
+.LP
+Consider a couple of scenarios first.
+.LP
+1) Two directory servers share two levels of naming context;
+say "dc=a,dc=foo,dc=com" and "dc=b,dc=foo,dc=com".
+Then, an unambiguous Meta database can be configured as:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+database meta
+suffix "\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+uri "ldap://a.foo.com/dc=a,\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+uri "ldap://b.foo.com/dc=b,\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+Operations directed to a specific target can be easily resolved
+because there are no ambiguities.
+The only operation that may resolve to multiple targets is a search
+with base "dc=foo,dc=com" and scope at least "one", which results in
+spawning two searches to the targets.
+.LP
+2a) Two directory servers don't share any portion of naming context,
+but they'd present as a single DIT
+[Caveat: uniqueness of (massaged) entries among the two servers is
+assumed; integrity checks risk to incur in excessive overhead and have
+not been implemented].
+Say we have "dc=bar,dc=org" and "o=Foo,c=US",
+and we'd like them to appear as branches of "dc=foo,dc=com", say
+"dc=a,dc=foo,dc=com" and "dc=b,dc=foo,dc=com".
+Then we need to configure our Meta backend as:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+database meta
+suffix "dc=foo,dc=com"
+
+uri "ldap://a.bar.com/\fBdc=a,dc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+suffixmassage "\fBdc=a,dc=foo,dc=com\fP" "dc=bar,dc=org"
+
+uri "ldap://b.foo.com/\fBdc=b,dc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+suffixmassage "\fBdc=b,dc=foo,dc=com\fP" "o=Foo,c=US"
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+Again, operations can be resolved without ambiguity, although
+some rewriting is required.
+Notice that the virtual naming context of each target is a branch of
+the database's naming context; it is rewritten back and forth when
+operations are performed towards the target servers.
+What "back and forth" means will be clarified later.
+.LP
+When a search with base "dc=foo,dc=com" is attempted, if the
+scope is "base" it fails with "no such object"; in fact, the
+common root of the two targets (prior to massaging) does not
+exist.
+If the scope is "one", both targets are contacted with the base
+replaced by each target's base; the scope is derated to "base".
+In general, a scope "one" search is honored, and the scope is derated,
+only when the incoming base is at most one level lower of a target's
+naming context (prior to massaging).
+.LP
+Finally, if the scope is "sub" the incoming base is replaced
+by each target's unmassaged naming context, and the scope
+is not altered.
+.LP
+2b) Consider the above reported scenario with the two servers
+sharing the same naming context:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+database meta
+suffix "\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+
+uri "ldap://a.bar.com/\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+suffixmassage "\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP" "dc=bar,dc=org"
+
+uri "ldap://b.foo.com/\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP"
+suffixmassage "\fBdc=foo,dc=com\fP" "o=Foo,c=US"
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+All the previous considerations hold, except that now there is
+no way to unambiguously resolve a DN.
+In this case, all the operations that require an unambiguous target
+selection will fail unless the DN is already cached or a default
+target has been set.
+Practical configurations may result as a combination of all the
+above scenarios.
+.SH ACLs
+Note on ACLs: at present you may add whatever ACL rule you desire
+to the Meta (and LDAP) backends.
+However, the meaning of an ACL on a proxy may require some
+considerations.
+Two philosophies may be considered:
+.LP
+a) the remote server dictates the permissions; the proxy simply passes
+back what it gets from the remote server.
+.LP
+b) the remote server unveils "everything"; the proxy is responsible
+for protecting data from unauthorized access.
+.LP
+Of course the latter sounds unreasonable, but it is not.
+It is possible to imagine scenarios in which a remote host discloses
+data that can be considered "public" inside an intranet, and a proxy
+that connects it to the internet may impose additional constraints.
+To this purpose, the proxy should be able to comply with all the ACL
+matching criteria that the server supports.
+This has been achieved with regard to all the criteria supported by
+slapd except a special subtle case (please file an ITS if you can
+find other exceptions: <http://www.openldap.org/its/>).
+The rule
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+access to dn="<dn>" attrs=<attr>
+ by dnattr=<dnattr> read
+ by * none
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+cannot be matched iff the attribute that is being requested, <attr>,
+is NOT <dnattr>, and the attribute that determines membership,
+<dnattr>, has not been requested (e.g. in a search)
+.LP
+In fact this ACL is resolved by slapd using the portion of entry it
+retrieved from the remote server without requiring any further
+intervention of the backend, so, if the <dnattr> attribute has not
+been fetched, the match cannot be assessed because the attribute is
+not present, not because no value matches the requirement!
+.LP
+Note on ACLs and attribute mapping: ACLs are applied to the mapped
+attributes; for instance, if the attribute locally known as "foo" is
+mapped to "bar" on a remote server, then local ACLs apply to attribute
+"foo" and are totally unaware of its remote name.
+The remote server will check permissions for "bar", and the local
+server will possibly enforce additional restrictions to "foo".
+.\"
+.\" If this section is moved, also update the reference in
+.\" libraries/librewrite/RATIONALE.
+.\"
+.SH REWRITING
+A string is rewritten according to a set of rules, called a `rewrite
+context'.
+The rules are based on POSIX (''extended'') regular expressions (regex)
+with substring matching; basic variable substitution and map resolution
+of substrings is allowed by specific mechanisms detailed in the following.
+The behavior of pattern matching/substitution can be altered by a set
+of flags.
+.LP
+The underlying concept is to build a lightweight rewrite module
+for the slapd server (initially dedicated to the LDAP backend).
+.SH Passes
+An incoming string is matched against a set of rules.
+Rules are made of a regex match pattern, a substitution pattern
+and a set of actions, described by a set of flags.
+In case of match a string rewriting is performed according to the
+substitution pattern that allows one to refer to substrings matched in the
+incoming string.
+The actions, if any, are finally performed.
+The substitution pattern allows map resolution of substrings.
+A map is a generic object that maps a substitution pattern to a value.
+The flags are divided in "Pattern matching Flags" and "Action Flags";
+the former alter the regex match pattern behavior while the latter
+alter the action that is taken after substitution.
+.SH "Pattern Matching Flags"
+.TP
+.B `C'
+honors case in matching (default is case insensitive)
+.TP
+.B `R'
+use POSIX ''basic'' regular expressions (default is ''extended'')
+.TP
+.B `M{n}'
+allow no more than
+.B n
+recursive passes for a specific rule; does not alter the max total count
+of passes, so it can only enforce a stricter limit for a specific rule.
+.SH "Action Flags"
+.TP
+.B `:'
+apply the rule once only (default is recursive)
+.TP
+.B `@'
+stop applying rules in case of match; the current rule is still applied
+recursively; combine with `:' to apply the current rule only once
+and then stop.
+.TP
+.B `#'
+stop current operation if the rule matches, and issue an `unwilling to
+perform' error.
+.TP
+.B `G{n}'
+jump
+.B n
+rules back and forth (watch for loops!).
+Note that `G{1}' is implicit in every rule.
+.TP
+.B `I'
+ignores errors in rule; this means, in case of error, e.g. issued by a
+map, the error is treated as a missed match.
+The `unwilling to perform' is not overridden.
+.TP
+.B `U{n}'
+uses
+.B
+n
+as return code if the rule matches; the flag does not alter the recursive
+behavior of the rule, so, to have it performed only once, it must be used
+in combination with `:', e.g.
+.B `:U{16}'
+returns the value `16' after exactly one execution of the rule, if the
+pattern matches.
+As a consequence, its behavior is equivalent to `@', with the return
+code set to
+.BR n ;
+or, in other words, `@' is equivalent to `U{0}'.
+By convention, the freely available codes are above 16 included;
+the others are reserved.
+.LP
+The ordering of the flags can be significant.
+For instance: `IG{2}' means ignore errors and jump two lines ahead
+both in case of match and in case of error, while `G{2}I' means ignore
+errors, but jump two lines ahead only in case of match.
+.LP
+More flags (mainly Action Flags) will be added as needed.
+.SH "Pattern matching:"
+See
+.BR regex (7)
+and/or
+.BR re_format (7).
+.SH "Substitution Pattern Syntax:"
+Everything starting with `%' requires substitution;
+.LP
+the only obvious exception is `%%', which is left as is;
+.LP
+the basic substitution is `%d', where `d' is a digit;
+0 means the whole string, while 1-9 is a submatch;
+.LP
+a `%' followed by a `{' invokes an advanced substitution.
+The pattern is:
+.LP
+.RS
+`%' `{' [ <op> ] <name> `(' <substitution> `)' `}'
+.RE
+.LP
+where <name> must be a legal name for the map, i.e.
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+<name> ::= [a-z][a-z0-9]* (case insensitive)
+<op> ::= `>' `|' `&' `&&' `*' `**' `$'
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+and <substitution> must be a legal substitution
+pattern, with no limits on the nesting level.
+.LP
+The operators are:
+.TP
+.B >
+sub context invocation; <name> must be a legal, already defined
+rewrite context name
+.TP
+.B |
+external command invocation; <name> must refer to a legal, already
+defined command name (NOT IMPL.)
+.TP
+.B &
+variable assignment; <name> defines a variable in the running
+operation structure which can be dereferenced later; operator
+.B &
+assigns a variable in the rewrite context scope; operator
+.B &&
+assigns a variable that scopes the entire session, e.g. its value
+can be dereferenced later by other rewrite contexts
+.TP
+.B *
+variable dereferencing; <name> must refer to a variable that is
+defined and assigned for the running operation; operator
+.B *
+dereferences a variable scoping the rewrite context; operator
+.B **
+dereferences a variable scoping the whole session, e.g. the value
+is passed across rewrite contexts
+.TP
+.B $
+parameter dereferencing; <name> must refer to an existing parameter;
+the idea is to make some run-time parameters set by the system
+available to the rewrite engine, as the client host name, the bind DN
+if any, constant parameters initialized at config time, and so on;
+no parameter is currently set by either
+.B back\-ldap
+or
+.BR back\-meta ,
+but constant parameters can be defined in the configuration file
+by using the
+.B rewriteParam
+directive.
+.LP
+Substitution escaping has been delegated to the `%' symbol,
+which is used instead of `\e' in string substitution patterns
+because `\e' is already escaped by slapd's low level parsing routines;
+as a consequence, regex escaping requires two `\e' symbols,
+e.g. `\fB.*\e.foo\e.bar\fP' must be written as `\fB.*\e\e.foo\e\e.bar\fP'.
+.\"
+.\" The symbol can be altered at will by redefining the related macro in
+.\" "rewrite-int.h".
+.\"
+.SH "Rewrite context:"
+A rewrite context is a set of rules which are applied in sequence.
+The basic idea is to have an application initialize a rewrite
+engine (think of Apache's mod_rewrite ...) with a set of rewrite
+contexts; when string rewriting is required, one invokes the
+appropriate rewrite context with the input string and obtains the
+newly rewritten one if no errors occur.
+.LP
+Each basic server operation is associated to a rewrite context;
+they are divided in two main groups: client \-> server and
+server \-> client rewriting.
+.LP
+client \-> server:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+(default) if defined and no specific context
+ is available
+bindDN bind
+searchBase search
+searchFilter search
+searchFilterAttrDN search
+compareDN compare
+compareAttrDN compare AVA
+addDN add
+addAttrDN add AVA
+modifyDN modify
+modifyAttrDN modify AVA
+modrDN modrdn
+newSuperiorDN modrdn
+deleteDN delete
+exopPasswdDN password modify extended operation DN if proxy
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+server \-> client:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+searchResult search (only if defined; no default;
+ acts on DN and DN-syntax attributes
+ of search results)
+searchAttrDN search AVA
+matchedDN all ops (only if applicable)
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+.SH "Basic configuration syntax"
+.TP
+.B rewriteEngine { on | off }
+If `on', the requested rewriting is performed; if `off', no
+rewriting takes place (an easy way to stop rewriting without
+altering too much the configuration file).
+.TP
+.B rewriteContext <context name> "[ alias <aliased context name> ]"
+<Context name> is the name that identifies the context, i.e. the name
+used by the application to refer to the set of rules it contains.
+It is used also to reference sub contexts in string rewriting.
+A context may alias another one.
+In this case the alias context contains no rule, and any reference to
+it will result in accessing the aliased one.
+.TP
+.B rewriteRule "<regex match pattern>" "<substitution pattern>" "[ <flags> ]"
+Determines how a string can be rewritten if a pattern is matched.
+Examples are reported below.
+.SH "Additional configuration syntax:"
+.TP
+.B rewriteMap "<map type>" "<map name>" "[ <map attrs> ]"
+Allows one to define a map that transforms substring rewriting into
+something else.
+The map is referenced inside the substitution pattern of a rule.
+.TP
+.B rewriteParam <param name> <param value>
+Sets a value with global scope, that can be dereferenced by the
+command `%{$paramName}'.
+.TP
+.B rewriteMaxPasses <number of passes> [<number of passes per rule>]
+Sets the maximum number of total rewriting passes that can be
+performed in a single rewrite operation (to avoid loops).
+A safe default is set to 100; note that reaching this limit is still
+treated as a success; recursive invocation of rules is simply
+interrupted.
+The count applies to the rewriting operation as a whole, not
+to any single rule; an optional per-rule limit can be set.
+This limit is overridden by setting specific per-rule limits
+with the `M{n}' flag.
+.SH "Configuration examples:"
+.nf
+# set to `off' to disable rewriting
+rewriteEngine on
+
+# the rules the "suffixmassage" directive implies
+rewriteEngine on
+# all dataflow from client to server referring to DNs
+rewriteContext default
+rewriteRule "(.*)<virtualnamingcontext>$" "%1<realnamingcontext>" ":"
+# empty filter rule
+rewriteContext searchFilter
+# all dataflow from server to client
+rewriteContext searchResult
+rewriteRule "(.*)<realnamingcontext>$" "%1<virtualnamingcontext>" ":"
+rewriteContext searchAttrDN alias searchResult
+rewriteContext matchedDN alias searchResult
+
+# Everything defined here goes into the `default' context.
+# This rule changes the naming context of anything sent
+# to `dc=home,dc=net' to `dc=OpenLDAP, dc=org'
+
+rewriteRule "(.*)dc=home,[ ]?dc=net"
+ "%1dc=OpenLDAP, dc=org" ":"
+
+# since a pretty/normalized DN does not include spaces
+# after rdn separators, e.g. `,', this rule suffices:
+
+rewriteRule "(.*)dc=home,dc=net"
+ "%1dc=OpenLDAP,dc=org" ":"
+
+# Start a new context (ends input of the previous one).
+# This rule adds blanks between DN parts if not present.
+rewriteContext addBlanks
+rewriteRule "(.*),([^ ].*)" "%1, %2"
+
+# This one eats blanks
+rewriteContext eatBlanks
+rewriteRule "(.*),[ ](.*)" "%1,%2"
+
+# Here control goes back to the default rewrite
+# context; rules are appended to the existing ones.
+# anything that gets here is piped into rule `addBlanks'
+rewriteContext default
+rewriteRule ".*" "%{>addBlanks(%0)}" ":"
+
+.\" # Anything with `uid=username' is looked up in
+.\" # /etc/passwd for gecos (I know it's nearly useless,
+.\" # but it is there just as a guideline to implementing
+.\" # custom maps).
+.\" # Note the `I' flag that leaves `uid=username' in place
+.\" # if `username' does not have a valid account, and the
+.\" # `:' that forces the rule to be processed exactly once.
+.\" rewriteContext uid2Gecos
+.\" rewriteRule "(.*)uid=([a-z0-9]+),(.+)"
+.\" "%1cn=%2{xpasswd},%3" "I:"
+.\"
+.\" # Finally, in a bind, if one uses a `uid=username' DN,
+.\" # it is rewritten in `cn=name surname' if possible.
+.\" rewriteContext bindDN
+.\" rewriteRule ".*" "%{>addBlanks(%{>uid2Gecos(%0)})}" ":"
+.\"
+# Rewrite the search base according to `default' rules.
+rewriteContext searchBase alias default
+
+# Search results with OpenLDAP DN are rewritten back with
+# `dc=home,dc=net' naming context, with spaces eaten.
+rewriteContext searchResult
+rewriteRule "(.*[^ ]?)[ ]?dc=OpenLDAP,[ ]?dc=org"
+ "%{>eatBlanks(%1)}dc=home,dc=net" ":"
+
+# Bind with email instead of full DN: we first need
+# an ldap map that turns attributes into a DN (the
+# argument used when invoking the map is appended to
+# the URI and acts as the filter portion)
+rewriteMap ldap attr2dn "ldap://host/dc=my,dc=org?dn?sub"
+
+# Then we need to detect DN made up of a single email,
+# e.g. `mail=someone@example.com'; note that the rule
+# in case of match stops rewriting; in case of error,
+# it is ignored. In case we are mapping virtual
+# to real naming contexts, we also need to rewrite
+# regular DNs, because the definition of a bindDn
+# rewrite context overrides the default definition.
+rewriteContext bindDN
+rewriteRule "^mail=[^,]+@[^,]+$" "%{attr2dn(%0)}" ":@I"
+
+# This is a rather sophisticated example. It massages a
+# search filter in case who performs the search has
+# administrative privileges. First we need to keep
+# track of the bind DN of the incoming request, which is
+# stored in a variable called `binddn' with session scope,
+# and left in place to allow regular binding:
+rewriteContext bindDN
+rewriteRule ".+" "%{&&binddn(%0)}%0" ":"
+
+# A search filter containing `uid=' is rewritten only
+# if an appropriate DN is bound.
+# To do this, in the first rule the bound DN is
+# dereferenced, while the filter is decomposed in a
+# prefix, in the value of the `uid=<arg>' AVA, and
+# in a suffix. A tag `<>' is appended to the DN.
+# If the DN refers to an entry in the `ou=admin' subtree,
+# the filter is rewritten OR-ing the `uid=<arg>' with
+# `cn=<arg>'; otherwise it is left as is. This could be
+# useful, for instance, to allow apache's auth_ldap-1.4
+# module to authenticate users with both `uid' and
+# `cn', but only if the request comes from a possible
+# `cn=Web auth,ou=admin,dc=home,dc=net' user.
+rewriteContext searchFilter
+rewriteRule "(.*\e\e()uid=([a-z0-9_]+)(\e\e).*)"
+ "%{**binddn}<>%{&prefix(%1)}%{&arg(%2)}%{&suffix(%3)}"
+ ":I"
+rewriteRule "[^,]+,ou=admin,dc=home,dc=net"
+ "%{*prefix}|(uid=%{*arg})(cn=%{*arg})%{*suffix}" ":@I"
+rewriteRule ".*<>" "%{*prefix}uid=%{*arg}%{*suffix}" ":"
+
+# This example shows how to strip unwanted DN-valued
+# attribute values from a search result; the first rule
+# matches DN values below "ou=People,dc=example,dc=com";
+# in case of match the rewriting exits successfully.
+# The second rule matches everything else and causes
+# the value to be rejected.
+rewriteContext searchResult
+rewriteRule ".*,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com" "%0" ":@"
+rewriteRule ".*" "" "#"
+.fi
+.SH "LDAP Proxy resolution (a possible evolution of slapd\-ldap(5)):"
+In case the rewritten DN is an LDAP URI, the operation is initiated
+towards the host[:port] indicated in the uri, if it does not refer
+to the local server.
+E.g.:
+.LP
+.nf
+ rewriteRule '^cn=root,.*' '%0' 'G{3}'
+ rewriteRule '^cn=[a-l].*' 'ldap://ldap1.my.org/%0' ':@'
+ rewriteRule '^cn=[m-z].*' 'ldap://ldap2.my.org/%0' ':@'
+ rewriteRule '.*' 'ldap://ldap3.my.org/%0' ':@'
+.fi
+.LP
+(Rule 1 is simply there to illustrate the `G{n}' action; it could have
+been written:
+.LP
+.nf
+ rewriteRule '^cn=root,.*' 'ldap://ldap3.my.org/%0' ':@'
+.fi
+.LP
+with the advantage of saving one rewrite pass ...)
+
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B meta
+backend does not honor all ACL semantics as described in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+In general, access checking is delegated to the remote server(s).
+Only
+.B read (=r)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute and to the other attribute values of the entries
+returned by the
+.B search
+operation is honored, which is performed by the frontend.
+
+.SH PROXY CACHE OVERLAY
+The proxy cache overlay
+allows caching of LDAP search requests (queries) in a local database.
+See
+.BR slapo\-pcache (5)
+for details.
+
+.SH DEPRECATED STATEMENTS
+The following statements have been deprecated and should no longer be used.
+
+.TP
+.B pseudorootdn "<substitute DN in case of rootdn bind>"
+Use
+.B idassert\-bind
+instead.
+
+.TP
+.B pseudorootpw "<substitute password in case of rootdn bind>"
+Use
+.B idassert\-bind
+instead.
+
+
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+.BR slapo\-pcache (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR regex (7),
+.BR re_format (7).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Pierangelo Masarati, based on back-ldap by Howard Chu
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-monitor.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-monitor.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a38f878
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-monitor.5
@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+.TH SLAPD-MONITOR 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-monitor \- Monitor backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B monitor
+backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+is not an actual database; if enabled, it is automatically generated
+and dynamically maintained by
+.B slapd
+with information about the running status of the daemon.
+.LP
+To inspect all monitor information, issue a subtree search with base
+cn=Monitor, requesting that attributes "+" and "*" are returned.
+The monitor backend produces mostly operational attributes, and LDAP
+only returns operational attributes that are explicitly requested.
+Requesting attribute "+" is an extension which requests all operational
+attributes.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the
+.B monitor
+backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database monitor" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+.LP
+As opposed to most databases, the
+.B monitor
+database can be instantiated only once, i.e. only one occurrence
+of "database monitor" can occur in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+file.
+Moreover, the suffix of the database cannot be explicitly set by means
+of the
+.B suffix
+directive.
+The suffix is automatically set
+to "\fIcn=Monitor\fP".
+.LP
+The
+.B monitor
+database honors the
+.B rootdn
+and the
+.B rootpw
+directives, and the usual ACL directives, e.g. the
+.B access
+directive.
+.\".LP
+.\"The following directives can be used:
+.\".TP
+.\".BI l \ <locality>
+.\"The additional argument \fI<locality>\fP,
+.\"a string, is added to the "\fIcn=Monitor\fP" entry as value of the
+.\".B l
+.\"attribute (Note: this may be subjected to changes).
+.LP
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.SH USAGE
+The usage is:
+.TP
+1) enable the \fBmonitor\fP backend at configure:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+configure \-\-enable\-monitor
+.fi
+.RE
+.TP
+2) activate the \fBmonitor\fP database in the \fBslapd.conf\fP(5) file:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+database monitor
+.fi
+.RE
+.TP
+3) add ACLs as detailed in \fBslapd.access\fP(5) to control access to the database, e.g.:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+access to dn.subtree="cn=Monitor"
+ by dn.exact="uid=Admin,dc=my,dc=org" write
+ by users read
+ by * none
+.fi
+.RE
+.TP
+4) ensure that the \fBcore.schema\fP file is loaded.
+The
+.B monitor
+backend relies on some standard track attributeTypes
+that must be already defined when the backend is started.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B monitor
+backend honors access control semantics as indicated in
+.BR slapd.access (5),
+including the
+.B disclose
+access privilege, on all currently implemented operations.
+.SH KNOWN LIMITATIONS
+The
+.B monitor
+backend does not honor size/time limits in search operations.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+.B ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd.access (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR ldap (3).
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-ndb.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-ndb.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..de15bcf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-ndb.5
@@ -0,0 +1,126 @@
+.TH SLAPD-NDB 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2008-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-ndb \- MySQL NDB backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+.B ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The \fBndb\fP backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+uses the MySQL Cluster package to store data, through its NDB API.
+It provides fault tolerance with extreme scalability, along with
+a degree of SQL compatibility.
+.LP
+This backend is designed to store LDAP information using tables that
+are also visible from SQL. It uses a higher level SQL API for creating
+these tables, while using the low level NDB API for storing and
+retrieving the data within these tables. The NDB Cluster engine
+allows data to be partitioned across multiple data nodes, and this
+backend allows multiple slapd instances to operate against a given
+database concurrently.
+.LP
+The general approach is to use distinct tables for each LDAP object class.
+Entries comprised of multiple object classes will have their data
+spread across multiple tables. The data tables use a 64 bit entryID
+as their primary key. The DIT hierarchy is maintained in a separate
+table, which maps DNs to entryIDs.
+.LP
+This backend is experimental. While intended to be a general-purpose
+backend, it is currently missing a number of common LDAP features.
+See the \fBTODO\fP file in the source directory for details.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the \fBndb\fP backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database ndb" line and
+come before any subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+
+.SH DATA SOURCE CONFIGURATION
+
+.TP
+.B dbhost <hostname>
+The name or IP address of the host running the MySQL server. The default
+is "localhost". On Unix systems, the connection to a local server is made
+using a Unix Domain socket, whose path is specified using the
+.B dbsocket
+directive.
+.TP
+.B dbuser <username>
+The MySQL login ID to use when connecting to the MySQL server. The chosen
+user must have sufficient privileges to manipulate the SQL tables in the
+target database.
+.TP
+.B dbpasswd <password>
+The password for the \fBdbuser\fP.
+.TP
+.B dbname <database name>
+The name of the MySQL database to use.
+.TP
+.B dbport <port>
+The port number to use for the TCP connection to the MySQL server.
+.TP
+.B dbsocket <path>
+The socket to be used for connecting to a local MySQL server.
+.TP
+.B dbflag <integer>
+Client flags for the MySQL session. See the MySQL documentation for details.
+.TP
+.B dbconnect <connectstring>
+The name or IP address of the host running the cluster manager. The default
+is "localhost".
+.TP
+.B dbconnections <integer>
+The number of cluster connections to establish. Using up to 4 may improve
+performance under heavier load. The default is 1.
+
+.SH SCHEMA CONFIGURATION
+.TP
+.B attrlen <attribute> <length>
+Specify the column length to use for a particular attribute. LDAP attributes are
+stored in individual columns of the SQL tables. The maximum column lengths for
+each column must be specified when creating these tables. If a length constraint
+was specified in the attribute's LDAP schema definition, that value will be used
+by default. If the schema didn't specify a constraint, the default is 128 bytes.
+Currently the maximum is 1024.
+.TP
+.B index <attr[,attr...]>
+Specify a list of attributes for which indexing should be maintained.
+Currently there is no support for substring indexing; a single index structure
+provides presence, equality, and inequality indexing for the specified attributes.
+.TP
+.B attrset <set> <attrs>
+Specify a list of attributes to be treated as an attribute set. This directive
+creates a table named \fIset\fP which will contain all of the listed attributes.
+Ordinarily an attribute resides in a table named by an object class that uses
+the attribute. However, attributes are only allowed to appear in a single table.
+For attributes that are derived from an inherited object class definition,
+the attribute will only be stored in the superior class's table.
+Attribute sets should be defined for any attributes that are used in multiple
+unrelated object classes, i.e., classes that are not connected by a simple
+inheritance chain.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B ndb
+backend honors most access control semantics as indicated in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+.B ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default
+.B slapd
+configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapindex (8),
+MySQL Cluster documentation.
+.SH AUTHOR
+Howard Chu, with assistance from Johan Andersson et al @ MySQL.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-null.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-null.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..175c43f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-null.5
@@ -0,0 +1,72 @@
+.TH SLAPD-NULL 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2002-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation. All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-null \- Null backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Null backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+is surely the most useful part of
+.BR slapd :
+.br
+- Searches return success but no entries.
+.br
+- Compares return compareFalse.
+.br
+- Updates return success (unless readonly is on) but do nothing.
+.br
+- Binds other than as the rootdn fail unless the database option "bind
+on" is given.
+.br
+- The
+.BR slapadd (8)
+and
+.BR slapcat (8)
+tools are equally exciting.
+.br
+Inspired by the /dev/null device.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+This
+.B slapd.conf
+option applies to the NULL backend database.
+That is, it must follow a "database null" line and come before
+any subsequent "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.TP
+.B bind <on/off>
+Allow binds as any DN in this backend's suffix, with any password.
+The default is "off".
+.TP
+.B dosearch <on/off>
+If enabled, a single entry will be returned on all search requests.
+The entry's DN will be the same as the database suffix.
+The default is "off".
+.SH EXAMPLE
+Here is a possible slapd.conf extract using the Null backend:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+database null
+suffix "cn=Nothing"
+bind on
+.fi
+.RE
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B null
+backend does not honor any of the access control semantics described in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapcat (8).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-passwd.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-passwd.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3fddb3d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-passwd.5
@@ -0,0 +1,56 @@
+.TH SLAPD-PASSWD 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-passwd \- /etc/passwd backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The PASSWD backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+serves up the user account information listed in the system
+.BR passwd (5)
+file. This backend is provided for demonstration purposes only.
+The DN of each entry is "uid=<username>,<suffix>".
+Note that non-base searches scan the entire passwd file, and
+are best suited for hosts with small passwd files.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+This
+.B slapd.conf
+option applies to the PASSWD backend database.
+That is, it must follow a "database passwd" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.TP
+.B file <filename>
+Specifies an alternate passwd file to use.
+The default is
+.BR /etc/passwd .
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B passwd
+backend does not honor any of the access control semantics described in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+Only
+.B read (=r)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute and to the other attribute values of the entries
+returned by the
+.B search
+operation is honored, which is performed by the frontend.
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.TP
+/etc/passwd
+user account information
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR passwd (5).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-perl.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-perl.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f0fddd5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-perl.5
@@ -0,0 +1,199 @@
+.TH SLAPD-PERL 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-perl \- Perl backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Perl backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+works by embedding a
+.BR perl (1)
+interpreter into
+.BR slapd (8).
+Any perl database section of the configuration file
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+must then specify what Perl module to use.
+.B Slapd
+then creates a new Perl object that handles all the requests for that
+particular instance of the backend.
+.LP
+You will need to create a method for each one of the
+following actions:
+.LP
+.nf
+ * new # creates a new object,
+ * search # performs the ldap search,
+ * compare # does a compare,
+ * modify # modifies an entry,
+ * add # adds an entry to backend,
+ * modrdn # modifies an entry's rdn,
+ * delete # deletes an ldap entry,
+ * config # module-specific config directives,
+ * init # called after backend is initialized.
+.fi
+.LP
+Unless otherwise specified, the methods return the result code
+which will be returned to the client. Unimplemented actions
+can just return unwillingToPerform (53).
+.TP
+.B new
+This method is called when the configuration file encounters a
+.B perlmod
+line.
+The module in that line is then effectively `use'd into the perl
+interpreter, then the \fBnew\fR method is called to create a new
+object.
+Note that multiple instances of that object may be instantiated, as
+with any perl object.
+.\" .LP
+The
+.B new
+method receives the class name as argument.
+.TP
+.B search
+This method is called when a search request comes from a client.
+It arguments are as follows:
+.nf
+ * object reference
+ * base DN
+ * scope
+ * alias dereferencing policy
+ * size limit
+ * time limit
+ * filter string
+ * attributes only flag (1 for yes)
+ * list of attributes to return (may be empty)
+.fi
+.LP
+Return value: (resultcode, ldif-entry, ldif-entry, ...)
+.TP
+.B compare
+This method is called when a compare request comes from a client.
+Its arguments are as follows.
+.nf
+ * object reference
+ * dn
+ * attribute assertion string
+.fi
+.LP
+.TP
+.B modify
+This method is called when a modify request comes from a client.
+Its arguments are as follows.
+.nf
+ * object reference
+ * dn
+ * a list formatted as follows
+ ({ "ADD" | "DELETE" | "REPLACE" },
+ attributetype, value...)...
+.fi
+.LP
+.TP
+.B add
+This method is called when a add request comes from a client.
+Its arguments are as follows.
+.nf
+ * object reference
+ * entry in string format
+.fi
+.LP
+.TP
+.B modrdn
+This method is called when a modrdn request comes from a client.
+Its arguments are as follows.
+.nf
+ * object reference
+ * dn
+ * new rdn
+ * delete old dn flag (1 means yes)
+.fi
+.LP
+.TP
+.B delete
+This method is called when a delete request comes from a client.
+Its arguments are as follows.
+.nf
+ * object reference
+ * dn
+.fi
+.LP
+.TP
+.B config
+This method is called once for each perlModuleConfig line in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+configuration file.
+Its arguments are as follows.
+.nf
+ * object reference
+ * array of arguments on line
+.fi
+.LP
+Return value: nonzero if this is not a valid option.
+.TP
+.B init
+This method is called after backend is initialized.
+Its argument is as follows.
+.nf
+ * object reference
+.fi
+.LP
+Return value: nonzero if initialization failed.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the PERL backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database perl" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.TP
+.B perlModulePath /path/to/libs
+Add the path to the @INC variable.
+.TP
+.B perlModule ModName
+`Use' the module name ModName from ModName.pm
+.TP
+.B filterSearchResults
+Search results are candidates that need to be filtered (with the
+filter in the search request), rather than search results to be
+returned directly to the client.
+.TP
+.B perlModuleConfig <arguments>
+Invoke the module's config method with the given arguments.
+.SH EXAMPLE
+There is an example Perl module `SampleLDAP' in the slapd/back\-perl/
+directory in the OpenLDAP source tree.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B perl
+backend does not honor any of the access control semantics described in
+.BR slapd.access (5);
+all access control is delegated to the underlying PERL scripting.
+Only
+.B read (=r)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute and to the other attribute values of the entries
+returned by the
+.B search
+operation is honored, which is performed by the frontend.
+.SH WARNING
+The interface of this backend to the perl module MAY change.
+Any suggestions would greatly be appreciated.
+
+Note: in previous versions, any unrecognized lines in the slapd.conf
+file were passed to the perl module's config method. This behavior is
+deprecated (but still allowed for backward compatibility), and the
+perlModuleConfig directive should instead be used to invoke the
+module's config method. This compatibility feature will be removed at
+some future date.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR perl (1).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-relay.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-relay.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3f0fffb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-relay.5
@@ -0,0 +1,207 @@
+.TH SLAPD-RELAY 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-relay \- relay backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The primary purpose of this
+.BR slapd (8)
+backend is to map a naming context defined in a database
+running in the same
+.BR slapd (8)
+instance into a virtual naming context, with attributeType
+and objectClass manipulation, if required.
+It requires the
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5)
+overlay.
+.LP
+This backend and the above mentioned overlay are experimental.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+The following
+.B slapd.conf
+directives apply to the relay backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database relay" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page; only the
+.B suffix
+directive is allowed by the
+.I relay
+backend.
+.TP
+.B relay <real naming context>
+The naming context of the database that is presented
+under a virtual naming context.
+The presence of this directive implies that one specific database,
+i.e. the one serving the
+.BR "real naming context" ,
+will be presented under a virtual naming context.
+
+.SH MASSAGING
+The
+.B relay
+database does not automatically rewrite the naming context
+of requests and responses.
+For this purpose, the
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5)
+overlay must be explicitly instantiated, and configured
+as appropriate.
+Usually, the
+.B rwm\-suffixmassage
+directive suffices if only naming context rewriting is required.
+
+.SH ACCESS RULES
+One important issue is that access rules are based on the identity
+that issued the operation.
+After massaging from the virtual to the real naming context, the
+frontend sees the operation as performed by the identity in the
+real naming context.
+Moreover, since
+.B back\-relay
+bypasses the real database frontend operations by short-circuiting
+operations through the internal backend API, the original database
+access rules do not apply but in selected cases, i.e. when the
+backend itself applies access control.
+As a consequence, the instances of the relay database must provide
+own access rules that are consistent with those of the original
+database, possibly adding further specific restrictions.
+So, access rules in the
+.B relay
+database must refer to identities in the real naming context.
+Examples are reported in the EXAMPLES section.
+
+.SH SCENARIOS
+.LP
+If no
+.B relay
+directive is given, the
+.I relay
+database does not refer to any specific database, but the most
+appropriate one is looked-up after rewriting the request DN
+for the operation that is being handled.
+.LP
+This allows one to write carefully crafted rewrite rules that
+cause some of the requests to be directed to one database, and
+some to another; e.g., authentication can be mapped to one
+database, and searches to another, or different target databases
+can be selected based on the DN of the request, and so.
+.LP
+Another possibility is to map the same operation to different
+databases based on details of the virtual naming context,
+e.g. groups on one database and persons on another.
+.LP
+.SH EXAMPLES
+To implement a plain virtual naming context mapping
+that refers to a single database, use
+.LP
+.nf
+ database relay
+ suffix "dc=virtual,dc=naming,dc=context"
+ relay "dc=real,dc=naming,dc=context"
+ overlay rwm
+ rwm\-suffixmassage "dc=real,dc=naming,dc=context"
+.fi
+.LP
+To implement a plain virtual naming context mapping
+that looks up the real naming context for each operation, use
+.LP
+.nf
+ database relay
+ suffix "dc=virtual,dc=naming,dc=context"
+ overlay rwm
+ rwm\-suffixmassage "dc=real,dc=naming,dc=context"
+.fi
+.LP
+This is useful, for instance, to relay different databases that
+share the terminal portion of the naming context (the one that
+is rewritten).
+.LP
+To implement the old-fashioned suffixalias, e.g. mapping
+the virtual to the real naming context, but not the results
+back from the real to the virtual naming context, use
+.LP
+.nf
+ database relay
+ suffix "dc=virtual,dc=naming,dc=context"
+ relay "dc=real,dc=naming,dc=context"
+ overlay rwm
+ rwm\-rewriteEngine on
+ rwm\-rewriteContext default
+ rwm\-rewriteRule "dc=virtual,dc=naming,dc=context"
+ "dc=real,dc=naming,dc=context" ":@"
+ rwm\-rewriteContext searchFilter
+ rwm\-rewriteContext searchEntryDN
+ rwm\-rewriteContext searchAttrDN
+ rwm\-rewriteContext matchedDN
+.fi
+.LP
+Note that the
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5)
+overlay is instantiated, but the rewrite rules are written explicitly,
+rather than automatically as with the
+.B rwm\-suffixmassage
+statement, to map all the virtual to real naming context data flow,
+but none of the real to virtual.
+.LP
+Access rules:
+.LP
+.nf
+ database bdb
+ suffix "dc=example,dc=com"
+ # skip...
+ access to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com"
+ by dn.exact="cn=Supervisor,dc=example,dc=com" write
+ by * read
+
+ database relay
+ suffix "o=Example,c=US"
+ relay "dc=example,dc=com"
+ overlay rwm
+ rwm\-suffixmassage "dc=example,dc=com"
+ # skip ...
+ access to dn.subtree="o=Example,c=US"
+ by dn.exact="cn=Supervisor,dc=example,dc=com" write
+ by dn.exact="cn=Relay Supervisor,dc=example,dc=com" write
+ by * read
+.fi
+.LP
+Note that, in both databases, the identities (the
+.B <who>
+clause) are in the
+.BR "real naming context" ,
+i.e.
+.BR "`dc=example,dc=com'" ,
+while the targets (the
+.B <what>
+clause) are in the
+.B real
+and in the
+.BR "virtual naming context" ,
+respectively.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B relay
+backend does not honor any of the access control semantics described in
+.BR slapd.access (5);
+all access control is delegated to the relayed database(s).
+Only
+.B read (=r)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute and to the other attribute values of the entries
+returned by the
+.B search
+operation is honored, which is performed by the frontend.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-shell.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-shell.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6c53385
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-shell.5
@@ -0,0 +1,237 @@
+.TH SLAPD-SHELL 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-shell \- Shell backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Shell backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+executes external programs to implement operations, and is designed to
+make it easy to tie an existing database to the
+.B slapd
+front-end.
+.LP
+This backend is primarily intended to be used in prototypes.
+.SH WARNING
+The
+.B abandon
+shell command has been removed since OpenLDAP 2.1.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the SHELL backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database shell" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.LP
+These options specify the pathname and arguments of the program to
+execute in response to the given LDAP operation.
+Each option is followed by the input lines that the program receives:
+.TP
+.B add <pathname> <argument>...
+.nf
+ADD
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+<entry in LDIF format>
+.fi
+.TP
+.B bind <pathname> <argument>...
+.nf
+BIND
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+method: <method number>
+credlen: <length of <credentials>>
+cred: <credentials>
+.fi
+.TP
+.B compare <pathname> <argument>...
+.nf
+COMPARE
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+<attribute>: <value>
+.fi
+.TP
+.B delete <pathname> <argument>...
+.nf
+DELETE
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+.fi
+.TP
+.B modify <pathname> <argument>...
+.nf
+MODIFY
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+<repeat {
+ <"add"/"delete"/"replace">: <attribute>
+ <repeat { <attribute>: <value> }>
+ \-
+}>
+.fi
+.TP
+.B modrdn <pathname> <argument>...
+.nf
+MODRDN
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+newrdn: <new RDN>
+deleteoldrdn: <0 or 1>
+<if new superior is specified: "newSuperior: <DN>">
+.fi
+.TP
+.B search <pathname> <argument>...
+.nf
+SEARCH
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+base: <base DN>
+scope: <0-2, see ldap.h>
+deref: <0-3, see ldap.h>
+sizelimit: <size limit>
+timelimit: <time limit>
+filter: <filter>
+attrsonly: <0 or 1>
+attrs: <"all" or space-separated attribute list>
+.fi
+.TP
+.B unbind <pathname> <argument>...
+.nf
+UNBIND
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <bound DN>
+.fi
+.LP
+Note that you need only supply configuration lines for those commands you
+want the backend to handle.
+Operations for which a command is not supplied will be refused with an
+"unwilling to perform" error.
+.LP
+The \fBsearch\fP command should output the entries in LDIF format,
+each entry followed by a blank line, and after these the RESULT below.
+.LP
+All commands except \fBunbind\fP should then output:
+.RS
+.nf
+RESULT
+code: <integer>
+matched: <matched DN>
+info: <text>
+.fi
+.RE
+where only the RESULT line is mandatory.
+Lines starting with `#' or `DEBUG:' are ignored.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B shell
+backend does not honor all ACL semantics as described in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+In general, access to objects is checked by using a dummy object
+that contains only the DN, so access rules that rely on the contents
+of the object are not honored.
+In detail:
+.LP
+The
+.B add
+operation does not require
+.B write (=w)
+access to the
+.B children
+pseudo-attribute of the parent entry.
+.LP
+The
+.B bind
+operation requires
+.B auth (=x)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute of the entry whose identity is being assessed;
+.B auth (=x)
+access to the credentials is not checked, but rather delegated
+to the underlying shell script.
+.LP
+The
+.B compare
+operation requires
+.B read (=r)
+access (FIXME: wouldn't
+.B compare (=c)
+be a more appropriate choice?)
+to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute
+of the object whose value is being asserted;
+.B compare (=c)
+access to the attribute whose value is being asserted is not checked.
+.LP
+The
+.B delete
+operation does not require
+.B write (=w)
+access to the
+.B children
+pseudo-attribute of the parent entry.
+.LP
+The
+.B modify
+operation requires
+.B write (=w)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute;
+.B write (=w)
+access to the specific attributes that are modified is not checked.
+.LP
+The
+.B modrdn
+operation does not require
+.B write (=w)
+access to the
+.B children
+pseudo-attribute of the parent entry, nor to that of the new parent,
+if different;
+.B write (=w)
+access to the distinguished values of the naming attributes
+is not checked.
+.LP
+The
+.B search
+operation does not require
+.B search (=s)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo_attribute of the searchBase;
+.B search (=s)
+access to the attributes and values used in the filter is not checked.
+
+.SH EXAMPLE
+There is an example search script in the slapd/back\-shell/ directory
+in the OpenLDAP source tree.
+.SH LIMITATIONS
+The shell backend does not support threaded environments.
+When using the shell backend,
+.BR slapd (8)
+should be built
+.IR \-\-without\-threads .
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR sh (1).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-sock.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-sock.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..74197df
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-sock.5
@@ -0,0 +1,329 @@
+.TH SLAPD-SOCK 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2007-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-sock \- Socket backend/overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Socket backend to
+.BR slapd (8)
+uses an external program to handle queries, similarly to
+.BR slapd\-shell (5).
+However, in this case the external program listens on a Unix domain socket.
+This makes it possible to have a pool of processes, which persist between
+requests. This allows multithreaded operation and a higher level of
+efficiency. The external program must have been started independently;
+.BR slapd (8)
+itself will not start it.
+
+This module may also be used as an overlay on top of some other database.
+Use as an overlay allows external actions to be triggered in response to
+operations on the main database.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the SOCK backend database.
+That is, they must follow a "database sock" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options are described in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+
+Alternatively, to use this module as an overlay, these directives must
+follow an "overlay sock" line within an existing database definition.
+.TP
+.B extensions [ binddn | peername | ssf | connid ]*
+Enables the sending of additional meta-attributes with each request.
+.nf
+binddn: <bound DN>
+peername: IP=<address>:<port>
+ssf: <SSF value>
+connid: <connection ID>
+.fi
+.TP
+.B socketpath <pathname>
+Gives the path to a Unix domain socket to which the commands will
+be sent and from which replies are received.
+
+When used as an overlay, these additional directives are defined:
+.TP
+.B sockops [ bind | unbind | search | compare | modify | modrdn | add | delete | extended ]*
+Specify which request types to send to the external program. The default is
+empty (no requests are sent).
+.TP
+.B sockresps [ result | search ]*
+Specify which response types to send to the external program. "result"
+sends just the results of an operation. "search" sends all entries that
+the database returned for a search request. The default is empty
+(no responses are sent).
+.TP
+.B sockdnpat <regexp>
+Specify DN patterns for which the overlay will act. Only operations on
+DNs matching the specified regular expression will be processed. The default
+is empty (all DNs are processed).
+
+.SH PROTOCOL
+The protocol is essentially the same as
+.BR slapd\-shell (5)
+with the addition of a newline to terminate the command parameters. The
+following commands are sent:
+.RS
+.nf
+ADD
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+<entry in LDIF format>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.PP
+.RS
+.nf
+BIND
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+method: <method number>
+credlen: <length of <credentials>>
+cred: <credentials>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.PP
+.RS
+.nf
+COMPARE
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+<attribute>: <value>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.PP
+.RS
+.nf
+DELETE
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.PP
+.RS
+.nf
+EXTENDED
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+oid: <OID>
+value: <base64-value>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.PP
+.RS
+.nf
+MODIFY
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+<repeat {
+ <"add"/"delete"/"replace">: <attribute>
+ <repeat { <attribute>: <value> }>
+ \-
+}>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.PP
+.RS
+.nf
+MODRDN
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+dn: <DN>
+newrdn: <new RDN>
+deleteoldrdn: <0 or 1>
+<if new superior is specified: "newSuperior: <DN>">
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.PP
+.RS
+.nf
+SEARCH
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+base: <base DN>
+scope: <0-2, see ldap.h>
+deref: <0-3, see ldap.h>
+sizelimit: <size limit>
+timelimit: <time limit>
+filter: <filter>
+attrsonly: <0 or 1>
+attrs: <"all" or space-separated attribute list>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.PP
+.RS
+.nf
+UNBIND
+msgid: <message id>
+<repeat { "suffix:" <database suffix DN> }>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+The commands - except \fBunbind\fP - should output:
+.RS
+.nf
+RESULT
+code: <integer>
+matched: <matched DN>
+info: <text>
+.fi
+.RE
+where only RESULT is mandatory, and then close the socket.
+The \fBsearch\fP RESULT should be preceded by the entries in LDIF
+format, each entry followed by a blank line.
+Lines starting with `#' or `DEBUG:' are ignored.
+
+When used as an overlay, the external program should return a
+CONTINUE response if request processing should continue normally, or
+a regular RESULT response if the external program wishes to bypass the
+underlying database.
+
+If the overlay is configured to send response messages to the external
+program, they will appear as an extended RESULT message or as an
+ENTRY message, defined below. The RESULT message is similar to
+the one above, but also includes the msgid and any configured
+extensions:
+.RS
+.nf
+RESULT
+msgid: <message id>
+code: <integer>
+matched: <matched DN>
+info: <text>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+
+Typically both the msgid and the connid will be needed to match
+a result message to a request. The ENTRY message has the form
+.RS
+.nf
+ENTRY
+msgid: <message id>
+<entry in LDIF format>
+<blank line>
+.fi
+.RE
+
+.SH KNOWN LIMITATIONS
+The
+.B sock
+backend does not process extended operation results from an external program.
+
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B sock
+backend does not honor all ACL semantics as described in
+.BR slapd.access (5).
+In general, access to objects is checked by using a dummy object
+that contains only the DN, so access rules that rely on the contents
+of the object are not honored.
+In detail:
+.LP
+The
+.B add
+operation does not require
+.B write (=w)
+access to the
+.B children
+pseudo-attribute of the parent entry.
+.LP
+The
+.B bind
+operation requires
+.B auth (=x)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute of the entry whose identity is being assessed;
+.B auth (=x)
+access to the credentials is not checked, but rather delegated
+to the underlying program.
+.LP
+The
+.B compare
+operation requires
+.B compare (=c)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute
+of the object whose value is being asserted;
+.B compare (=c)
+access to the attribute whose value is being asserted is not checked.
+.LP
+The
+.B delete
+operation does not require
+.B write (=w)
+access to the
+.B children
+pseudo-attribute of the parent entry.
+.LP
+The
+.B modify
+operation requires
+.B write (=w)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute;
+.B write (=w)
+access to the specific attributes that are modified is not checked.
+.LP
+The
+.B modrdn
+operation does not require
+.B write (=w)
+access to the
+.B children
+pseudo-attribute of the parent entry, nor to that of the new parent,
+if different;
+.B write (=w)
+access to the distinguished values of the naming attributes
+is not checked.
+.LP
+The
+.B search
+operation does not require
+.B search (=s)
+access to the
+.B entry
+pseudo_attribute of the searchBase;
+.B search (=s)
+access to the attributes and values used in the filter is not checked.
+.LP
+The
+.B extended
+operation does not require any access special rights.
+The external program has to implement any sort of access control.
+
+.SH EXAMPLE
+There is an example script in the slapd/back\-sock/ directory
+in the OpenLDAP source tree.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Brian Candler, with enhancements by Howard Chu
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-sock.5.links b/doc/man/man5/slapd-sock.5.links
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b5f4e45
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-sock.5.links
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+slapo-sock.5
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd-sql.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd-sql.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8492553
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd-sql.5
@@ -0,0 +1,699 @@
+.TH SLAPD-SQL 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd\-sql \- SQL backend to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The primary purpose of this
+.BR slapd (8)
+backend is to PRESENT information stored in some RDBMS as an LDAP subtree
+without any programming (some SQL and maybe stored procedures can't be
+considered programming, anyway ;).
+.LP
+That is, for example, when you (some ISP) have account information you
+use in an RDBMS, and want to use modern solutions that expect such
+information in LDAP (to authenticate users, make email lookups etc.).
+Or you want to synchronize or distribute information between different
+sites/applications that use RDBMSes and/or LDAP.
+Or whatever else...
+.LP
+It is NOT designed as a general-purpose backend that uses RDBMS instead
+of BerkeleyDB (as the standard BDB backend does), though it can be
+used as such with several limitations.
+You can take a look at
+.B http://www.openldap.org/faq/index.cgi?file=378
+(OpenLDAP FAQ\-O\-Matic/General LDAP FAQ/Directories vs. conventional
+databases) to find out more on this point.
+.LP
+The idea (detailed below) is to use some meta-information to translate
+LDAP queries to SQL queries, leaving relational schema untouched, so
+that old applications can continue using it without any
+modifications.
+This allows SQL and LDAP applications to inter-operate without
+replication, and exchange data as needed.
+.LP
+The SQL backend is designed to be tunable to virtually any relational
+schema without having to change source (through that meta-information
+mentioned).
+Also, it uses ODBC to connect to RDBMSes, and is highly configurable
+for SQL dialects RDBMSes may use, so it may be used for integration
+and distribution of data on different RDBMSes, OSes, hosts etc., in
+other words, in highly heterogeneous environment.
+.LP
+This backend is \fIexperimental\fP.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the SQL backend database, which means that
+they must follow a "database sql" line and come before any
+subsequent "backend" or "database" lines.
+Other database options not specific to this backend are described
+in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+manual page.
+.SH DATA SOURCE CONFIGURATION
+
+.TP
+.B dbname <datasource name>
+The name of the ODBC datasource to use.
+.LP
+.B dbhost <hostname>
+.br
+.B dbpasswd <password>
+.br
+.B dbuser <username>
+.RS
+The three above options are generally unneeded, because this information
+is taken from the datasource specified by the
+.B dbname
+directive.
+They allow to override datasource settings.
+Also, several RDBMS' drivers tend to require explicit passing of user/password,
+even if those are given in datasource (Note:
+.B dbhost
+is currently ignored).
+.RE
+.SH SCOPING CONFIGURATION
+These options specify SQL query templates for scoping searches.
+
+.TP
+.B subtree_cond <SQL expression>
+Specifies a where-clause template used to form a subtree search condition
+(dn="(.+,)?<dn>$").
+It may differ from one SQL dialect to another (see samples).
+By default, it is constructed based on the knowledge about
+how to normalize DN values (e.g.
+\fB"<upper_func>(ldap_entries.dn) LIKE CONCAT('%',?)"\fP);
+see \fBupper_func\fP, \fBupper_needs_cast\fP, \fBconcat_pattern\fP
+and \fBstrcast_func\fP in "HELPER CONFIGURATION" for details.
+
+.TP
+.B children_cond <SQL expression>
+Specifies a where-clause template used to form a children search condition
+(dn=".+,<dn>$").
+It may differ from one SQL dialect to another (see samples).
+By default, it is constructed based on the knowledge about
+how to normalize DN values (e.g.
+\fB"<upper_func>(ldap_entries.dn) LIKE CONCAT('%,',?)"\fP);
+see \fBupper_func\fP, \fBupper_needs_cast\fP, \fBconcat_pattern\fP
+and \fBstrcast_func\fP in "HELPER CONFIGURATION" for details.
+
+.TP
+.B use_subtree_shortcut { YES | no }
+Do not use the subtree condition when the searchBase is the database
+suffix, and the scope is subtree; rather collect all entries.
+
+.RE
+.SH STATEMENT CONFIGURATION
+These options specify SQL query templates for loading schema mapping
+meta-information, adding and deleting entries to ldap_entries, etc.
+All these and subtree_cond should have the given default values.
+For the current value it is recommended to look at the sources,
+or in the log output when slapd starts with "\-d 5" or greater.
+Note that the parameter number and order must not be changed.
+
+.TP
+.B oc_query <SQL expression>
+The query that is used to collect the objectClass mapping data
+from table \fIldap_oc_mappings\fP; see "METAINFORMATION USED" for details.
+The default is
+\fB"SELECT id, name, keytbl, keycol, create_proc, delete_proc, expect_return
+FROM ldap_oc_mappings"\fP.
+
+.TP
+.B at_query <SQL expression>
+The query that is used to collect the attributeType mapping data
+from table \fIldap_attr_mappings\fP; see "METAINFORMATION USED" for details.
+The default is
+\fB"SELECT name, sel_expr, from_tbls, join_where, add_proc, delete_proc,
+param_order, expect_return FROM ldap_attr_mappings WHERE oc_map_id=?"\fP.
+
+.TP
+.B id_query <SQL expression>
+The query that is used to map a DN to an entry
+in table \fIldap_entries\fP; see "METAINFORMATION USED" for details.
+The default is
+\fB"SELECT id,keyval,oc_map_id,dn FROM ldap_entries WHERE <DN match expr>"\fP,
+where \fB<DN match expr>\fP is constructed based on the knowledge about
+how to normalize DN values (e.g. \fB"dn=?"\fP if no means to uppercase
+strings are available; typically, \fB"<upper_func>(dn)=?"\fP is used);
+see \fBupper_func\fP, \fBupper_needs_cast\fP, \fBconcat_pattern\fP
+and \fBstrcast_func\fP in "HELPER CONFIGURATION" for details.
+
+.TP
+.B insentry_stmt <SQL expression>
+The statement that is used to insert a new entry
+in table \fIldap_entries\fP; see "METAINFORMATION USED" for details.
+The default is
+\fB"INSERT INTO ldap_entries (dn, oc_map_id, parent, keyval) VALUES
+(?, ?, ?, ?)"\fP.
+
+.TP
+.B delentry_stmt <SQL expression>
+The statement that is used to delete an existing entry
+from table \fIldap_entries\fP; see "METAINFORMATION USED" for details.
+The default is
+\fB"DELETE FROM ldap_entries WHERE id=?"\fP.
+
+.TP
+.B delobjclasses_stmt <SQL expression>
+The statement that is used to delete an existing entry's ID
+from table \fIldap_objclasses\fP; see "METAINFORMATION USED" for details.
+The default is
+\fB"DELETE FROM ldap_entry_objclasses WHERE entry_id=?"\fP.
+
+.RE
+.SH HELPER CONFIGURATION
+These statements are used to modify the default behavior of the backend
+according to issues of the dialect of the RDBMS.
+The first options essentially refer to string and DN normalization
+when building filters.
+LDAP normalization is more than upper- (or lower-)casing everything;
+however, as a reasonable trade-off, for case-sensitive RDBMSes the backend
+can be instructed to uppercase strings and DNs by providing
+the \fBupper_func\fP directive.
+Some RDBMSes, to use functions on arbitrary data types, e.g. string
+constants, requires a cast, which is triggered
+by the \fBupper_needs_cast\fP directive.
+If required, a string cast function can be provided as well,
+by using the \fBstrcast_func\fP directive.
+Finally, a custom string concatenation pattern may be required;
+it is provided by the \fBconcat_pattern\fP directive.
+
+.TP
+.B upper_func <SQL function name>
+Specifies the name of a function that converts a given value to uppercase.
+This is used for case insensitive matching when the RDBMS is case sensitive.
+It may differ from one SQL dialect to another (e.g. \fBUCASE\fP, \fBUPPER\fP
+or whatever; see samples). By default, none is used, i.e. strings are not
+uppercased, so matches may be case sensitive.
+
+.TP
+.B upper_needs_cast { NO | yes }
+Set this directive to
+.B yes
+if
+.B upper_func
+needs an explicit cast when applied to literal strings.
+A cast in the form
+.B CAST (<arg> AS VARCHAR(<max DN length>))
+is used, where
+.B <max DN length>
+is builtin in back-sql; see macro
+.B BACKSQL_MAX_DN_LEN
+(currently 255; note that slapd's builtin limit, in macro
+.BR SLAP_LDAPDN_MAXLEN ,
+is set to 8192).
+This is \fIexperimental\fP and may change in future releases.
+
+.TP
+.B strcast_func <SQL function name>
+Specifies the name of a function that converts a given value to a string
+for appropriate ordering. This is used in "SELECT DISTINCT" statements
+for strongly typed RDBMSes with little implicit casting (like PostgreSQL),
+when a literal string is specified.
+This is \fIexperimental\fP and may change in future releases.
+
+.TP
+.B concat_pattern <pattern>
+This statement defines the
+.B pattern
+that is used to concatenate strings. The
+.B pattern
+MUST contain two question marks, '?', that will be replaced
+by the two strings that must be concatenated. The default value is
+.BR "CONCAT(?,?)";
+a form that is known to be highly portable (IBM db2, PostgreSQL) is
+.BR "?||?",
+but an explicit cast may be required when operating on literal strings:
+.BR "CAST(?||? AS VARCHAR(<length>))".
+On some RDBMSes (IBM db2, MSSQL) the form
+.B "?+?"
+is known to work as well.
+Carefully check the documentation of your RDBMS or stay with the examples
+for supported ones.
+This is \fIexperimental\fP and may change in future releases.
+
+.TP
+.B aliasing_keyword <string>
+Define the aliasing keyword. Some RDBMSes use the word "\fIAS\fP"
+(the default), others don't use any.
+
+.TP
+.B aliasing_quote <string>
+Define the quoting char of the aliasing keyword. Some RDBMSes
+don't require any (the default), others may require single
+or double quotes.
+
+.TP
+.B has_ldapinfo_dn_ru { NO | yes }
+Explicitly inform the backend whether the dn_ru column
+(DN in reverse uppercased form) is present in table \fIldap_entries\fP.
+Overrides automatic check (this is required, for instance,
+by PostgreSQL/unixODBC).
+This is \fIexperimental\fP and may change in future releases.
+
+.TP
+.B fail_if_no_mapping { NO | yes }
+When set to
+.B yes
+it forces \fIattribute\fP write operations to fail if no appropriate
+mapping between LDAP attributes and SQL data is available.
+The default behavior is to ignore those changes that cannot be mapped.
+It has no impact on objectClass mapping, i.e. if the
+.I structuralObjectClass
+of an entry cannot be mapped to SQL by looking up its name
+in ldap_oc_mappings, an
+.I add
+operation will fail regardless of the
+.B fail_if_no_mapping
+switch; see section "METAINFORMATION USED" for details.
+This is \fIexperimental\fP and may change in future releases.
+
+.TP
+.B allow_orphans { NO | yes }
+When set to
+.B yes
+orphaned entries (i.e. without the parent entry in the database)
+can be added. This option should be used with care, possibly
+in conjunction with some special rule on the RDBMS side that
+dynamically creates the missing parent.
+
+.TP
+.B baseObject [ <filename> ]
+Instructs the database to create and manage an in-memory baseObject
+entry instead of looking for one in the RDBMS.
+If the (optional)
+.B <filename>
+argument is given, the entry is read from that file in
+.BR LDIF (5)
+format; otherwise, an entry with objectClass \fBextensibleObject\fP
+is created based on the contents of the RDN of the \fIbaseObject\fP.
+This is particularly useful when \fIldap_entries\fP
+information is stored in a view rather than in a table, and
+.B union
+is not supported for views, so that the view can only specify
+one rule to compute the entry structure for one objectClass.
+This topic is discussed further in section "METAINFORMATION USED".
+This is \fIexperimental\fP and may change in future releases.
+
+.TP
+.B create_needs_select { NO | yes }
+Instructs the database whether or not entry creation
+in table \fIldap_entries\fP needs a subsequent select to collect
+the automatically assigned ID, instead of being returned
+by a stored procedure.
+
+.LP
+.B fetch_attrs <attrlist>
+.br
+.B fetch_all_attrs { NO | yes }
+.RS
+The first statement allows one to provide a list of attributes that
+must always be fetched in addition to those requested by any specific
+operation, because they are required for the proper usage of the
+backend. For instance, all attributes used in ACLs should be listed
+here. The second statement is a shortcut to require all attributes
+to be always loaded. Note that the dynamically generated attributes,
+e.g. \fIhasSubordinates\fP, \fIentryDN\fP and other implementation
+dependent attributes are \fBNOT\fP generated at this point, for
+consistency with the rest of slapd. This may change in the future.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B check_schema { YES | no }
+Instructs the database to check schema adherence of entries after
+modifications, and structural objectClass chain when entries are built.
+By default it is set to
+.BR yes .
+
+.TP
+.B sqllayer <name> [...]
+Loads the layer \fB<name>\fP onto a stack of helpers that are used
+to map DNs from LDAP to SQL representation and vice-versa.
+Subsequent args are passed to the layer configuration routine.
+This is \fIhighly experimental\fP and should be used with extreme care.
+The API of the layers is not frozen yet, so it is unpublished.
+
+.TP
+.B autocommit { NO | yes }
+Activates autocommit; by default, it is off.
+
+.SH METAINFORMATION USED
+.LP
+Almost everything mentioned later is illustrated in examples located
+in the
+.B servers/slapd/back\-sql/rdbms_depend/
+directory in the OpenLDAP source tree, and contains scripts for
+generating sample database for Oracle, MS SQL Server, mySQL and more
+(including PostgreSQL and IBM db2).
+.LP
+The first thing that one must arrange is what set of LDAP
+object classes can present your RDBMS information.
+.LP
+The easiest way is to create an objectClass for each entity you had in
+ER-diagram when designing your relational schema.
+Any relational schema, no matter how normalized it is, was designed
+after some model of your application's domain (for instance, accounts,
+services etc. in ISP), and is used in terms of its entities, not just
+tables of normalized schema.
+It means that for every attribute of every such instance there is an
+effective SQL query that loads its values.
+.LP
+Also you might want your object classes to conform to some of the standard
+schemas like inetOrgPerson etc.
+.LP
+Nevertheless, when you think it out, we must define a way to translate
+LDAP operation requests to (a series of) SQL queries.
+Let us deal with the SEARCH operation.
+.LP
+Example:
+Let's suppose that we store information about persons working in our
+organization in two tables:
+.LP
+.nf
+ PERSONS PHONES
+ ---------- -------------
+ id integer id integer
+ first_name varchar pers_id integer references persons(id)
+ last_name varchar phone
+ middle_name varchar
+ ...
+.fi
+.LP
+(PHONES contains telephone numbers associated with persons).
+A person can have several numbers, then PHONES contains several
+records with corresponding pers_id, or no numbers (and no records in
+PHONES with such pers_id).
+An LDAP objectclass to present such information could look like this:
+.LP
+.nf
+ person
+ -------
+ MUST cn
+ MAY telephoneNumber $ firstName $ lastName
+ ...
+.fi
+.LP
+To fetch all values for cn attribute given person ID, we construct the
+query:
+.LP
+.nf
+ SELECT CONCAT(persons.first_name,' ',persons.last_name)
+ AS cn FROM persons WHERE persons.id=?
+.fi
+.LP
+for telephoneNumber we can use:
+.LP
+.nf
+ SELECT phones.phone AS telephoneNumber FROM persons,phones
+ WHERE persons.id=phones.pers_id AND persons.id=?
+.fi
+.LP
+If we wanted to service LDAP requests with filters like
+(telephoneNumber=123*), we would construct something like:
+.LP
+.nf
+ SELECT ... FROM persons,phones
+ WHERE persons.id=phones.pers_id
+ AND persons.id=?
+ AND phones.phone like '%1%2%3%'
+.fi
+.LP
+(note how the telephoneNumber match is expanded in multiple wildcards
+to account for interspersed ininfluential chars like spaces, dashes
+and so; this occurs by design because telephoneNumber is defined after
+a specially recognized syntax).
+So, if we had information about what tables contain values for each
+attribute, how to join these tables and arrange these values, we could
+try to automatically generate such statements, and translate search
+filters to SQL WHERE clauses.
+.LP
+To store such information, we add three more tables to our schema
+and fill it with data (see samples):
+.LP
+.nf
+ ldap_oc_mappings (some columns are not listed for clarity)
+ ---------------
+ id=1
+ name="person"
+ keytbl="persons"
+ keycol="id"
+.fi
+.LP
+This table defines a mapping between objectclass (its name held in the
+"name" column), and a table that holds the primary key for corresponding
+entities.
+For instance, in our example, the person entity, which we are trying
+to present as "person" objectclass, resides in two tables (persons and
+phones), and is identified by the persons.id column (that we will call
+the primary key for this entity).
+Keytbl and keycol thus contain "persons" (name of the table), and "id"
+(name of the column).
+.LP
+.nf
+ ldap_attr_mappings (some columns are not listed for clarity)
+ -----------
+ id=1
+ oc_map_id=1
+ name="cn"
+ sel_expr="CONCAT(persons.first_name,' ',persons.last_name)"
+ from_tbls="persons"
+ join_where=NULL
+ ************
+ id=<n>
+ oc_map_id=1
+ name="telephoneNumber"
+ sel_expr="phones.phone"
+ from_tbls="persons,phones"
+ join_where="phones.pers_id=persons.id"
+.fi
+.LP
+This table defines mappings between LDAP attributes and SQL queries
+that load their values.
+Note that, unlike LDAP schema, these are not
+.B attribute types
+- the attribute "cn" for "person" objectclass can
+have its values in different tables than "cn" for some other objectclass,
+so attribute mappings depend on objectclass mappings (unlike attribute
+types in LDAP schema, which are indifferent to objectclasses).
+Thus, we have oc_map_id column with link to oc_mappings table.
+.LP
+Now we cut the SQL query that loads values for a given attribute into 3 parts.
+First goes into sel_expr column - this is the expression we had
+between SELECT and FROM keywords, which defines WHAT to load.
+Next is table list - text between FROM and WHERE keywords.
+It may contain aliases for convenience (see examples).
+The last is part of the where clause, which (if it exists at all) expresses the
+condition for joining the table containing values with the table
+containing the primary key (foreign key equality and such).
+If values are in the same table as the primary key, then this column is
+left NULL (as for cn attribute above).
+.LP
+Having this information in parts, we are able to not only construct
+queries that load attribute values by id of entry (for this we could
+store SQL query as a whole), but to construct queries that load id's
+of objects that correspond to a given search filter (or at least part of
+it).
+See below for examples.
+.LP
+.nf
+ ldap_entries
+ ------------
+ id=1
+ dn=<dn you choose>
+ oc_map_id=...
+ parent=<parent record id>
+ keyval=<value of primary key>
+.fi
+.LP
+This table defines mappings between DNs of entries in your LDAP tree,
+and values of primary keys for corresponding relational data.
+It has recursive structure (parent column references id column of the
+same table), which allows you to add any tree structure(s) to your
+flat relational data.
+Having id of objectclass mapping, we can determine table and column
+for primary key, and keyval stores value of it, thus defining the exact
+tuple corresponding to the LDAP entry with this DN.
+.LP
+Note that such design (see exact SQL table creation query) implies one
+important constraint - the key must be an integer.
+But all that I know about well-designed schemas makes me think that it's
+not very narrow ;) If anyone needs support for different types for
+keys - he may want to write a patch, and submit it to OpenLDAP ITS,
+then I'll include it.
+.LP
+Also, several users complained that they don't really need very
+structured trees, and they don't want to update one more table every
+time they add or delete an instance in the relational schema.
+Those people can use a view instead of a real table for ldap_entries, something
+like this (by Robin Elfrink):
+.LP
+.nf
+ CREATE VIEW ldap_entries (id, dn, oc_map_id, parent, keyval)
+ AS
+ SELECT 0, UPPER('o=MyCompany,c=NL'),
+ 3, 0, 'baseObject' FROM unixusers WHERE userid='root'
+ UNION
+ SELECT (1000000000+userid),
+ UPPER(CONCAT(CONCAT('cn=',gecos),',o=MyCompany,c=NL')),
+ 1, 0, userid FROM unixusers
+ UNION
+ SELECT (2000000000+groupnummer),
+ UPPER(CONCAT(CONCAT('cn=',groupnaam),',o=MyCompany,c=NL')),
+ 2, 0, groupnummer FROM groups;
+.fi
+
+.LP
+If your RDBMS does not support
+.B unions
+in views, only one objectClass can be mapped in
+.BR ldap_entries ,
+and the baseObject cannot be created; in this case, see the
+.B baseObject
+directive for a possible workaround.
+
+.LP
+.SH TYPICAL SQL BACKEND OPERATION
+Having meta-information loaded, the SQL backend uses these tables to
+determine a set of primary keys of candidates (depending on search
+scope and filter).
+It tries to do it for each objectclass registered in ldap_objclasses.
+.LP
+Example:
+for our query with filter (telephoneNumber=123*) we would get the following
+query generated (which loads candidate IDs)
+.LP
+.nf
+ SELECT ldap_entries.id,persons.id, 'person' AS objectClass,
+ ldap_entries.dn AS dn
+ FROM ldap_entries,persons,phones
+ WHERE persons.id=ldap_entries.keyval
+ AND ldap_entries.objclass=?
+ AND ldap_entries.parent=?
+ AND phones.pers_id=persons.id
+ AND (phones.phone LIKE '%1%2%3%')
+.fi
+.LP
+(for ONELEVEL search)
+or "... AND dn=?" (for BASE search)
+or "... AND dn LIKE '%?'" (for SUBTREE)
+.LP
+Then, for each candidate, we load the requested attributes using
+per-attribute queries like
+.LP
+.nf
+ SELECT phones.phone AS telephoneNumber
+ FROM persons,phones
+ WHERE persons.id=? AND phones.pers_id=persons.id
+.fi
+.LP
+Then, we use test_filter() from the frontend API to test the entry for a full
+LDAP search filter match (since we cannot effectively make sense of
+SYNTAX of corresponding LDAP schema attribute, we translate the filter
+into the most relaxed SQL condition to filter candidates), and send it to
+the user.
+.LP
+ADD, DELETE, MODIFY and MODRDN operations are also performed on per-attribute
+meta-information (add_proc etc.).
+In those fields one can specify an SQL statement or stored procedure
+call which can add, or delete given values of a given attribute, using
+the given entry keyval (see examples -- mostly PostgreSQL, ORACLE and MSSQL
+- since as of this writing there are no stored procs in MySQL).
+.LP
+We just add more columns to ldap_oc_mappings and ldap_attr_mappings, holding
+statements to execute (like create_proc, add_proc, del_proc etc.), and
+flags governing the order of parameters passed to those statements.
+Please see samples to find out what are the parameters passed, and other
+information on this matter - they are self-explanatory for those familiar
+with the concepts expressed above.
+.LP
+.SH COMMON TECHNIQUES
+First of all, let's recall that among other major differences to the
+complete LDAP data model, the above illustrated concept does not directly
+support such features as multiple objectclasses per entry, and referrals.
+Fortunately, they are easy to adopt in this scheme.
+The SQL backend requires that one more table is added to the schema:
+ldap_entry_objectclasses(entry_id,oc_name).
+.LP
+That table contains any number of objectclass names that corresponding
+entries will possess, in addition to that mentioned in mapping.
+The SQL backend automatically adds attribute mapping for the "objectclass"
+attribute to each objectclass mapping that loads values from this table.
+So, you may, for instance, have a mapping for inetOrgPerson, and use it
+for queries for "person" objectclass...
+.LP
+Referrals used to be implemented in a loose manner by adding an extra
+table that allowed any entry to host a "ref" attribute, along with
+a "referral" extra objectClass in table ldap_entry_objclasses.
+In the current implementation, referrals are treated like any other
+user-defined schema, since "referral" is a structural objectclass.
+The suggested practice is to define a "referral" entry in ldap_oc_mappings,
+holding a naming attribute, e.g. "ou" or "cn", a "ref" attribute,
+containing the url; in case multiple referrals per entry are needed,
+a separate table for urls can be created, where urls are mapped
+to the respective entries.
+The use of the naming attribute usually requires to add
+an "extensibleObject" value to ldap_entry_objclasses.
+
+.LP
+.SH CAVEATS
+As previously stated, this backend should not be considered
+a replacement of other data storage backends, but rather a gateway
+to existing RDBMS storages that need to be published in LDAP form.
+.LP
+The \fBhasSubordintes\fP operational attribute is honored by back-sql
+in search results and in compare operations; it is partially honored
+also in filtering. Owing to design limitations, a (brain-dead?) filter
+of the form
+\fB(!(hasSubordinates=TRUE))\fP
+will give no results instead of returning all the leaf entries, because
+it actually expands into \fB... AND NOT (1=1)\fP.
+If you need to find all the leaf entries, please use
+\fB(hasSubordinates=FALSE)\fP
+instead.
+.LP
+A directoryString value of the form "__First___Last_"
+(where underscores mean spaces, ASCII 0x20 char) corresponds
+to its prettified counterpart "First_Last"; this is not currently
+honored by back-sql if non-prettified data is written via RDBMS;
+when non-prettified data is written through back-sql, the prettified
+values are actually used instead.
+
+.LP
+.SH BUGS
+When the
+.B ldap_entry_objclasses
+table is empty, filters on the
+.B objectClass
+attribute erroneously result in no candidates.
+A workaround consists in adding at least one row to that table,
+no matter if valid or not.
+
+.LP
+.SH PROXY CACHE OVERLAY
+The proxy cache overlay
+allows caching of LDAP search requests (queries) in a local database.
+See
+.BR slapo\-pcache (5)
+for details.
+.SH EXAMPLES
+There are example SQL modules in the slapd/back\-sql/rdbms_depend/
+directory in the OpenLDAP source tree.
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B sql
+backend honors access control semantics as indicated in
+.BR slapd.access (5)
+(including the
+.B disclose
+access privilege when enabled at compile time).
+.SH FILES
+
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd.access.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd.access.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..72e7140
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd.access.5
@@ -0,0 +1,1183 @@
+.TH SLAPD.ACCESS 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd.access \- access configuration for slapd, the stand-alone LDAP daemon
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+file contains configuration information for the
+.BR slapd (8)
+daemon. This configuration file is also used by the SLAPD tools
+.BR slapacl (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapauth (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapdn (8),
+.BR slapindex (8),
+and
+.BR slaptest (8).
+.LP
+The
+.B slapd.conf
+file consists of a series of global configuration options that apply to
+.B slapd
+as a whole (including all backends), followed by zero or more database
+backend definitions that contain information specific to a backend
+instance.
+.LP
+The general format of
+.B slapd.conf
+is as follows:
+.LP
+.nf
+ # comment - these options apply to every database
+ <global configuration options>
+ # first database definition & configuration options
+ database <backend 1 type>
+ <configuration options specific to backend 1>
+ # subsequent database definitions & configuration options
+ ...
+.fi
+.LP
+Both the global configuration and each backend-specific section can
+contain access information. Backend-specific access control
+directives are used for those entries that belong to the backend,
+according to their naming context. In case no access control
+directives are defined for a backend or those which are defined are
+not applicable, the directives from the global configuration section
+are then used.
+.LP
+If no access controls are present, the default policy
+allows anyone and everyone to read anything but restricts
+updates to rootdn. (e.g., "access to * by * read").
+.LP
+When dealing with an access list, because the global access list is
+effectively appended to each per-database list, if the resulting
+list is non-empty then the access list will end with an implicit
+.B access to * by * none
+directive. If there are no access directives applicable to a backend,
+then a default read is used.
+.LP
+.B Be warned: the rootdn can always read and write EVERYTHING!
+.LP
+For entries not held in any backend (such as a root DSE), the
+global directives are used.
+.LP
+Arguments that should be replaced by actual text are shown in
+brackets <>.
+.SH THE ACCESS DIRECTIVE
+The structure of the access control directives is
+.TP
+.B access to <what> "[ by <who> [ <access> ] [ <control> ] ]+"
+Grant access (specified by
+.BR <access> )
+to a set of entries and/or attributes (specified by
+.BR <what> )
+by one or more requestors (specified by
+.BR <who> ).
+
+.LP
+Lists of access directives are evaluated in the order they appear
+in \fIslapd.conf\fP.
+When a
+.B <what>
+clause matches the datum whose access is being evaluated, its
+.B <who>
+clause list is checked.
+When a
+.B <who>
+clause matches the accessor's properties, its
+.B <access>
+and
+.B <control>
+clauses are evaluated.
+Access control checking stops at the first match of the
+.B <what>
+and
+.B <who>
+clause, unless otherwise dictated by the
+.B <control>
+clause.
+Each
+.B <who>
+clause list is implicitly terminated by a
+.LP
+.nf
+ by * none stop
+.fi
+.LP
+clause that results in stopping the access control with no access
+privileges granted.
+Each
+.B <what>
+clause list is implicitly terminated by a
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to *
+ by * none
+.fi
+.LP
+clause that results in granting no access privileges to an otherwise
+unspecified datum.
+.SH THE <WHAT> FIELD
+The field
+.BR <what>
+specifies the entity the access control directive applies to.
+It can have the forms
+.LP
+.nf
+ dn[.<dnstyle>]=<dnpattern>
+ filter=<ldapfilter>
+ attrs=<attrlist>[ val[/matchingRule][.<attrstyle>]=<attrval>]
+.fi
+.LP
+with
+.LP
+.nf
+ <dnstyle>={{exact|base(object)}|regex
+ |one(level)|sub(tree)|children}
+ <attrlist>={<attr>|[{!|@}]<objectClass>}[,<attrlist>]
+ <attrstyle>={{exact|base(object)}|regex
+ |one(level)|sub(tree)|children}
+.fi
+.LP
+The statement
+.B dn=<dnpattern>
+selects the entries based on their naming context.
+The
+.B <dnpattern>
+is a string representation of the entry's DN.
+The wildcard
+.B *
+stands for all the entries, and it is implied if no
+.B dn
+form is given.
+.LP
+The
+.B <dnstyle>
+is optional; however, it is recommended to specify it to avoid ambiguities.
+.B Base
+(synonym of
+.BR baseObject ),
+the default,
+or
+.B exact
+(an alias of
+.BR base )
+indicates the entry whose DN is equal to the
+.BR <dnpattern> ;
+.B one
+(synonym of
+.BR onelevel )
+indicates all the entries immediately below the
+.BR <dnpattern> ,
+.B sub
+(synonym of
+.BR subtree )
+indicates all entries in the subtree at the
+.BR <dnpattern> ,
+.B children
+indicates all the entries below (subordinate to) the
+.BR <dnpattern> .
+.LP
+If the
+.B <dnstyle>
+qualifier is
+.BR regex ,
+then
+.B <dnpattern>
+is a POSIX (''extended'') regular expression pattern,
+as detailed in
+.BR regex (7)
+and/or
+.BR re_format (7),
+matching a normalized string representation of the entry's DN.
+The regex form of the pattern does not (yet) support UTF-8.
+.LP
+The statement
+.B filter=<ldapfilter>
+selects the entries based on a valid LDAP filter as described in RFC 4515.
+A filter of
+.B (objectClass=*)
+is implied if no
+.B filter
+form is given.
+.LP
+The statement
+.B attrs=<attrlist>
+selects the attributes the access control rule applies to.
+It is a comma-separated list of attribute types, plus the special names
+.BR entry ,
+indicating access to the entry itself, and
+.BR children ,
+indicating access to the entry's children. ObjectClass names may also
+be specified in this list, which will affect all the attributes that
+are required and/or allowed by that objectClass.
+Actually, names in
+.B <attrlist>
+that are prefixed by
+.B @
+are directly treated as objectClass names. A name prefixed by
+.B !
+is also treated as an objectClass, but in this case the access rule
+affects the attributes that are not required nor allowed
+by that objectClass.
+If no
+.B attrs
+form is given,
+.B attrs=@extensibleObject
+is implied, i.e. all attributes are addressed.
+.LP
+Using the form
+.B attrs=<attr> val[/matchingRule][.<attrstyle>]=<attrval>
+specifies access to a particular value of a single attribute.
+In this case, only a single attribute type may be given. The
+.B <attrstyle>
+.B exact
+(the default) uses the attribute's equality matching rule to compare the
+value, unless a different (and compatible) matching rule is specified. If the
+.B <attrstyle>
+is
+.BR regex ,
+the provided value is used as a POSIX (''extended'') regular
+expression pattern. If the attribute has DN syntax, the
+.B <attrstyle>
+can be any of
+.BR base ,
+.BR onelevel ,
+.B subtree
+or
+.BR children ,
+resulting in base, onelevel, subtree or children match, respectively.
+.LP
+The dn, filter, and attrs statements are additive; they can be used in sequence
+to select entities the access rule applies to based on naming context,
+value and attribute type simultaneously.
+Submatches resulting from
+.B regex
+matching can be dereferenced in the
+.B <who>
+field using the syntax
+.IR ${v<n>} ,
+where
+.I <n>
+is the submatch number.
+The default syntax,
+.IR $<n> ,
+is actually an alias for
+.IR ${d<n>} ,
+that corresponds to dereferencing submatches from the
+.B dnpattern
+portion of the
+.B <what>
+field.
+.SH THE <WHO> FIELD
+The field
+.B <who>
+indicates whom the access rules apply to.
+Multiple
+.B <who>
+statements can appear in an access control statement, indicating the
+different access privileges to the same resource that apply to different
+accessee.
+It can have the forms
+.LP
+.nf
+ *
+ anonymous
+ users
+ self[.<selfstyle>]
+
+ dn[.<dnstyle>[,<modifier>]]=<DN>
+ dnattr=<attrname>
+
+ realanonymous
+ realusers
+ realself[.<selfstyle>]
+
+ realdn[.<dnstyle>[,<modifier>]]=<DN>
+ realdnattr=<attrname>
+
+ group[/<objectclass>[/<attrname>]]
+ [.<groupstyle>]=<group>
+ peername[.<peernamestyle>]=<peername>
+ sockname[.<style>]=<sockname>
+ domain[.<domainstyle>[,<modifier>]]=<domain>
+ sockurl[.<style>]=<sockurl>
+ set[.<setstyle>]=<pattern>
+
+ ssf=<n>
+ transport_ssf=<n>
+ tls_ssf=<n>
+ sasl_ssf=<n>
+
+ dynacl/<name>[/<options>][.<dynstyle>][=<pattern>]
+.fi
+.LP
+with
+.LP
+.nf
+ <style>={exact|regex|expand}
+ <selfstyle>={level{<n>}}
+ <dnstyle>={{exact|base(object)}|regex
+ |one(level)|sub(tree)|children|level{<n>}}
+ <groupstyle>={exact|expand}
+ <peernamestyle>={<style>|ip|ipv6|path}
+ <domainstyle>={exact|regex|sub(tree)}
+ <setstyle>={exact|expand}
+ <modifier>={expand}
+ <name>=aci <pattern>=<attrname>]
+.fi
+.LP
+They may be specified in combination.
+.LP
+.nf
+.fi
+.LP
+The wildcard
+.B *
+refers to everybody.
+.LP
+The keywords prefixed by
+.B real
+act as their counterparts without prefix; the checking respectively occurs
+with the \fIauthentication\fP DN and the \fIauthorization\fP DN.
+.LP
+The keyword
+.B anonymous
+means access is granted to unauthenticated clients; it is mostly used
+to limit access to authentication resources (e.g. the
+.B userPassword
+attribute) to unauthenticated clients for authentication purposes.
+.LP
+The keyword
+.B users
+means access is granted to authenticated clients.
+.LP
+The keyword
+.B self
+means access to an entry is allowed to the entry itself (e.g. the entry
+being accessed and the requesting entry must be the same).
+It allows the
+.B level{<n>}
+style, where \fI<n>\fP indicates what ancestor of the DN
+is to be used in matches.
+A positive value indicates that the <n>-th ancestor of the user's DN
+is to be considered; a negative value indicates that the <n>-th ancestor
+of the target is to be considered.
+For example, a "\fIby self.level{1} ...\fP" clause would match
+when the object "\fIdc=example,dc=com\fP" is accessed
+by "\fIcn=User,dc=example,dc=com\fP".
+A "\fIby self.level{-1} ...\fP" clause would match when the same user
+accesses the object "\fIou=Address Book,cn=User,dc=example,dc=com\fP".
+.LP
+The statement
+.B dn=<DN>
+means that access is granted to the matching DN.
+The optional style qualifier
+.B dnstyle
+allows the same choices of the dn form of the
+.B <what>
+field. In addition, the
+.B regex
+style can exploit substring substitution of submatches in the
+.B <what>
+dn.regex clause by using the form
+.BR $<digit> ,
+with
+.B digit
+ranging from 0 to 9 (where 0 matches the entire string),
+or the form
+.BR ${<digit>+} ,
+for submatches higher than 9.
+Substring substitution from attribute value can
+be done in
+using the form
+.BR ${v<digit>+} .
+Since the dollar character is used to indicate a substring replacement,
+the dollar character that is used to indicate match up to the end of
+the string must be escaped by a second dollar character, e.g.
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.regex="^(.+,)?uid=([^,]+),dc=[^,]+,dc=com$"
+ by dn.regex="^uid=$2,dc=[^,]+,dc=com$$" write
+.fi
+.LP
+The style qualifier
+allows an optional
+.BR modifier .
+At present, the only type allowed is
+.BR expand ,
+which causes substring substitution of submatches to take place
+even if
+.B dnstyle
+is not
+.BR regex .
+Note that the
+.B regex
+dnstyle in the above example may be of use only if the
+.B <by>
+clause needs to be a regex; otherwise, if the
+value of the second (from the right)
+.B dc=
+portion of the DN in the above example were fixed, the form
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.regex="^(.+,)?uid=([^,]+),dc=example,dc=com$"
+ by dn.exact,expand="uid=$2,dc=example,dc=com" write
+.fi
+.LP
+could be used; if it had to match the value in the
+.B <what>
+clause, the form
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.regex="^(.+,)?uid=([^,]+),dc=([^,]+),dc=com$"
+ by dn.exact,expand="uid=$2,dc=$3,dc=com" write
+.fi
+.LP
+could be used.
+.LP
+Forms of the
+.B <what>
+clause other than regex may provide submatches as well.
+The
+.BR base(object) ,
+the
+.BR sub(tree) ,
+the
+.BR one(level) ,
+and the
+.BR children
+forms provide
+.B $0
+as the match of the entire string.
+The
+.BR sub(tree) ,
+the
+.BR one(level) ,
+and the
+.BR children
+forms also provide
+.B $1
+as the match of the rightmost part of the DN as defined in the
+.B <what>
+clause.
+This may be useful, for instance, to provide access to all the
+ancestors of a user by defining
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.subtree="dc=com"
+ by dn.subtree,expand="$1" read
+.fi
+.LP
+which means that only access to entries that appear in the DN of the
+.B <by>
+clause is allowed.
+.LP
+The
+.BR level{<n>}
+form is an extension and a generalization of the
+.BR onelevel
+form, which matches all DNs whose <n>-th ancestor is the pattern.
+So, \fIlevel{1}\fP is equivalent to \fIonelevel\fP,
+and \fIlevel{0}\fP is equivalent to \fIbase\fP.
+.LP
+It is perfectly useless to give any access privileges to a DN
+that exactly matches the
+.B rootdn
+of the database the ACLs apply to, because it implicitly
+possesses write privileges for the entire tree of that database.
+Actually, access control is bypassed for the
+.BR rootdn ,
+to solve the intrinsic chicken-and-egg problem.
+.LP
+The statement
+.B dnattr=<attrname>
+means that access is granted to requests whose DN is listed in the
+entry being accessed under the
+.B <attrname>
+attribute.
+.LP
+The statement
+.B group=<group>
+means that access is granted to requests whose DN is listed
+in the group entry whose DN is given by
+.BR <group> .
+The optional parameters
+.B <objectclass>
+and
+.B <attrname>
+define the objectClass and the member attributeType of the group entry.
+The defaults are
+.B groupOfNames
+and
+.BR member ,
+respectively.
+The optional style qualifier
+.B <style>
+can be
+.BR expand ,
+which means that
+.B <group>
+will be expanded as a replacement string (but not as a regular expression)
+according to
+.BR regex (7)
+and/or
+.BR re_format (7),
+and
+.BR exact ,
+which means that exact match will be used.
+If the style of the DN portion of the
+.B <what>
+clause is regex, the submatches are made available according to
+.BR regex (7)
+and/or
+.BR re_format (7);
+other styles provide limited submatches as discussed above about
+the DN form of the
+.B <by>
+clause.
+.LP
+For static groups, the specified attributeType must have
+.B DistinguishedName
+or
+.B NameAndOptionalUID
+syntax. For dynamic groups the attributeType must
+be a subtype of the
+.B labeledURI
+attributeType. Only LDAP URIs of the form
+.B ldap:///<base>??<scope>?<filter>
+will be evaluated in a dynamic group, by searching the local server only.
+.LP
+The statements
+.BR peername=<peername> ,
+.BR sockname=<sockname> ,
+.BR domain=<domain> ,
+and
+.BR sockurl=<sockurl>
+mean that the contacting host IP (in the form
+.BR "IP=<ip>:<port>"
+for IPv4, or
+.BR "IP=[<ipv6>]:<port>"
+for IPv6)
+or the contacting host named pipe file name (in the form
+.B "PATH=<path>"
+if connecting through a named pipe) for
+.BR peername ,
+the named pipe file name for
+.BR sockname ,
+the contacting host name for
+.BR domain ,
+and the contacting URL for
+.BR sockurl
+are compared against
+.B pattern
+to determine access.
+The same
+.B style
+rules for pattern match described for the
+.B group
+case apply, plus the
+.B regex
+style, which implies submatch
+.B expand
+and regex match of the corresponding connection parameters.
+The
+.B exact
+style of the
+.BR <peername>
+clause (the default) implies a case-exact match on the client's
+.BR IP ,
+including the
+.B "IP="
+prefix and the trailing
+.BR ":<port>" ,
+or the client's
+.BR path ,
+including the
+.B "PATH="
+prefix if connecting through a named pipe.
+The special
+.B ip
+style interprets the pattern as
+.BR <peername>=<ip>[%<mask>][{<n>}] ,
+where
+.B <ip>
+and
+.B <mask>
+are dotted digit representations of the IP and the mask, while
+.BR <n> ,
+delimited by curly brackets, is an optional port.
+The same applies to IPv6 addresses when the special
+.B ipv6
+style is used.
+When checking access privileges, the IP portion of the
+.BR peername
+is extracted, eliminating the
+.B "IP="
+prefix and the
+.B ":<port>"
+part, and it is compared against the
+.B <ip>
+portion of the pattern after masking with
+.BR <mask> :
+\fI((peername & <mask>) == <ip>)\fP.
+As an example,
+.B peername.ip=127.0.0.1
+and
+.B peername.ipv6=::1
+allow connections only from localhost,
+.B peername.ip=192.168.1.0%255.255.255.0
+allows connections from any IP in the 192.168.1 class C domain, and
+.B peername.ip=192.168.1.16%255.255.255.240{9009}
+allows connections from any IP in the 192.168.1.[16-31] range
+of the same domain, only if port 9009 is used.
+The special
+.B path
+style eliminates the
+.B "PATH="
+prefix from the
+.B peername
+when connecting through a named pipe, and performs an exact match
+on the given pattern.
+The
+.BR <domain>
+clause also allows the
+.B subtree
+style, which succeeds when a fully qualified name exactly matches the
+.BR domain
+pattern, or its trailing part, after a
+.BR dot ,
+exactly matches the
+.BR domain
+pattern.
+The
+.B expand
+style is allowed, implying an
+.B exact
+match with submatch expansion; the use of
+.B expand
+as a style modifier is considered more appropriate.
+As an example,
+.B domain.subtree=example.com
+will match www.example.com, but will not match www.anotherexample.com.
+The
+.B domain
+of the contacting host is determined by performing a DNS reverse lookup.
+As this lookup can easily be spoofed, use of the
+.B domain
+statement is strongly discouraged. By default, reverse lookups are disabled.
+The optional
+.B domainstyle
+qualifier of the
+.B <domain>
+clause allows a
+.B modifier
+option; the only value currently supported is
+.BR expand ,
+which causes substring substitution of submatches to take place even if
+the
+.B domainstyle
+is not
+.BR regex ,
+much like the analogous usage in
+.B <dn>
+clause.
+.LP
+The statement
+.B set=<pattern>
+is undocumented yet.
+.LP
+The statement
+.B dynacl/<name>[/<options>][.<dynstyle>][=<pattern>]
+means that access checking is delegated to the admin-defined method
+indicated by
+.BR <name> ,
+which can be registered at run-time by means of the
+.B moduleload
+statement.
+The fields
+.BR <options> ,
+.B <dynstyle>
+and
+.B <pattern>
+are optional, and are directly passed to the registered parsing routine.
+Dynacl is experimental; it must be enabled at compile time.
+.LP
+The statement
+.B dynacl/aci[=<attrname>]
+means that the access control is determined by the values in the
+.B attrname
+of the entry itself.
+The optional
+.B <attrname>
+indicates what attributeType holds the ACI information in the entry.
+By default, the
+.B OpenLDAPaci
+operational attribute is used.
+ACIs are experimental; they must be enabled at compile time.
+.LP
+The statements
+.BR ssf=<n> ,
+.BR transport_ssf=<n> ,
+.BR tls_ssf=<n> ,
+and
+.BR sasl_ssf=<n>
+set the minimum required Security Strength Factor (ssf) needed
+to grant access. The value should be positive integer.
+.SH THE <ACCESS> FIELD
+The optional field
+.B <access> ::= [[real]self]{<level>|<priv>}
+determines the access level or the specific access privileges the
+.B who
+field will have.
+Its component are defined as
+.LP
+.nf
+ <level> ::= none|disclose|auth|compare|search|read|{write|add|delete}|manage
+ <priv> ::= {=|+|\-}{0|d|x|c|s|r|{w|a|z}|m}+
+.fi
+.LP
+The modifier
+.B self
+allows special operations like having a certain access level or privilege
+only in case the operation involves the name of the user that's requesting
+the access.
+It implies the user that requests access is authorized.
+The modifier
+.B realself
+refers to the authenticated DN as opposed to the authorized DN of the
+.B self
+modifier.
+An example is the
+.B selfwrite
+access to the member attribute of a group, which allows one to add/delete
+its own DN from the member list of a group, while being not allowed
+to affect other members.
+.LP
+The
+.B level
+access model relies on an incremental interpretation of the access
+privileges.
+The possible levels are
+.BR none ,
+.BR disclose ,
+.BR auth ,
+.BR compare ,
+.BR search ,
+.BR read ,
+.BR write ,
+and
+.BR manage .
+Each access level implies all the preceding ones, thus
+.B manage
+grants all access including administrative access.
+The
+.BR write
+access is actually the combination of
+.BR add
+and
+.BR delete ,
+which respectively restrict the write privilege to add or delete
+the specified
+.BR <what> .
+
+.LP
+The
+.B none
+access level disallows all access including disclosure on error.
+.LP
+The
+.B disclose
+access level allows disclosure of information on error.
+.LP
+The
+.B auth
+access level means that one is allowed access to an attribute to perform
+authentication/authorization operations (e.g.
+.BR bind )
+with no other access.
+This is useful to grant unauthenticated clients the least possible
+access level to critical resources, like passwords.
+.LP
+The
+.B priv
+access model relies on the explicit setting of access privileges
+for each clause.
+The
+.B =
+sign resets previously defined accesses; as a consequence, the final
+access privileges will be only those defined by the clause.
+The
+.B +
+and
+.B \-
+signs add/remove access privileges to the existing ones.
+The privileges are
+.B m
+for manage,
+.B w
+for write,
+.B a
+for add,
+.B z
+for delete,
+.B r
+for read,
+.B s
+for search,
+.B c
+for compare,
+.B x
+for authentication, and
+.B d
+for disclose.
+More than one of the above privileges can be added in one statement.
+.B 0
+indicates no privileges and is used only by itself (e.g., +0).
+Note that
+.B +az
+is equivalent to
+.BR +w .
+.LP
+If no access is given, it defaults to
+.BR +0 .
+.SH THE <CONTROL> FIELD
+The optional field
+.B <control>
+controls the flow of access rule application.
+It can have the forms
+.LP
+.nf
+ stop
+ continue
+ break
+.fi
+.LP
+where
+.BR stop ,
+the default, means access checking stops in case of match.
+The other two forms are used to keep on processing access clauses.
+In detail, the
+.B continue
+form allows for other
+.B <who>
+clauses in the same
+.B <access>
+clause to be considered, so that they may result in incrementally altering
+the privileges, while the
+.B break
+form allows for other
+.B <access>
+clauses that match the same target to be processed.
+Consider the (silly) example
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" attrs=cn
+ by * =cs break
+
+ access to dn.subtree="ou=People,dc=example,dc=com"
+ by * +r
+.fi
+.LP
+which allows search and compare privileges to everybody under
+the "dc=example,dc=com" tree, with the second rule allowing
+also read in the "ou=People" subtree,
+or the (even more silly) example
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" attrs=cn
+ by * =cs continue
+ by users +r
+.fi
+.LP
+which grants everybody search and compare privileges, and adds read
+privileges to authenticated clients.
+.LP
+One useful application is to easily grant write privileges to an
+.B updatedn
+that is different from the
+.BR rootdn .
+In this case, since the
+.B updatedn
+needs write access to (almost) all data, one can use
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to *
+ by dn.exact="cn=The Update DN,dc=example,dc=com" write
+ by * break
+.fi
+.LP
+as the first access rule.
+As a consequence, unless the operation is performed with the
+.B updatedn
+identity, control is passed straight to the subsequent rules.
+
+.SH OPERATION REQUIREMENTS
+Operations require different privileges on different portions of entries.
+The following summary applies to primary MDB database backend and the
+deprecated BDB and HDB backends. Requirements for other backends may
+(and often do) differ.
+
+.LP
+The
+.B add
+operation requires
+.B add (=a)
+privileges on the pseudo-attribute
+.B entry
+of the entry being added, and
+.B add (=a)
+privileges on the pseudo-attribute
+.B children
+of the entry's parent.
+When adding the suffix entry of a database,
+.B add
+access to
+.B children
+of the empty DN ("") is required. Also if
+Add content ACL checking has been configured on
+the database (see the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+or
+.BR slapd\-config (5)
+manual page),
+.B add (=a)
+will be required on all of the attributes being added.
+
+.LP
+The
+.B bind
+operation, when credentials are stored in the directory, requires
+.B auth (=x)
+privileges on the attribute the credentials are stored in (usually
+.BR userPassword ).
+
+.LP
+The
+.B compare
+operation requires
+.B compare (=c)
+privileges on the attribute that is being compared.
+
+.LP
+The
+.B delete
+operation requires
+.B delete (=z)
+privileges on the pseudo-attribute
+.B entry
+of the entry being deleted, and
+.B delete (=d)
+privileges on the
+.B children
+pseudo-attribute of the entry's parent.
+
+.LP
+The
+.B modify
+operation requires
+.B write (=w)
+privileges on the attributes being modified.
+In detail,
+.B add (=a)
+is required to add new values,
+.B delete (=z)
+is required to delete existing values,
+and both
+.B delete
+and
+.BR "add (=az)" ,
+or
+.BR "write (=w)" ,
+are required to replace existing values.
+
+.LP
+The
+.B modrdn
+operation requires
+.B write (=w)
+privileges on the pseudo-attribute
+.B entry
+of the entry whose relative DN is being modified,
+.B delete (=z)
+privileges on the pseudo-attribute
+.B children
+of the old entry's parents,
+.B add (=a)
+privileges on the pseudo-attribute
+.B children
+of the new entry's parents, and
+.B add (=a)
+privileges on the attributes that are present in the new relative DN.
+.B Delete (=z)
+privileges are also required on the attributes that are present
+in the old relative DN if
+.B deleteoldrdn
+is set to 1.
+
+.LP
+The
+.B search
+operation, requires
+.B search (=s)
+privileges on the
+.B entry
+pseudo-attribute of the searchBase
+(NOTE: this was introduced with OpenLDAP 2.4).
+Then, for each entry, it requires
+.B search (=s)
+privileges on the attributes that are defined in the filter.
+The resulting entries are finally tested for
+.B read (=r)
+privileges on the pseudo-attribute
+.B entry
+(for read access to the entry itself)
+and for
+.B read (=r)
+access on each value of each attribute that is requested.
+Also, for each
+.B referral
+object used in generating continuation references, the operation requires
+.B read (=r)
+access on the pseudo-attribute
+.B entry
+(for read access to the referral object itself),
+as well as
+.B read (=r)
+access to the attribute holding the referral information
+(generally the
+.B ref
+attribute).
+
+.LP
+Some internal operations and some
+.B controls
+require specific access privileges.
+The
+.B authzID
+mapping and the
+.B proxyAuthz
+control require
+.B auth (=x)
+privileges on all the attributes that are present in the search filter
+of the URI regexp maps (the right-hand side of the
+.B authz-regexp
+directives).
+.B Auth (=x)
+privileges are also required on the
+.B authzTo
+attribute of the authorizing identity and/or on the
+.B authzFrom
+attribute of the authorized identity.
+In general, when an internal lookup is performed for authentication
+or authorization purposes, search-specific privileges (see the access
+requirements for the search operation illustrated above) are relaxed to
+.BR auth .
+
+.LP
+Access control to search entries is checked by the frontend,
+so it is fully honored by all backends; for all other operations
+and for the discovery phase of the search operation,
+full ACL semantics is only supported by the primary backends, i.e.
+.BR back\-bdb (5),
+and
+.BR back\-hdb (5).
+
+Some other backend, like
+.BR back\-sql (5),
+may fully support them; others may only support a portion of the
+described semantics, or even differ in some aspects.
+The relevant details are described in the backend-specific man pages.
+
+.SH CAVEATS
+It is strongly recommended to explicitly use the most appropriate
+.B <dnstyle>
+in
+.B <what>
+and
+.B <who>
+clauses, to avoid possible incorrect specifications of the access rules
+as well as for performance (avoid unnecessary regex matching when an exact
+match suffices) reasons.
+.LP
+An administrator might create a rule of the form:
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.regex="dc=example,dc=com"
+ by ...
+.fi
+.LP
+expecting it to match all entries in the subtree "dc=example,dc=com".
+However, this rule actually matches any DN which contains anywhere
+the substring "dc=example,dc=com". That is, the rule matches both
+"uid=joe,dc=example,dc=com" and "dc=example,dc=com,uid=joe".
+.LP
+To match the desired subtree, the rule would be more precisely
+written:
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.regex="^(.+,)?dc=example,dc=com$"
+ by ...
+.fi
+.LP
+For performance reasons, it would be better to use the subtree style.
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com"
+ by ...
+.fi
+.LP
+When writing submatch rules, it may be convenient to avoid unnecessary
+.B regex
+.B <dnstyle>
+use; for instance, to allow access to the subtree of the user
+that matches the
+.B <what>
+clause, one could use
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.regex="^(.+,)?uid=([^,]+),dc=example,dc=com$"
+ by dn.regex="^uid=$2,dc=example,dc=com$$" write
+ by ...
+.fi
+.LP
+However, since all that is required in the
+.B <by>
+clause is substring expansion, a more efficient solution is
+.LP
+.nf
+ access to dn.regex="^(.+,)?uid=([^,]+),dc=example,dc=com$"
+ by dn.exact,expand="uid=$2,dc=example,dc=com" write
+ by ...
+.fi
+.LP
+In fact, while a
+.B <dnstyle>
+of
+.B regex
+implies substring expansion,
+.BR exact ,
+as well as all the other DN specific
+.B <dnstyle>
+values, does not, so it must be explicitly requested.
+.LP
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR slapd\-* (5),
+.BR slapacl (8),
+.BR regex (7),
+.BR re_format (7)
+.LP
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd.backends.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd.backends.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..00e4b6a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd.backends.5
@@ -0,0 +1,162 @@
+.TH SLAPD.BACKENDS 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2006-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd.backends \- backends for slapd, the stand-alone LDAP daemon
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.BR slapd (8)
+daemon can use a variety of different backends for serving LDAP requests.
+Backends may be compiled statically into slapd, or when module support
+is enabled, they may be dynamically loaded. Multiple instances of a
+backend can be configured, to serve separate databases from the same
+slapd server.
+
+
+Configuration options for each backend are documented separately in the
+corresponding
+.BR slapd\-<backend> (5)
+manual pages.
+.TP
+.B bdb
+This was the recommended primary backend through OpenLDAP 2.3, but it has
+since been superseded by the
+.BR mdb
+backend. It takes care to configure it properly.
+It uses the transactional database interface of the Oracle Berkeley
+DB (BDB) package to store data.
+.TP
+.B config
+This backend is used to manage the configuration of slapd at run-time.
+Unlike other backends, only a single instance of the
+.B config
+backend may be defined. It also instantiates itself automatically,
+so it is always present even if not explicitly defined in the
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+file.
+.TP
+.B dnssrv
+This backend is experimental.
+It serves up referrals based upon SRV resource records held in the
+Domain Name System.
+.TP
+.B hdb
+This was the recommended primary backend through OpenLDAP 2.4.40 but it has
+since been superseded by the
+.BR mdb
+backend. It takes care to configure it properly.
+.B hdb
+is a variant of the
+.B bdb
+backend that uses a hierarchical database
+layout.
+This layout stores entry DNs more efficiently than the
+.B bdb
+backend,
+using less space and requiring less work to create, delete, and rename
+entries. It is also one of the few backends to support subtree renames.
+.TP
+.B ldap
+This backend acts as a proxy to forward incoming requests to another
+LDAP server.
+.TP
+.B ldif
+This database uses the filesystem to build the tree structure
+of the database, using plain ascii files to store data.
+Its usage should be limited to very simple databases, where performance
+is not a requirement. This backend also supports subtree renames.
+.TP
+.B mdb
+This is the recommended primary backend, superseding
+.BR hdb .
+This backend uses OpenLDAP's own MDB transactional database
+library. It is extremely compact and extremely efficient, delivering
+much higher performance than the Berkeley DB backends while using
+significantly less memory. Also, unlike Berkeley DB, MDB is crash proof,
+and requires no special tuning or maintenance.
+This backend also supports subtree renames.
+.TP
+.B meta
+This backend performs basic LDAP proxying with respect to a set of
+remote LDAP servers. It is an enhancement of the
+.B ldap
+backend.
+.TP
+.B monitor
+This backend provides information about the running status of the slapd
+daemon. Only a single instance of the
+.B monitor
+backend may be defined.
+.TP
+.B ndb
+This backend is experimental.
+It uses the transactional database interface of the MySQL Cluster Engine
+(NDB) to store data. Note that Oracle, which now owns MySQL, has withdrawn
+support for NDB and this backend is unlikely to be developed any further.
+.TP
+.B null
+Operations in this backend succeed but do nothing.
+.TP
+.B passwd
+This backend is provided for demonstration purposes only.
+It serves up user account information from the system
+.BR passwd (5)
+file.
+.TP
+.B perl
+This backend embeds a
+.BR perl (1)
+interpreter into slapd.
+It runs Perl subroutines to implement LDAP operations.
+.TP
+.B relay
+This backend is experimental.
+It redirects LDAP operations to another database
+in the same server, based on the naming context of the request.
+Its use requires the
+.B rwm
+overlay (see
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5)
+for details) to rewrite the naming context of the request.
+It is primarily intended to implement virtual views on databases
+that actually store data.
+.TP
+.B shell
+This backend executes external programs to implement LDAP operations.
+It is primarily intended to be used in prototypes.
+.TP
+.B sql
+This backend is experimental.
+It services LDAP requests from an SQL database.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.d
+default slapd configuration directory
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR ldap (3),
+.BR slapd\-bdb (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd\-dnssrv (5),
+.BR slapd\-hdb (5),
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+.BR slapd\-ldif (5),
+.BR slapd\-mdb (5),
+.BR slapd\-meta (5),
+.BR slapd\-monitor (5),
+.BR slapd\-ndb (5),
+.BR slapd\-null (5),
+.BR slapd\-passwd (5),
+.BR slapd\-perl (5),
+.BR slapd\-relay (5),
+.BR slapd\-shell (5),
+.BR slapd\-sql (5),
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd.overlays (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd.conf.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd.conf.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1631995
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd.conf.5
@@ -0,0 +1,2085 @@
+.TH SLAPD.CONF 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd.conf \- configuration file for slapd, the stand-alone LDAP daemon
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The file
+.B ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+contains configuration information for the
+.BR slapd (8)
+daemon. This configuration file is also used by the SLAPD tools
+.BR slapacl (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapauth (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapdn (8),
+.BR slapindex (8),
+and
+.BR slaptest (8).
+.LP
+The
+.B slapd.conf
+file consists of a series of global configuration options that apply to
+.B slapd
+as a whole (including all backends), followed by zero or more database
+backend definitions that contain information specific to a backend
+instance.
+The configuration options are case-insensitive;
+their value, on a case by case basis, may be case-sensitive.
+.LP
+The general format of
+.B slapd.conf
+is as follows:
+.LP
+.nf
+ # comment - these options apply to every database
+ <global configuration options>
+ # first database definition & configuration options
+ database <backend 1 type>
+ <configuration options specific to backend 1>
+ # subsequent database definitions & configuration options
+ ...
+.fi
+.LP
+As many backend-specific sections as desired may be included. Global
+options can be overridden in a backend (for options that appear more
+than once, the last appearance in the
+.B slapd.conf
+file is used).
+.LP
+If a line begins with white space, it is considered a continuation
+of the previous line. No physical line should be over 2000 bytes
+long.
+.LP
+Blank lines and comment lines beginning with
+a `#' character are ignored. Note: continuation lines are unwrapped
+before comment processing is applied.
+.LP
+Arguments on configuration lines are separated by white space. If an
+argument contains white space, the argument should be enclosed in
+double quotes. If an argument contains a double quote (`"') or a
+backslash character (`\\'), the character should be preceded by a
+backslash character.
+.LP
+The specific configuration options available are discussed below in the
+Global Configuration Options, General Backend Options, and General Database
+Options. Backend-specific options are discussed in the
+.B slapd\-<backend>(5)
+manual pages. Refer to the "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" for more
+details on the slapd configuration file.
+.SH GLOBAL CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
+Options described in this section apply to all backends, unless specifically
+overridden in a backend definition. Arguments that should be replaced by
+actual text are shown in brackets <>.
+.TP
+.B access to <what> "[ by <who> <access> <control> ]+"
+Grant access (specified by <access>) to a set of entries and/or
+attributes (specified by <what>) by one or more requestors (specified
+by <who>).
+If no access controls are present, the default policy
+allows anyone and everyone to read anything but restricts
+updates to rootdn. (e.g., "access to * by * read").
+The rootdn can always read and write EVERYTHING!
+See
+.BR slapd.access (5)
+and the "OpenLDAP's Administrator's Guide" for details.
+.TP
+.B allow <features>
+Specify a set of features (separated by white space) to
+allow (default none).
+.B bind_v2
+allows acceptance of LDAPv2 bind requests. Note that
+.BR slapd (8)
+does not truly implement LDAPv2 (RFC 1777), now Historic (RFC 3494).
+.B bind_anon_cred
+allows anonymous bind when credentials are not empty (e.g.
+when DN is empty).
+.B bind_anon_dn
+allows unauthenticated (anonymous) bind when DN is not empty.
+.B update_anon
+allows unauthenticated (anonymous) update operations to be processed
+(subject to access controls and other administrative limits).
+.B proxy_authz_anon
+allows unauthenticated (anonymous) proxy authorization control to be processed
+(subject to access controls, authorization and other administrative limits).
+.TP
+.B argsfile <filename>
+The (absolute) name of a file that will hold the
+.B slapd
+server's command line (program name and options).
+.TP
+.B attributeoptions [option-name]...
+Define tagging attribute options or option tag/range prefixes.
+Options must not end with `\-', prefixes must end with `\-'.
+The `lang\-' prefix is predefined.
+If you use the
+.B attributeoptions
+directive, `lang\-' will no longer be defined and you must specify it
+explicitly if you want it defined.
+
+An attribute description with a tagging option is a subtype of that
+attribute description without the option.
+Except for that, options defined this way have no special semantics.
+Prefixes defined this way work like the `lang\-' options:
+They define a prefix for tagging options starting with the prefix.
+That is, if you define the prefix `x\-foo\-', you can use the option
+`x\-foo\-bar'.
+Furthermore, in a search or compare, a prefix or range name (with
+a trailing `\-') matches all options starting with that name, as well
+as the option with the range name sans the trailing `\-'.
+That is, `x\-foo\-bar\-' matches `x\-foo\-bar' and `x\-foo\-bar\-baz'.
+
+RFC 4520 reserves options beginning with `x\-' for private experiments.
+Other options should be registered with IANA, see RFC 4520 section 3.5.
+OpenLDAP also has the `binary' option built in, but this is a transfer
+option, not a tagging option.
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B attributetype "(\ <oid>\
+ [NAME\ <name>]\
+ [DESC\ <description>]\
+ [OBSOLETE]\
+ [SUP\ <oid>]\
+ [EQUALITY\ <oid>]\
+ [ORDERING\ <oid>]\
+ [SUBSTR\ <oid>]\
+ [SYNTAX\ <oidlen>]\
+ [SINGLE\-VALUE]\
+ [COLLECTIVE]\
+ [NO\-USER\-MODIFICATION]\
+ [USAGE\ <attributeUsage>]\ )"
+.RS
+Specify an attribute type using the LDAPv3 syntax defined in RFC 4512.
+The slapd parser extends the RFC 4512 definition by allowing string
+forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the attribute OID and
+attribute syntax OID.
+(See the
+.B objectidentifier
+description.)
+.RE
+.TP
+.B authid\-rewrite<cmd> <args>
+Used by the authentication framework to convert simple user names
+to an LDAP DN used for authorization purposes.
+Its purpose is analogous to that of
+.BR authz-regexp
+(see below).
+The prefix \fIauthid\-\fP is followed by a set of rules analogous
+to those described in
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5)
+for data rewriting (replace the \fIrwm\-\fP prefix with \fIauthid\-\fP).
+.B authid\-rewrite<cmd>
+and
+.B authz\-regexp
+rules should not be intermixed.
+.TP
+.B authz\-policy <policy>
+Used to specify which rules to use for Proxy Authorization. Proxy
+authorization allows a client to authenticate to the server using one
+user's credentials, but specify a different identity to use for authorization
+and access control purposes. It essentially allows user A to login as user
+B, using user A's password.
+The
+.B none
+flag disables proxy authorization. This is the default setting.
+The
+.B from
+flag will use rules in the
+.I authzFrom
+attribute of the authorization DN.
+The
+.B to
+flag will use rules in the
+.I authzTo
+attribute of the authentication DN.
+The
+.B any
+flag, an alias for the deprecated value of
+.BR both ,
+will allow any of the above, whatever succeeds first (checked in
+.BR to ,
+.B from
+sequence.
+The
+.B all
+flag requires both authorizations to succeed.
+.LP
+.RS
+The rules are mechanisms to specify which identities are allowed
+to perform proxy authorization.
+The
+.I authzFrom
+attribute in an entry specifies which other users
+are allowed to proxy login to this entry. The
+.I authzTo
+attribute in
+an entry specifies which other users this user can authorize as. Use of
+.I authzTo
+rules can be easily
+abused if users are allowed to write arbitrary values to this attribute.
+In general the
+.I authzTo
+attribute must be protected with ACLs such that
+only privileged users can modify it.
+The value of
+.I authzFrom
+and
+.I authzTo
+describes an
+.B identity
+or a set of identities; it can take five forms:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B ldap:///<base>??[<scope>]?<filter>
+.RE
+.RS
+.B dn[.<dnstyle>]:<pattern>
+.RE
+.RS
+.B u[.<mech>[/<realm>]]:<pattern>
+.RE
+.RS
+.B group[/objectClass[/attributeType]]:<pattern>
+.RE
+.RS
+.B <pattern>
+.RE
+.RS
+
+.B <dnstyle>:={exact|onelevel|children|subtree|regex}
+
+.RE
+The first form is a valid LDAP
+.B URI
+where the
+.IR <host>:<port> ,
+the
+.I <attrs>
+and the
+.I <extensions>
+portions must be absent, so that the search occurs locally on either
+.I authzFrom
+or
+.IR authzTo .
+The second form is a
+.BR DN ,
+with the optional style modifiers
+.IR exact ,
+.IR onelevel ,
+.IR children ,
+and
+.I subtree
+for exact, onelevel, children and subtree matches, which cause
+.I <pattern>
+to be normalized according to the DN normalization rules, or the special
+.I regex
+style, which causes the
+.I <pattern>
+to be treated as a POSIX (''extended'') regular expression, as
+discussed in
+.BR regex (7)
+and/or
+.BR re_format (7).
+A pattern of
+.I *
+means any non-anonymous DN.
+The third form is a SASL
+.BR id ,
+with the optional fields
+.I <mech>
+and
+.I <realm>
+that allow to specify a SASL
+.BR mechanism ,
+and eventually a SASL
+.BR realm ,
+for those mechanisms that support one.
+The need to allow the specification of a mechanism is still debated,
+and users are strongly discouraged to rely on this possibility.
+The fourth form is a group specification, consisting of the keyword
+.BR group ,
+optionally followed by the specification of the group
+.B objectClass
+and member
+.BR attributeType .
+The group with DN
+.B <pattern>
+is searched with base scope, and in case of match, the values of the
+member
+.B attributeType
+are searched for the asserted DN.
+For backwards compatibility, if no identity type is provided, i.e. only
+.B <pattern>
+is present, an
+.I exact DN
+is assumed; as a consequence,
+.B <pattern>
+is subjected to DN normalization.
+Since the interpretation of
+.I authzFrom
+and
+.I authzTo
+can impact security, users are strongly encouraged
+to explicitly set the type of identity specification that is being used.
+A subset of these rules can be used as third arg in the
+.B authz\-regexp
+statement (see below); significantly, the
+.IR URI ,
+provided it results in exactly one entry,
+and the
+.I dn.exact:<dn>
+forms.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B authz\-regexp <match> <replace>
+Used by the authentication framework to convert simple user names,
+such as provided by SASL subsystem, or extracted from certificates
+in case of cert-based SASL EXTERNAL, or provided within the RFC 4370
+"proxied authorization" control, to an LDAP DN used for
+authorization purposes. Note that the resulting DN need not refer
+to an existing entry to be considered valid. When an authorization
+request is received from the SASL subsystem, the SASL
+.BR USERNAME ,
+.BR REALM ,
+and
+.B MECHANISM
+are taken, when available, and combined into a name of the form
+.RS
+.RS
+.TP
+.B UID=<username>[[,CN=<realm>],CN=<mechanism>],CN=auth
+
+.RE
+This name is then compared against the
+.B match
+POSIX (''extended'') regular expression, and if the match is successful,
+the name is replaced with the
+.B replace
+string. If there are wildcard strings in the
+.B match
+regular expression that are enclosed in parenthesis, e.g.
+.RS
+.TP
+.B UID=([^,]*),CN=.*
+
+.RE
+then the portion of the name that matched the wildcard will be stored
+in the numbered placeholder variable $1. If there are other wildcard strings
+in parenthesis, the matching strings will be in $2, $3, etc. up to $9. The
+placeholders can then be used in the
+.B replace
+string, e.g.
+.RS
+.TP
+.B UID=$1,OU=Accounts,DC=example,DC=com
+
+.RE
+The replaced name can be either a DN, i.e. a string prefixed by "dn:",
+or an LDAP URI.
+If the latter, the server will use the URI to search its own database(s)
+and, if the search returns exactly one entry, the name is
+replaced by the DN of that entry. The LDAP URI must have no
+hostport, attrs, or extensions components, but the filter is mandatory,
+e.g.
+.RS
+.TP
+.B ldap:///OU=Accounts,DC=example,DC=com??one?(UID=$1)
+
+.RE
+The protocol portion of the URI must be strictly
+.BR ldap .
+Note that this search is subject to access controls. Specifically,
+the authentication identity must have "auth" access in the subject.
+
+Multiple
+.B authz\-regexp
+options can be given in the configuration file to allow for multiple matching
+and replacement patterns. The matching patterns are checked in the order they
+appear in the file, stopping at the first successful match.
+
+.\".B Caution:
+.\"Because the plus sign + is a character recognized by the regular expression engine,
+.\"and it will appear in names that include a REALM, be careful to escape the
+.\"plus sign with a backslash \\+ to remove the character's special meaning.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B concurrency <integer>
+Specify a desired level of concurrency. Provided to the underlying
+thread system as a hint. The default is not to provide any hint.
+.TP
+.B conn_max_pending <integer>
+Specify the maximum number of pending requests for an anonymous session.
+If requests are submitted faster than the server can process them, they
+will be queued up to this limit. If the limit is exceeded, the session
+is closed. The default is 100.
+.TP
+.B conn_max_pending_auth <integer>
+Specify the maximum number of pending requests for an authenticated session.
+The default is 1000.
+.TP
+.B defaultsearchbase <dn>
+Specify a default search base to use when client submits a
+non-base search request with an empty base DN.
+Base scoped search requests with an empty base DN are not affected.
+.TP
+.B disallow <features>
+Specify a set of features (separated by white space) to
+disallow (default none).
+.B bind_anon
+disables acceptance of anonymous bind requests. Note that this setting
+does not prohibit anonymous directory access (See "require authc").
+.B bind_simple
+disables simple (bind) authentication.
+.B tls_2_anon
+disables forcing session to anonymous status (see also
+.BR tls_authc )
+upon StartTLS operation receipt.
+.B tls_authc
+disallows the StartTLS operation if authenticated (see also
+.BR tls_2_anon ).
+.B proxy_authz_non_critical
+disables acceptance of the proxied authorization control (RFC4370)
+when criticality is FALSE.
+.B dontusecopy_non_critical
+disables acceptance of the dontUseCopy control (a work in progress)
+when criticality is FALSE.
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B ditcontentrule "(\ <oid>\
+ [NAME\ <name>]\
+ [DESC\ <description>]\
+ [OBSOLETE]\
+ [AUX\ <oids>]\
+ [MUST\ <oids>]\
+ [MAY\ <oids>]\
+ [NOT\ <oids>]\ )"
+.RS
+Specify an DIT Content Rule using the LDAPv3 syntax defined in RFC 4512.
+The slapd parser extends the RFC 4512 definition by allowing string
+forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the attribute OID and
+attribute syntax OID.
+(See the
+.B objectidentifier
+description.)
+.RE
+.TP
+.B gentlehup { on | off }
+A SIGHUP signal will only cause a 'gentle' shutdown-attempt:
+.B Slapd
+will stop listening for new connections, but will not close the
+connections to the current clients. Future write operations return
+unwilling-to-perform, though. Slapd terminates when all clients
+have closed their connections (if they ever do), or - as before -
+if it receives a SIGTERM signal. This can be useful if you wish to
+terminate the server and start a new
+.B slapd
+server
+.B with another database,
+without disrupting the currently active clients.
+The default is off. You may wish to use
+.B idletimeout
+along with this option.
+.TP
+.B idletimeout <integer>
+Specify the number of seconds to wait before forcibly closing
+an idle client connection. A idletimeout of 0 disables this
+feature. The default is 0. You may also want to set the
+.B writetimeout
+option.
+.TP
+.B include <filename>
+Read additional configuration information from the given file before
+continuing with the next line of the current file.
+.TP
+.B index_intlen <integer>
+Specify the key length for ordered integer indices. The most significant
+bytes of the binary integer will be used for index keys. The default
+value is 4, which provides exact indexing for 31 bit values.
+A floating point representation is used to index too large values.
+.TP
+.B index_substr_if_minlen <integer>
+Specify the minimum length for subinitial and subfinal indices. An
+attribute value must have at least this many characters in order to be
+processed by the indexing functions. The default is 2.
+.TP
+.B index_substr_if_maxlen <integer>
+Specify the maximum length for subinitial and subfinal indices. Only
+this many characters of an attribute value will be processed by the
+indexing functions; any excess characters are ignored. The default is 4.
+.TP
+.B index_substr_any_len <integer>
+Specify the length used for subany indices. An attribute value must have
+at least this many characters in order to be processed. Attribute values
+longer than this length will be processed in segments of this length. The
+default is 4. The subany index will also be used in subinitial and
+subfinal index lookups when the filter string is longer than the
+.I index_substr_if_maxlen
+value.
+.TP
+.B index_substr_any_step <integer>
+Specify the steps used in subany index lookups. This value sets the offset
+for the segments of a filter string that are processed for a subany index
+lookup. The default is 2. For example, with the default values, a search
+using this filter "cn=*abcdefgh*" would generate index lookups for
+"abcd", "cdef", and "efgh".
+
+.LP
+Note: Indexing support depends on the particular backend in use. Also,
+changing these settings will generally require deleting any indices that
+depend on these parameters and recreating them with
+.BR slapindex (8).
+
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B ldapsyntax "(\ <oid>\
+ [DESC\ <description>]\
+ [X\-SUBST <substitute-syntax>]\ )"
+.RS
+Specify an LDAP syntax using the LDAPv3 syntax defined in RFC 4512.
+The slapd parser extends the RFC 4512 definition by allowing string
+forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the syntax OID.
+(See the
+.B objectidentifier
+description.)
+The slapd parser also honors the
+.B X\-SUBST
+extension (an OpenLDAP-specific extension), which allows one to use the
+.B ldapsyntax
+statement to define a non-implemented syntax along with another syntax,
+the extension value
+.IR substitute-syntax ,
+as its temporary replacement.
+The
+.I substitute-syntax
+must be defined.
+This allows one to define attribute types that make use of non-implemented syntaxes
+using the correct syntax OID.
+Unless
+.B X\-SUBST
+is used, this configuration statement would result in an error,
+since no handlers would be associated to the resulting syntax structure.
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B listener-threads <integer>
+Specify the number of threads to use for the connection manager.
+The default is 1 and this is typically adequate for up to 16 CPU cores.
+The value should be set to a power of 2.
+.TP
+.B localSSF <SSF>
+Specifies the Security Strength Factor (SSF) to be given local LDAP sessions,
+such as those to the ldapi:// listener. For a description of SSF values,
+see
+.BR sasl-secprops 's
+.B minssf
+option description. The default is 71.
+.TP
+.B logfile <filename>
+Specify a file for recording debug log messages. By default these messages
+only go to stderr and are not recorded anywhere else. Specifying a logfile
+copies messages to both stderr and the logfile.
+.TP
+.B loglevel <integer> [...]
+Specify the level at which debugging statements and operation
+statistics should be syslogged (currently logged to the
+.BR syslogd (8)
+LOG_LOCAL4 facility).
+They must be considered subsystems rather than increasingly verbose
+log levels.
+Some messages with higher priority are logged regardless
+of the configured loglevel as soon as any logging is configured.
+Log levels are additive, and available levels are:
+.RS
+.RS
+.PD 0
+.TP
+.B 1
+.B (0x1 trace)
+trace function calls
+.TP
+.B 2
+.B (0x2 packets)
+debug packet handling
+.TP
+.B 4
+.B (0x4 args)
+heavy trace debugging (function args)
+.TP
+.B 8
+.B (0x8 conns)
+connection management
+.TP
+.B 16
+.B (0x10 BER)
+print out packets sent and received
+.TP
+.B 32
+.B (0x20 filter)
+search filter processing
+.TP
+.B 64
+.B (0x40 config)
+configuration file processing
+.TP
+.B 128
+.B (0x80 ACL)
+access control list processing
+.TP
+.B 256
+.B (0x100 stats)
+connections, LDAP operations, results (recommended)
+.TP
+.B 512
+.B (0x200 stats2)
+stats log entries sent
+.TP
+.B 1024
+.B (0x400 shell)
+print communication with shell backends
+.TP
+.B 2048
+.B (0x800 parse)
+entry parsing
+\".TP
+\".B 4096
+\".B (0x1000 cache)
+\"caching (unused)
+\".TP
+\".B 8192
+\".B (0x2000 index)
+\"data indexing (unused)
+.TP
+.B 16384
+.B (0x4000 sync)
+LDAPSync replication
+.TP
+.B 32768
+.B (0x8000 none)
+only messages that get logged whatever log level is set
+.PD
+.RE
+The desired log level can be input as a single integer that combines
+the (ORed) desired levels, both in decimal or in hexadecimal notation,
+as a list of integers (that are ORed internally),
+or as a list of the names that are shown between parentheses, such that
+.LP
+.nf
+ loglevel 129
+ loglevel 0x81
+ loglevel 128 1
+ loglevel 0x80 0x1
+ loglevel acl trace
+.fi
+.LP
+are equivalent.
+The keyword
+.B any
+can be used as a shortcut to enable logging at all levels (equivalent to \-1).
+The keyword
+.BR none ,
+or the equivalent integer representation, causes those messages
+that are logged regardless of the configured loglevel to be logged.
+In fact, if loglevel is set to 0, no logging occurs,
+so at least the
+.B none
+level is required to have high priority messages logged.
+
+The loglevel defaults to \fBstats\fP.
+This level should usually also be included when using other loglevels, to
+help analyze the logs.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B moduleload <filename>
+Specify the name of a dynamically loadable module to load. The filename
+may be an absolute path name or a simple filename. Non-absolute names
+are searched for in the directories specified by the
+.B modulepath
+option. This option and the
+.B modulepath
+option are only usable if slapd was compiled with \-\-enable\-modules.
+.TP
+.B modulepath <pathspec>
+Specify a list of directories to search for loadable modules. Typically
+the path is colon-separated but this depends on the operating system.
+The default is MODULEDIR, which is where the standard OpenLDAP install
+will place its modules.
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B objectclass "(\ <oid>\
+ [NAME\ <name>]\
+ [DESC\ <description>]\
+ [OBSOLETE]\
+ [SUP\ <oids>]\
+ [{ ABSTRACT | STRUCTURAL | AUXILIARY }]\
+ [MUST\ <oids>] [MAY\ <oids>] )"
+.RS
+Specify an objectclass using the LDAPv3 syntax defined in RFC 4512.
+The slapd parser extends the RFC 4512 definition by allowing string
+forms as well as numeric OIDs to be used for the object class OID.
+(See the
+.B
+objectidentifier
+description.) Object classes are "STRUCTURAL" by default.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B objectidentifier <name> "{ <oid> | <name>[:<suffix>] }"
+Define a string name that equates to the given OID. The string can be used
+in place of the numeric OID in objectclass and attribute definitions. The
+name can also be used with a suffix of the form ":xx" in which case the
+value "oid.xx" will be used.
+.TP
+.B password\-hash <hash> [<hash>...]
+This option configures one or more hashes to be used in generation of user
+passwords stored in the userPassword attribute during processing of
+LDAP Password Modify Extended Operations (RFC 3062).
+The <hash> must be one of
+.BR {SSHA} ,
+.BR {SHA} ,
+.BR {SMD5} ,
+.BR {MD5} ,
+.BR {CRYPT} ,
+and
+.BR {CLEARTEXT} .
+The default is
+.BR {SSHA} .
+
+.B {SHA}
+and
+.B {SSHA}
+use the SHA-1 algorithm (FIPS 160-1), the latter with a seed.
+
+.B {MD5}
+and
+.B {SMD5}
+use the MD5 algorithm (RFC 1321), the latter with a seed.
+
+.B {CRYPT}
+uses the
+.BR crypt (3).
+
+.B {CLEARTEXT}
+indicates that the new password should be
+added to userPassword as clear text.
+
+Note that this option does not alter the normal user applications
+handling of userPassword during LDAP Add, Modify, or other LDAP operations.
+.TP
+.B password\-crypt\-salt\-format <format>
+Specify the format of the salt passed to
+.BR crypt (3)
+when generating {CRYPT} passwords (see
+.BR password\-hash )
+during processing of LDAP Password Modify Extended Operations (RFC 3062).
+
+This string needs to be in
+.BR sprintf (3)
+format and may include one (and only one) %s conversion.
+This conversion will be substituted with a string of random
+characters from [A\-Za\-z0\-9./]. For example, "%.2s"
+provides a two character salt and "$1$%.8s" tells some
+versions of crypt(3) to use an MD5 algorithm and provides
+8 random characters of salt. The default is "%s", which
+provides 31 characters of salt.
+.TP
+.B pidfile <filename>
+The (absolute) name of a file that will hold the
+.B slapd
+server's process ID (see
+.BR getpid (2)).
+.TP
+.B referral <url>
+Specify the referral to pass back when
+.BR slapd (8)
+cannot find a local database to handle a request.
+If specified multiple times, each url is provided.
+.TP
+.B require <conditions>
+Specify a set of conditions (separated by white space) to
+require (default none).
+The directive may be specified globally and/or per-database;
+databases inherit global conditions, so per-database specifications
+are additive.
+.B bind
+requires bind operation prior to directory operations.
+.B LDAPv3
+requires session to be using LDAP version 3.
+.B authc
+requires authentication prior to directory operations.
+.B SASL
+requires SASL authentication prior to directory operations.
+.B strong
+requires strong authentication prior to directory operations.
+The strong keyword allows protected "simple" authentication
+as well as SASL authentication.
+.B none
+may be used to require no conditions (useful to clear out globally
+set conditions within a particular database); it must occur first
+in the list of conditions.
+.TP
+.B reverse\-lookup on | off
+Enable/disable client name unverified reverse lookup (default is
+.BR off
+if compiled with \-\-enable\-rlookups).
+.TP
+.B rootDSE <file>
+Specify the name of an LDIF(5) file containing user defined attributes
+for the root DSE. These attributes are returned in addition to the
+attributes normally produced by slapd.
+
+The root DSE is an entry with information about the server and its
+capabilities, in operational attributes.
+It has the empty DN, and can be read with e.g.:
+.ti +4
+ldapsearch \-x \-b "" \-s base "+"
+.br
+See RFC 4512 section 5.1 for details.
+.TP
+.B sasl\-auxprops <plugin> [...]
+Specify which auxprop plugins to use for authentication lookups. The
+default is empty, which just uses slapd's internal support. Usually
+no other auxprop plugins are needed.
+.TP
+.B sasl\-host <fqdn>
+Used to specify the fully qualified domain name used for SASL processing.
+.TP
+.B sasl\-realm <realm>
+Specify SASL realm. Default is empty.
+.TP
+.B sasl\-secprops <properties>
+Used to specify Cyrus SASL security properties.
+The
+.B none
+flag (without any other properties) causes the flag properties
+default, "noanonymous,noplain", to be cleared.
+The
+.B noplain
+flag disables mechanisms susceptible to simple passive attacks.
+The
+.B noactive
+flag disables mechanisms susceptible to active attacks.
+The
+.B nodict
+flag disables mechanisms susceptible to passive dictionary attacks.
+The
+.B noanonymous
+flag disables mechanisms which support anonymous login.
+The
+.B forwardsec
+flag require forward secrecy between sessions.
+The
+.B passcred
+require mechanisms which pass client credentials (and allow
+mechanisms which can pass credentials to do so).
+The
+.B minssf=<factor>
+property specifies the minimum acceptable
+.I security strength factor
+as an integer approximate to effective key length used for
+encryption. 0 (zero) implies no protection, 1 implies integrity
+protection only, 56 allows DES or other weak ciphers, 112
+allows triple DES and other strong ciphers, 128 allows RC4,
+Blowfish and other modern strong ciphers. The default is 0.
+The
+.B maxssf=<factor>
+property specifies the maximum acceptable
+.I security strength factor
+as an integer (see minssf description). The default is INT_MAX.
+The
+.B maxbufsize=<size>
+property specifies the maximum security layer receive buffer
+size allowed. 0 disables security layers. The default is 65536.
+.TP
+.B schemadn <dn>
+Specify the distinguished name for the subschema subentry that
+controls the entries on this server. The default is "cn=Subschema".
+.TP
+.B security <factors>
+Specify a set of security strength factors (separated by white space)
+to require (see
+.BR sasl\-secprops 's
+.B minssf
+option for a description of security strength factors).
+The directive may be specified globally and/or per-database.
+.B ssf=<n>
+specifies the overall security strength factor.
+.B transport=<n>
+specifies the transport security strength factor.
+.B tls=<n>
+specifies the TLS security strength factor.
+.B sasl=<n>
+specifies the SASL security strength factor.
+.B update_ssf=<n>
+specifies the overall security strength factor to require for
+directory updates.
+.B update_transport=<n>
+specifies the transport security strength factor to require for
+directory updates.
+.B update_tls=<n>
+specifies the TLS security strength factor to require for
+directory updates.
+.B update_sasl=<n>
+specifies the SASL security strength factor to require for
+directory updates.
+.B simple_bind=<n>
+specifies the security strength factor required for
+.I simple
+username/password authentication.
+Note that the
+.B transport
+factor is measure of security provided by the underlying transport,
+e.g. ldapi:// (and eventually IPSEC). It is not normally used.
+.TP
+.B serverID <integer> [<URL>]
+Specify an integer ID from 0 to 4095 for this server (limited
+to 3 hexadecimal digits). The ID may also be specified as a
+hexadecimal ID by prefixing the value with "0x".
+Non-zero IDs are
+required when using multi-provider replication and each provider must have a
+unique non-zero ID. Note that this requirement also applies to separate providers
+contributing to a glued set of databases.
+If the URL is provided, this directive may be specified
+multiple times, providing a complete list of participating servers
+and their IDs. The fully qualified hostname of each server should be
+used in the supplied URLs. The IDs are used in the "replica id" field
+of all CSNs generated by the specified server. The default value is zero, which
+is only valid for single provider replication.
+Example:
+.LP
+.nf
+ serverID 1
+.fi
+.TP
+.B sizelimit {<integer>|unlimited}
+.TP
+.B sizelimit size[.{soft|hard|unchecked}]=<integer> [...]
+Specify the maximum number of entries to return from a search operation.
+The default size limit is 500.
+Use
+.B unlimited
+to specify no limits.
+The second format allows a fine grain setting of the size limits.
+Extra args can be added on the same line.
+See
+.BR limits
+for an explanation of the different flags.
+.TP
+.B sockbuf_max_incoming <integer>
+Specify the maximum incoming LDAP PDU size for anonymous sessions.
+The default is 262143.
+.TP
+.B sockbuf_max_incoming_auth <integer>
+Specify the maximum incoming LDAP PDU size for authenticated sessions.
+The default is 4194303.
+.TP
+.B sortvals <attr> [...]
+Specify a list of multi-valued attributes whose values will always
+be maintained in sorted order. Using this option will allow Modify,
+Compare, and filter evaluations on these attributes to be performed
+more efficiently. The resulting sort order depends on the
+attributes' syntax and matching rules and may not correspond to
+lexical order or any other recognizable order.
+.TP
+.B tcp-buffer [listener=<URL>] [{read|write}=]<size>
+Specify the size of the TCP buffer.
+A global value for both read and write TCP buffers related to any listener
+is defined, unless the listener is explicitly specified,
+or either the read or write qualifiers are used.
+See
+.BR tcp (7)
+for details.
+Note that some OS-es implement automatic TCP buffer tuning.
+.TP
+.B threads <integer>
+Specify the maximum size of the primary thread pool.
+The default is 16; the minimum value is 2.
+.TP
+.B timelimit {<integer>|unlimited}
+.TP
+.B timelimit time[.{soft|hard}]=<integer> [...]
+Specify the maximum number of seconds (in real time)
+.B slapd
+will spend answering a search request. The default time limit is 3600.
+Use
+.B unlimited
+to specify no limits.
+The second format allows a fine grain setting of the time limits.
+Extra args can be added on the same line.
+See
+.BR limits
+for an explanation of the different flags.
+.TP
+.B tool\-threads <integer>
+Specify the maximum number of threads to use in tool mode.
+This should not be greater than the number of CPUs in the system.
+The default is 1.
+.\"ucdata-path is obsolete / ignored...
+.\".TP
+.\".B ucdata-path <path>
+.\"Specify the path to the directory containing the Unicode character
+.\"tables. The default path is DATADIR/ucdata.
+.TP
+.B writetimeout <integer>
+Specify the number of seconds to wait before forcibly closing
+a connection with an outstanding write. This allows recovery from
+various network hang conditions. A writetimeout of 0 disables this
+feature. The default is 0.
+.SH TLS OPTIONS
+If
+.B slapd
+is built with support for Transport Layer Security, there are more options
+you can specify.
+.TP
+.B TLSCipherSuite <cipher-suite-spec>
+Permits configuring what ciphers will be accepted and the preference order.
+<cipher-suite-spec> should be a cipher specification for the TLS library
+in use (OpenSSL, GnuTLS, or Mozilla NSS).
+Example:
+.RS
+.RS
+.TP
+.I OpenSSL:
+TLSCipherSuite HIGH:MEDIUM:+SSLv2
+.TP
+.I GnuTLS:
+TLSCiphersuite SECURE256:!AES-128-CBC
+.RE
+
+To check what ciphers a given spec selects in OpenSSL, use:
+
+.nf
+ openssl ciphers \-v <cipher-suite-spec>
+.fi
+
+With GnuTLS the available specs can be found in the manual page of
+.BR gnutls\-cli (1)
+(see the description of the
+option
+.BR \-\-priority ).
+
+In older versions of GnuTLS, where gnutls\-cli does not support the option
+\-\-priority, you can obtain the \(em more limited \(em list of ciphers by calling:
+
+.nf
+ gnutls\-cli \-l
+.fi
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, the OpenSSL cipher suite specifications are used and
+translated into the format used internally by Mozilla NSS. There isn't an easy
+way to list the cipher suites from the command line. The authoritative list
+is in the source code for Mozilla NSS in the file sslinfo.c in the structure
+.nf
+ static const SSLCipherSuiteInfo suiteInfo[]
+.fi
+.RE
+.TP
+.B TLSCACertificateFile <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains certificates for all of the Certificate
+Authorities that
+.B slapd
+will recognize. The certificate for
+the CA that signed the server certificate must be included among
+these certificates. If the signing CA was not a top-level (root) CA,
+certificates for the entire sequence of CA's from the signing CA to
+the top-level CA should be present. Multiple certificates are simply
+appended to the file; the order is not significant.
+.TP
+.B TLSCACertificatePath <path>
+Specifies the path of a directory that contains Certificate Authority
+certificates in separate individual files. Usually only one of this
+or the TLSCACertificateFile is used. This directive is not supported
+when using GnuTLS.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, <path> may contain a Mozilla NSS cert/key
+database. If <path> contains a Mozilla NSS cert/key database and
+CA cert files, OpenLDAP will use the cert/key database and will
+ignore the CA cert files.
+.TP
+.B TLSCertificateFile <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains the
+.B slapd
+server certificate.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, if using a cert/key database (specified with
+TLSCACertificatePath), TLSCertificateFile specifies
+the name of the certificate to use:
+.nf
+ TLSCertificateFile Server-Cert
+.fi
+If using a token other than the internal built in token, specify the
+token name first, followed by a colon:
+.nf
+ TLSCertificateFile my hardware device:Server-Cert
+.fi
+Use certutil \-L to list the certificates by name:
+.nf
+ certutil \-d /path/to/certdbdir \-L
+.fi
+.TP
+.B TLSCertificateKeyFile <filename>
+Specifies the file that contains the
+.B slapd
+server private key that matches the certificate stored in the
+.B TLSCertificateFile
+file. Currently, the private key must not be protected with a password, so
+it is of critical importance that it is protected carefully.
+
+When using Mozilla NSS, TLSCertificateKeyFile specifies the name of
+a file that contains the password for the key for the certificate specified with
+TLSCertificateFile. The modutil command can be used to turn off password
+protection for the cert/key database. For example, if TLSCACertificatePath
+specifes /etc/openldap/certdb as the location of the cert/key database, use
+modutil to change the password to the empty string:
+.nf
+ modutil \-dbdir /etc/openldap/certdb \-changepw 'NSS Certificate DB'
+.fi
+You must have the old password, if any. Ignore the WARNING about the running
+browser. Press 'Enter' for the new password.
+.TP
+.B TLSDHParamFile <filename>
+This directive specifies the file that contains parameters for Diffie-Hellman
+ephemeral key exchange. This is required in order to use a DSA certificate on
+the server, or an RSA certificate missing the "key encipherment" key usage.
+Note that setting this option may also enable
+Anonymous Diffie-Hellman key exchanges in certain non-default cipher suites.
+Anonymous key exchanges should generally be avoided since they provide no
+actual client or server authentication and provide no protection against
+man-in-the-middle attacks.
+You should append "!ADH" to your cipher suites to ensure that these suites
+are not used.
+When using Mozilla NSS these parameters are always generated randomly
+so this directive is ignored.
+.TP
+.B TLSECName <name>
+Specify the name of the curve(s) to use for Elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman
+ephemeral key exchange. This option is only used for OpenSSL.
+This option is not used with GnuTLS; the curves may be
+chosen in the GnuTLS ciphersuite specification. This option is also
+ignored for Mozilla NSS.
+.TP
+.B TLSProtocolMin <major>[.<minor>]
+Specifies minimum SSL/TLS protocol version that will be negotiated.
+If the server doesn't support at least that version,
+the SSL handshake will fail.
+To require TLS 1.x or higher, set this option to 3.(x+1),
+e.g.,
+
+.nf
+ TLSProtocolMin 3.2
+.fi
+
+would require TLS 1.1.
+Specifying a minimum that is higher than that supported by the
+OpenLDAP implementation will result in it requiring the
+highest level that it does support.
+This directive is ignored with GnuTLS.
+.TP
+.B TLSRandFile <filename>
+Specifies the file to obtain random bits from when /dev/[u]random
+is not available. Generally set to the name of the EGD/PRNGD socket.
+The environment variable RANDFILE can also be used to specify the filename.
+This directive is ignored with GnuTLS and Mozilla NSS.
+.TP
+.B TLSVerifyClient <level>
+Specifies what checks to perform on client certificates in an
+incoming TLS session, if any.
+The
+.B <level>
+can be specified as one of the following keywords:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B never
+This is the default.
+.B slapd
+will not ask the client for a certificate.
+.TP
+.B allow
+The client certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided,
+the session proceeds normally. If a bad certificate is provided,
+it will be ignored and the session proceeds normally.
+.TP
+.B try
+The client certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided,
+the session proceeds normally. If a bad certificate is provided,
+the session is immediately terminated.
+.TP
+.B demand | hard | true
+These keywords are all equivalent, for compatibility reasons.
+The client certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided,
+or a bad certificate is provided, the session is immediately terminated.
+
+Note that a valid client certificate is required in order to use the
+SASL EXTERNAL authentication mechanism with a TLS session. As such,
+a non-default
+.B TLSVerifyClient
+setting must be chosen to enable SASL EXTERNAL authentication.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B TLSCRLCheck <level>
+Specifies if the Certificate Revocation List (CRL) of the CA should be
+used to verify if the client certificates have not been revoked. This
+requires
+.B TLSCACertificatePath
+parameter to be set. This directive is ignored with GnuTLS and Mozilla NSS.
+.B <level>
+can be specified as one of the following keywords:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B none
+No CRL checks are performed
+.TP
+.B peer
+Check the CRL of the peer certificate
+.TP
+.B all
+Check the CRL for a whole certificate chain
+.RE
+.TP
+.B TLSCRLFile <filename>
+Specifies a file containing a Certificate Revocation List to be used
+for verifying that certificates have not been revoked. This directive is
+only valid when using GnuTLS and Mozilla NSS.
+.SH GENERAL BACKEND OPTIONS
+Options in this section only apply to the configuration file section
+for the specified backend. They are supported by every
+type of backend.
+.TP
+.B backend <databasetype>
+Mark the beginning of a backend definition. <databasetype>
+should be one of
+.BR bdb ,
+.BR config ,
+.BR dnssrv ,
+.BR hdb ,
+.BR ldap ,
+.BR ldif ,
+.BR mdb ,
+.BR meta ,
+.BR monitor ,
+.BR null ,
+.BR passwd ,
+.BR perl ,
+.BR relay ,
+.BR shell ,
+or
+.BR sql ,
+depending on which backend will serve the database.
+
+.SH GENERAL DATABASE OPTIONS
+Options in this section only apply to the configuration file section
+for the database in which they are defined. They are supported by every
+type of backend. Note that the
+.B database
+and at least one
+.B suffix
+option are mandatory for each database.
+.TP
+.B database <databasetype>
+Mark the beginning of a new database instance definition. <databasetype>
+should be one of
+.BR bdb ,
+.BR config ,
+.BR dnssrv ,
+.BR hdb ,
+.BR ldap ,
+.BR ldif ,
+.BR mdb ,
+.BR meta ,
+.BR monitor ,
+.BR null ,
+.BR passwd ,
+.BR perl ,
+.BR relay ,
+.BR shell ,
+or
+.BR sql ,
+depending on which backend will serve the database.
+
+LDAP operations, even subtree searches, normally access only one
+database.
+That can be changed by gluing databases together with the
+.B subordinate
+keyword.
+Access controls and some overlays can also involve multiple databases.
+.TP
+.B add_content_acl on | off
+Controls whether Add operations will perform ACL checks on
+the content of the entry being added. This check is off
+by default. See the
+.BR slapd.access (5)
+manual page for more details on ACL requirements for
+Add operations.
+.TP
+.B extra_attrs <attrlist>
+Lists what attributes need to be added to search requests.
+Local storage backends return the entire entry to the frontend.
+The frontend takes care of only returning the requested attributes
+that are allowed by ACLs.
+However, features like access checking and so may need specific
+attributes that are not automatically returned by remote storage
+backends, like proxy backends and so on.
+.B <attrlist>
+is a list of attributes that are needed for internal purposes
+and thus always need to be collected, even when not explicitly
+requested by clients.
+.TP
+.B hidden on | off
+Controls whether the database will be used to answer
+queries. A database that is hidden will never be
+selected to answer any queries, and any suffix configured
+on the database will be ignored in checks for conflicts
+with other databases. By default, hidden is off.
+.TP
+.B lastmod on | off
+Controls whether
+.B slapd
+will automatically maintain the
+modifiersName, modifyTimestamp, creatorsName, and
+createTimestamp attributes for entries. It also controls
+the entryCSN and entryUUID attributes, which are needed
+by the syncrepl provider. By default, lastmod is on.
+.TP
+.B limits <selector> <limit> [<limit> [...]]
+Specify time and size limits based on the operation's initiator or
+base DN.
+The argument
+.B <selector>
+can be any of
+.RS
+.RS
+.TP
+anonymous | users | [<dnspec>=]<pattern> | group[/oc[/at]]=<pattern>
+
+.RE
+with
+.RS
+.TP
+<dnspec> ::= dn[.<type>][.<style>]
+.TP
+<type> ::= self | this
+.TP
+<style> ::= exact | base | onelevel | subtree | children | regex | anonymous
+
+.RE
+DN type
+.B self
+is the default and means the bound user, while
+.B this
+means the base DN of the operation.
+The term
+.B anonymous
+matches all unauthenticated clients.
+The term
+.B users
+matches all authenticated clients;
+otherwise an
+.B exact
+dn pattern is assumed unless otherwise specified by qualifying
+the (optional) key string
+.B dn
+with
+.B exact
+or
+.B base
+(which are synonyms), to require an exact match; with
+.BR onelevel ,
+to require exactly one level of depth match; with
+.BR subtree ,
+to allow any level of depth match, including the exact match; with
+.BR children ,
+to allow any level of depth match, not including the exact match;
+.BR regex
+explicitly requires the (default) match based on POSIX (''extended'')
+regular expression pattern.
+Finally,
+.B anonymous
+matches unbound operations; the
+.B pattern
+field is ignored.
+The same behavior is obtained by using the
+.B anonymous
+form of the
+.B <selector>
+clause.
+The term
+.BR group ,
+with the optional objectClass
+.B oc
+and attributeType
+.B at
+fields, followed by
+.BR pattern ,
+sets the limits for any DN listed in the values of the
+.B at
+attribute (default
+.BR member )
+of the
+.B oc
+group objectClass (default
+.BR groupOfNames )
+whose DN exactly matches
+.BR pattern .
+
+The currently supported limits are
+.B size
+and
+.BR time .
+
+The syntax for time limits is
+.BR time[.{soft|hard}]=<integer> ,
+where
+.I integer
+is the number of seconds slapd will spend answering a search request.
+If no time limit is explicitly requested by the client, the
+.BR soft
+limit is used; if the requested time limit exceeds the
+.BR hard
+.\"limit, an
+.\".I "Administrative limit exceeded"
+.\"error is returned.
+limit, the value of the limit is used instead.
+If the
+.BR hard
+limit is set to the keyword
+.IR soft ,
+the soft limit is used in either case; if it is set to the keyword
+.IR unlimited ,
+no hard limit is enforced.
+Explicit requests for time limits smaller or equal to the
+.BR hard
+limit are honored.
+If no limit specifier is set, the value is assigned to the
+.BR soft
+limit, and the
+.BR hard
+limit is set to
+.IR soft ,
+to preserve the original behavior.
+
+The syntax for size limits is
+.BR size[.{soft|hard|unchecked}]=<integer> ,
+where
+.I integer
+is the maximum number of entries slapd will return answering a search
+request.
+If no size limit is explicitly requested by the client, the
+.BR soft
+limit is used; if the requested size limit exceeds the
+.BR hard
+.\"limit, an
+.\".I "Administrative limit exceeded"
+.\"error is returned.
+limit, the value of the limit is used instead.
+If the
+.BR hard
+limit is set to the keyword
+.IR soft ,
+the soft limit is used in either case; if it is set to the keyword
+.IR unlimited ,
+no hard limit is enforced.
+Explicit requests for size limits smaller or equal to the
+.BR hard
+limit are honored.
+The
+.BR unchecked
+specifier sets a limit on the number of candidates a search request is allowed
+to examine.
+The rationale behind it is that searches for non-properly indexed
+attributes may result in large sets of candidates, which must be
+examined by
+.BR slapd (8)
+to determine whether they match the search filter or not.
+The
+.B unchecked
+limit provides a means to drop such operations before they are even
+started.
+If the selected candidates exceed the
+.BR unchecked
+limit, the search will abort with
+.IR "Unwilling to perform" .
+If it is set to the keyword
+.IR unlimited ,
+no limit is applied (the default).
+If it is set to
+.IR disabled ,
+the search is not even performed; this can be used to disallow searches
+for a specific set of users.
+If no limit specifier is set, the value is assigned to the
+.BR soft
+limit, and the
+.BR hard
+limit is set to
+.IR soft ,
+to preserve the original behavior.
+
+In case of no match, the global limits are used.
+The default values are the same as for
+.B sizelimit
+and
+.BR timelimit ;
+no limit is set on
+.BR unchecked .
+
+If
+.B pagedResults
+control is requested, the
+.B hard
+size limit is used by default, because the request of a specific page size
+is considered an explicit request for a limitation on the number
+of entries to be returned.
+However, the size limit applies to the total count of entries returned within
+the search, and not to a single page.
+Additional size limits may be enforced; the syntax is
+.BR size.pr={<integer>|noEstimate|unlimited} ,
+where
+.I integer
+is the max page size if no explicit limit is set; the keyword
+.I noEstimate
+inhibits the server from returning an estimate of the total number
+of entries that might be returned
+(note: the current implementation does not return any estimate).
+The keyword
+.I unlimited
+indicates that no limit is applied to the pagedResults control page size.
+The syntax
+.B size.prtotal={<integer>|unlimited|disabled}
+allows one to set a limit on the total number of entries that the pagedResults
+control will return.
+By default it is set to the
+.B hard
+limit.
+When set,
+.I integer
+is the max number of entries that the whole search with pagedResults control
+can return.
+Use
+.I unlimited
+to allow unlimited number of entries to be returned, e.g. to allow
+the use of the pagedResults control as a means to circumvent size
+limitations on regular searches; the keyword
+.I disabled
+disables the control, i.e. no paged results can be returned.
+Note that the total number of entries returned when the pagedResults control
+is requested cannot exceed the
+.B hard
+size limit of regular searches unless extended by the
+.B prtotal
+switch.
+
+The \fBlimits\fP statement is typically used to let an unlimited
+number of entries be returned by searches performed
+with the identity used by the consumer for synchronization purposes
+by means of the RFC 4533 LDAP Content Synchronization protocol
+(see \fBsyncrepl\fP for details).
+.RE
+.TP
+.B maxderefdepth <depth>
+Specifies the maximum number of aliases to dereference when trying to
+resolve an entry, used to avoid infinite alias loops. The default is 15.
+.TP
+.B mirrormode on | off
+This option puts a consumer database into "mirror" mode. Update
+operations will be accepted from any user, not just the updatedn. The
+database must already be configured as a syncrepl consumer
+before this keyword may be set. This mode also requires a
+.B serverID
+(see above) to be configured.
+By default, mirrormode is off.
+.TP
+.B monitoring on | off
+This option enables database-specific monitoring in the entry related
+to the current database in the "cn=Databases,cn=Monitor" subtree
+of the monitor database, if the monitor database is enabled.
+Currently, only the BDB and the HDB databases provide database-specific
+monitoring.
+The default depends on the backend type.
+.TP
+.B overlay <overlay-name>
+Add the specified overlay to this database. An overlay is a piece of
+code that intercepts database operations in order to extend or change
+them. Overlays are pushed onto
+a stack over the database, and so they will execute in the reverse
+of the order in which they were configured and the database itself
+will receive control last of all. See the
+.BR slapd.overlays (5)
+manual page for an overview of the available overlays.
+Note that all of the database's
+regular settings should be configured before any overlay settings.
+.TP
+.B readonly on | off
+This option puts the database into "read-only" mode. Any attempts to
+modify the database will return an "unwilling to perform" error. By
+default, readonly is off.
+.TP
+.B restrict <oplist>
+Specify a whitespace separated list of operations that are restricted.
+If defined inside a database specification, restrictions apply only
+to that database, otherwise they are global.
+Operations can be any of
+.BR add ,
+.BR bind ,
+.BR compare ,
+.BR delete ,
+.BR extended[=<OID>] ,
+.BR modify ,
+.BR rename ,
+.BR search ,
+or the special pseudo-operations
+.B read
+and
+.BR write ,
+which respectively summarize read and write operations.
+The use of
+.I restrict write
+is equivalent to
+.I readonly on
+(see above).
+The
+.B extended
+keyword allows one to indicate the OID of the specific operation
+to be restricted.
+.TP
+.B rootdn <dn>
+Specify the distinguished name that is not subject to access control
+or administrative limit restrictions for operations on this database.
+This DN may or may not be associated with an entry. An empty root
+DN (the default) specifies no root access is to be granted. It is
+recommended that the rootdn only be specified when needed (such as
+when initially populating a database). If the rootdn is within
+a namingContext (suffix) of the database, a simple bind password
+may also be provided using the
+.B rootpw
+directive. Many optional features, including syncrepl, require the
+rootdn to be defined for the database.
+.TP
+.B rootpw <password>
+Specify a password (or hash of the password) for the rootdn. The
+password can only be set if the rootdn is within the namingContext
+(suffix) of the database.
+This option accepts all RFC 2307 userPassword formats known to
+the server (see
+.B password\-hash
+description) as well as cleartext.
+.BR slappasswd (8)
+may be used to generate a hash of a password. Cleartext
+and \fB{CRYPT}\fP passwords are not recommended. If empty
+(the default), authentication of the root DN is by other means
+(e.g. SASL). Use of SASL is encouraged.
+.TP
+.B suffix <dn suffix>
+Specify the DN suffix of queries that will be passed to this
+backend database. Multiple suffix lines can be given and at least one is
+required for each database definition.
+
+If the suffix of one database is "inside" that of another, the database
+with the inner suffix must come first in the configuration file.
+You may also want to glue such databases together with the
+.B subordinate
+keyword.
+.TP
+.B subordinate [advertise]
+Specify that the current backend database is a subordinate of another
+backend database. A subordinate database may have only one suffix. This
+option may be used to glue multiple databases into a single namingContext.
+If the suffix of the current database is within the namingContext of a
+superior database, searches against the superior database will be
+propagated to the subordinate as well. All of the databases
+associated with a single namingContext should have identical rootdns.
+Behavior of other LDAP operations is unaffected by this setting. In
+particular, it is not possible to use moddn to move an entry from
+one subordinate to another subordinate within the namingContext.
+
+If the optional \fBadvertise\fP flag is supplied, the naming context of
+this database is advertised in the root DSE. The default is to hide this
+database context, so that only the superior context is visible.
+
+If the slap tools
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+or
+.BR slapindex (8)
+are used on the superior database, any glued subordinates that support
+these tools are opened as well.
+
+Databases that are glued together should usually be configured with the
+same indices (assuming they support indexing), even for attributes that
+only exist in some of these databases. In general, all of the glued
+databases should be configured as similarly as possible, since the intent
+is to provide the appearance of a single directory.
+
+Note that the \fIsubordinate\fP functionality is implemented internally
+by the \fIglue\fP overlay and as such its behavior will interact with other
+overlays in use. By default, the glue overlay is automatically configured as
+the last overlay on the superior backend. Its position on the backend
+can be explicitly configured by setting an \fBoverlay glue\fP directive
+at the desired position. This explicit configuration is necessary e.g.
+when using the \fIsyncprov\fP overlay, which needs to follow \fIglue\fP
+in order to work over all of the glued databases. E.g.
+.RS
+.nf
+ database bdb
+ suffix dc=example,dc=com
+ ...
+ overlay glue
+ overlay syncprov
+.fi
+.RE
+.TP
+.B sync_use_subentry
+Store the syncrepl contextCSN in a subentry instead of the context entry
+of the database. The subentry's RDN will be "cn=ldapsync". By default
+the contextCSN is stored in the context entry.
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B syncrepl rid=<replica ID>
+.B provider=ldap[s]://<hostname>[:port]
+.B searchbase=<base DN>
+.B [type=refreshOnly|refreshAndPersist]
+.B [interval=dd:hh:mm:ss]
+.B [retry=[<retry interval> <# of retries>]+]
+.B [filter=<filter str>]
+.B [scope=sub|one|base|subord]
+.B [attrs=<attr list>]
+.B [exattrs=<attr list>]
+.B [attrsonly]
+.B [sizelimit=<limit>]
+.B [timelimit=<limit>]
+.B [schemachecking=on|off]
+.B [network\-timeout=<seconds>]
+.B [timeout=<seconds>]
+.B [bindmethod=simple|sasl]
+.B [binddn=<dn>]
+.B [saslmech=<mech>]
+.B [authcid=<identity>]
+.B [authzid=<identity>]
+.B [credentials=<passwd>]
+.B [realm=<realm>]
+.B [secprops=<properties>]
+.B [keepalive=<idle>:<probes>:<interval>]
+.B [starttls=yes|critical]
+.B [tls_cert=<file>]
+.B [tls_key=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacert=<file>]
+.B [tls_cacertdir=<path>]
+.B [tls_reqcert=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_reqsan=never|allow|try|demand]
+.B [tls_cipher_suite=<ciphers>]
+.B [tls_ecname=<names>]
+.B [tls_crlcheck=none|peer|all]
+.B [tls_protocol_min=<major>[.<minor>]]
+.B [suffixmassage=<real DN>]
+.B [logbase=<base DN>]
+.B [logfilter=<filter str>]
+.B [syncdata=default|accesslog|changelog]
+.RS
+Specify the current database as a consumer which is kept up-to-date with the
+provider content by establishing the current
+.BR slapd (8)
+as a replication consumer site running a
+.B syncrepl
+replication engine.
+The consumer content is kept synchronized to the provider content using
+the LDAP Content Synchronization protocol. Refer to the
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" for detailed information on
+setting up a replicated
+.B slapd
+directory service using the
+.B syncrepl
+replication engine.
+
+.B rid
+identifies the current
+.B syncrepl
+directive within the replication consumer site.
+It is a non-negative integer not greater than 999 (limited
+to three decimal digits).
+
+.B provider
+specifies the replication provider site containing the provider content
+as an LDAP URI. If <port> is not given, the standard LDAP port number
+(389 or 636) is used.
+
+The content of the
+.B syncrepl
+consumer is defined using a search
+specification as its result set. The consumer
+.B slapd
+will send search requests to the provider
+.B slapd
+according to the search specification. The search specification includes
+.BR searchbase ", " scope ", " filter ", " attrs ", " attrsonly ", " sizelimit ", "
+and
+.B timelimit
+parameters as in the normal search specification.
+The \fBscope\fP defaults to \fBsub\fP, the \fBfilter\fP defaults to
+\fB(objectclass=*)\fP, while there is no default \fBsearchbase\fP. The
+\fBattrs\fP list defaults to \fB"*,+"\fP to return all user and operational
+attributes, and \fBattrsonly\fP is unset by default.
+The \fBsizelimit\fP and \fBtimelimit\fP only
+accept "unlimited" and positive integers, and both default to "unlimited".
+The \fBsizelimit\fP and \fBtimelimit\fP parameters define
+a consumer requested limitation on the number of entries that can be returned
+by the LDAP Content Synchronization operation; as such, it is intended
+to implement partial replication based on the size of the replicated database
+and on the time required by the synchronization.
+Note, however, that any provider-side limits for the replication identity
+will be enforced by the provider regardless of the limits requested
+by the LDAP Content Synchronization operation, much like for any other
+search operation.
+.B exattrs
+option may also be used to specify attributes that should be omitted
+from incoming entries.
+The \fBscope\fP defaults to \fBsub\fP, the \fBfilter\fP defaults to
+\fB(objectclass=*)\fP, and there is no default \fBsearchbase\fP. The
+\fBattrs\fP list defaults to \fB"*,+"\fP to return all user and operational
+attributes, and \fBattrsonly\fP and \fBexattrs\fP are unset by default.
+The \fBsizelimit\fP and \fBtimelimit\fP only
+accept "unlimited" and positive integers, and both default to "unlimited".
+Note, however, that any provider-side limits for the replication identity
+will be enforced by the provider regardless of the limits requested
+by the LDAP Content Synchronization operation, much like for any other
+search operation.
+
+The LDAP Content Synchronization protocol has two operation types.
+In the
+.B refreshOnly
+operation, the next synchronization search operation
+is periodically rescheduled at an interval time (specified by
+.B interval
+parameter; 1 day by default)
+after each synchronization operation finishes.
+In the
+.B refreshAndPersist
+operation, a synchronization search remains persistent in the provider slapd.
+Further updates to the provider will generate
+.B searchResultEntry
+to the consumer slapd as the search responses to the persistent
+synchronization search. If the initial search fails due to an error, the
+next synchronization search operation is periodically rescheduled at an
+interval time (specified by
+.B interval
+parameter; 1 day by default)
+
+If an error occurs during replication, the consumer will attempt to
+reconnect according to the
+.B retry
+parameter which is a list of the <retry interval> and <# of retries> pairs.
+For example, retry="60 10 300 3" lets the consumer retry every 60 seconds
+for the first 10 times and then retry every 300 seconds for the next 3
+times before stop retrying. The `+' in <# of retries> means indefinite
+number of retries until success.
+If no
+.B retry
+was specified, by default syncrepl retries every hour forever.
+
+The schema checking can be enforced at the LDAP Sync
+consumer site by turning on the
+.B schemachecking
+parameter. The default is \fBoff\fP.
+Schema checking \fBon\fP means that replicated entries must have
+a structural objectClass, must obey to objectClass requirements
+in terms of required/allowed attributes, and that naming attributes
+and distinguished values must be present.
+As a consequence, schema checking should be \fBoff\fP when partial
+replication is used.
+
+The
+.B network\-timeout
+parameter sets how long the consumer will wait to establish a
+network connection to the provider. Once a connection is
+established, the
+.B timeout
+parameter determines how long the consumer will wait for the initial
+Bind request to complete. The defaults for these parameters come
+from
+.BR ldap.conf (5).
+
+A
+.B bindmethod
+of
+.B simple
+requires the options
+.B binddn
+and
+.B credentials
+and should only be used when adequate security services
+(e.g. TLS or IPSEC) are in place.
+.B REMEMBER: simple bind credentials must be in cleartext!
+A
+.B bindmethod
+of
+.B sasl
+requires the option
+.B saslmech.
+Depending on the mechanism, an authentication identity and/or
+credentials can be specified using
+.B authcid
+and
+.B credentials.
+The
+.B authzid
+parameter may be used to specify an authorization identity.
+Specific security properties (as with the
+.B sasl\-secprops
+keyword above) for a SASL bind can be set with the
+.B secprops
+option. A non default SASL realm can be set with the
+.B realm
+option.
+The identity used for synchronization by the consumer should be allowed
+to receive an unlimited number of entries in response to a search request.
+The provider, other than allow authentication of the syncrepl identity,
+should grant that identity appropriate access privileges to the data
+that is being replicated (\fBaccess\fP directive), and appropriate time
+and size limits.
+This can be accomplished by either allowing unlimited \fBsizelimit\fP
+and \fBtimelimit\fP, or by setting an appropriate \fBlimits\fP statement
+in the consumer's configuration (see \fBsizelimit\fP and \fBlimits\fP
+for details).
+
+The
+.B keepalive
+parameter sets the values of \fIidle\fP, \fIprobes\fP, and \fIinterval\fP
+used to check whether a socket is alive;
+.I idle
+is the number of seconds a connection needs to remain idle before TCP
+starts sending keepalive probes;
+.I probes
+is the maximum number of keepalive probes TCP should send before dropping
+the connection;
+.I interval
+is interval in seconds between individual keepalive probes.
+Only some systems support the customization of these values;
+the
+.B keepalive
+parameter is ignored otherwise, and system-wide settings are used.
+
+The
+.B starttls
+parameter specifies use of the StartTLS extended operation
+to establish a TLS session before Binding to the provider. If the
+.B critical
+argument is supplied, the session will be aborted if the StartTLS request
+fails. Otherwise the syncrepl session continues without TLS. The
+.B tls_reqcert
+setting defaults to "demand", the
+.B tls_reqsan
+seting defaults to "allow", and the other TLS settings
+default to the same as the main slapd TLS settings.
+
+The
+.B suffixmassage
+parameter allows the consumer to pull entries from a remote directory
+whose DN suffix differs from the local directory. The portion of the
+remote entries' DNs that matches the \fIsearchbase\fP will be replaced
+with the suffixmassage DN.
+
+Rather than replicating whole entries, the consumer can query logs of
+data modifications. This mode of operation is referred to as \fIdelta
+syncrepl\fP. In addition to the above parameters, the
+.B logbase
+and
+.B logfilter
+parameters must be set appropriately for the log that will be used. The
+.B syncdata
+parameter must be set to either "accesslog" if the log conforms to the
+.BR slapo\-accesslog (5)
+log format, or "changelog" if the log conforms
+to the obsolete \fIchangelog\fP format. If the
+.B syncdata
+parameter is omitted or set to "default" then the log parameters are
+ignored.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B updatedn <dn>
+This option is only applicable in a replica
+database.
+It specifies the DN permitted to update (subject to access controls)
+the replica. It is only needed in certain push-mode
+replication scenarios. Generally, this DN
+.I should not
+be the same as the
+.B rootdn
+used at the provider.
+.TP
+.B updateref <url>
+Specify the referral to pass back when
+.BR slapd (8)
+is asked to modify a replicated local database.
+If specified multiple times, each url is provided.
+
+.SH DATABASE-SPECIFIC OPTIONS
+Each database may allow specific configuration options; they are
+documented separately in the backends' manual pages. See the
+.BR slapd.backends (5)
+manual page for an overview of available backends.
+.SH EXAMPLES
+.LP
+Here is a short example of a configuration file:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+include SYSCONFDIR/schema/core.schema
+pidfile LOCALSTATEDIR/run/slapd.pid
+
+# Subtypes of "name" (e.g. "cn" and "ou") with the
+# option ";x\-hidden" can be searched for/compared,
+# but are not shown. See \fBslapd.access\fP(5).
+attributeoptions x\-hidden lang\-
+access to attrs=name;x\-hidden by * =cs
+
+# Protect passwords. See \fBslapd.access\fP(5).
+access to attrs=userPassword by * auth
+# Read access to other attributes and entries.
+access to * by * read
+
+database bdb
+suffix "dc=our\-domain,dc=com"
+# The database directory MUST exist prior to
+# running slapd AND should only be accessible
+# by the slapd/tools. Mode 0700 recommended.
+directory LOCALSTATEDIR/openldap\-data
+# Indices to maintain
+index objectClass eq
+index cn,sn,mail pres,eq,approx,sub
+
+# We serve small clients that do not handle referrals,
+# so handle remote lookups on their behalf.
+database ldap
+suffix ""
+uri ldap://ldap.some\-server.com/
+lastmod off
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" contains a longer annotated
+example of a configuration file.
+The original ETCDIR/slapd.conf is another example.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR ldap (3),
+.BR gnutls\-cli (1),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd.access (5),
+.BR slapd.backends (5),
+.BR slapd.overlays (5),
+.BR slapd.plugin (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR slapacl (8),
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapauth (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+.BR slapdn (8),
+.BR slapindex (8),
+.BR slappasswd (8),
+.BR slaptest (8).
+.LP
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd.overlays.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd.overlays.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..618ea2f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd.overlays.5
@@ -0,0 +1,174 @@
+.TH SLAPD.OVERLAYS 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2006-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapd.overlays \- overlays for slapd, the stand-alone LDAP daemon
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.BR slapd (8)
+daemon can use a variety of different overlays to alter or extend
+the normal behavior of a database backend.
+Overlays may be compiled statically into slapd, or when module support
+is enabled, they may be dynamically loaded. Most of the overlays
+are only allowed to be configured on individual databases, but some
+may also be configured globally.
+
+Configuration options for each overlay are documented separately in the
+corresponding
+.BR slapo\-<overlay> (5)
+manual pages.
+.TP
+.B accesslog
+Access Logging.
+This overlay can record accesses to a given backend database on another
+database.
+.TP
+.B auditlog
+Audit Logging.
+This overlay records changes on a given backend database to an LDIF log
+file.
+By default it is not built.
+.TP
+.B chain
+Chaining.
+This overlay allows automatic referral chasing when a referral would
+have been returned, either when configured by the server or when
+requested by the client.
+.TP
+.B collect
+Collective Attributes.
+This overlay implements RFC 3671 collective attributes; these
+attributes share common values over all the members of the collection
+as inherited from an ancestor entry.
+.TP
+.B constraint
+Constraint.
+This overlay enforces a regular expression constraint on all values
+of specified attributes. It is used to enforce a more rigorous
+syntax when the underlying attribute syntax is too general.
+.TP
+.B dds
+Dynamic Directory Services.
+This overlay supports dynamic objects, which have a limited life after
+which they expire and are automatically deleted.
+.TP
+.B dyngroup
+Dynamic Group.
+This is a demo overlay which extends the Compare operation to detect
+members of a dynamic group.
+It has no effect on any other operations.
+.TP
+.B dynlist
+Dynamic List.
+This overlay allows expansion of dynamic groups and more.
+.TP
+.B memberof
+MemberOf.
+This overlay maintains automatic reverse group membership values,
+typically stored in an attribute called memberOf.
+.TP
+.B pbind
+Proxybind.
+This overlay forwards simple bind requests on a local database to a
+remote LDAP server.
+.TP
+.B pcache
+Proxycache.
+This overlay allows caching of LDAP search requests in a local database.
+It is most often used with the
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5)
+or
+.BR slapd\-meta (5)
+backends.
+.TP
+.B ppolicy
+Password Policy.
+This overlay provides a variety of password control mechanisms,
+e.g. password aging, password reuse and duplication control, mandatory
+password resets, etc.
+.TP
+.B refint
+Referential Integrity.
+This overlay can be used with a backend database such as
+.BR slapd\-bdb (5)
+to maintain the cohesiveness of a schema which utilizes reference
+attributes.
+.TP
+.B retcode
+Return Code.
+This overlay is useful to test the behavior of clients when
+server-generated erroneous and/or unusual responses occur.
+.TP
+.B rwm
+Rewrite/remap.
+This overlay is experimental.
+It performs basic DN/data rewrite and
+objectClass/attributeType mapping.
+.TP
+.B sssvlv
+Server Side Sorting and Virtual List Views.
+This overlay implements the RFC2891 server-side sorting control and
+virtual list view controls, and replaces the RFC2696 paged-results
+implementation to ensure it works with the sorting technique.
+.TP
+.B syncprov
+Syncrepl Provider.
+This overlay implements the provider-side support for
+.B syncrepl
+replication, including persistent search functionality.
+.TP
+.B translucent
+Translucent Proxy.
+This overlay can be used with a backend database such as
+.BR slapd\-bdb (5)
+to create a "translucent proxy".
+Content of entries retrieved from a remote LDAP server can be partially
+overridden by the database.
+.TP
+.B unique
+Attribute Uniqueness.
+This overlay can be used with a backend database such as
+.BR slapd\-bdb (5)
+to enforce the uniqueness of some or all attributes within a subtree.
+.TP
+.B valsort
+Value Sorting.
+This overlay can be used to enforce a specific order for the values
+of an attribute when it is returned in a search.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.d
+default slapd configuration directory
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR ldap (3),
+.BR slapo\-accesslog (5),
+.BR slapo\-auditlog (5),
+.BR slapo\-chain (5),
+.BR slapo\-collect (5),
+.BR slapo\-constraint (5),
+.BR slapo\-dds (5),
+.BR slapo\-dyngroup (5),
+.BR slapo\-dynlist (5),
+.BR slapo\-memberof (5),
+.BR slapo\-pbind (5),
+.BR slapo\-pcache (5),
+.BR slapo\-ppolicy (5),
+.BR slapo\-refint (5),
+.BR slapo\-retcode (5),
+.BR slapo\-rwm (5),
+.BR slapo\-sssvlv (5),
+.BR slapo\-syncprov (5),
+.BR slapo\-translucent (5),
+.BR slapo\-unique (5).
+.BR slapo\-valsort (5).
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd.backends (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapd.plugin.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapd.plugin.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ce6de7e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapd.plugin.5
@@ -0,0 +1,123 @@
+.TH SLAPD.PLUGIN 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2002-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.SH NAME
+slapd.plugin \- plugin configuration for slapd, the stand-alone LDAP daemon
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+file contains configuration information for the
+.BR slapd (8)
+daemon. This configuration file is also used by the SLAPD tools
+.BR slapadd (8),
+.BR slapcat (8),
+and
+.BR slapindex (8).
+.LP
+The
+.B slapd.conf
+file consists of a series of global configuration options that apply to
+.B slapd
+as a whole (including all backends), followed by zero or more database
+backend definitions that contain information specific to a backend
+instance.
+.LP
+The general format of
+.B slapd.conf
+is as follows:
+.LP
+.nf
+ # comment - these options apply to every database
+ <global configuration options>
+ # first database definition & configuration options
+ database <backend 1 type>
+ <configuration options specific to backend 1>
+ # subsequent database definitions & configuration options
+ ...
+.fi
+.LP
+If slapd is compiled with \fI\-\-enable\-slapi\fP, support for plugins
+according to \fINetscape's Directory Server Plug-Ins\fP.
+Version 4 of the API is currently implemented, with some extensions
+from version 5.
+.LP
+Both global and database specific data may contain plugin information.
+Plugins associated with a specific database are called before global
+plugins.
+This manpage details the
+.BR slapd (8)
+configuration statements that affect the loading of SLAPI \fIplugins\fP.
+.LP
+Arguments that should be replaced by actual text are shown in brackets <>.
+.LP
+The structure of the plugin directives is
+.TP
+.B plugin "<type> <lib_path> <init_function> [<arguments>]"
+Load a plugin of the specified type for the current database.
+.LP
+The
+.BR <type>
+can be one of
+.BR preoperation ,
+that is executed before processing the operation for the specified
+database,
+.BR postoperation ,
+that is executed after the operation for the specified database
+has been processed,
+.BR extendedop ,
+that is used when executing an extended operation, or
+.BR object .
+The latter is used for miscellaneous types such as ACL, computed
+attribute and search filter rewriter plugins.
+.LP
+The
+.BR <libpath>
+argument specifies the path to the plugin loadable object; if a relative
+path is given, the object is looked for according to the underlying
+dynamic loading package (libtool's ltdl is used).
+.LP
+The
+.BR <init_function>
+argument specifies what symbol must be called when the plugin is first
+loaded.
+This function should register the functions provided by the plugin
+for the desired operations. It should be noted that it is this
+init function, not the plugin type specified as the first argument,
+that determines when and for what operations the plugin will be invoked.
+The optional
+.BR <arguments>
+list is passed to the init function.
+.TP
+.B pluginlog <file>
+Specify an alternative path for the plugin log file (default is
+LOCALSTATEDIR/errors).
+.TP
+.B modulepath <pathspec>
+This statement sets the module load path for dynamically loadable
+backends, as described in
+.BR slapd.conf (5);
+however, since both the dynamically loadable backends
+and the SLAPI plugins use the same underlying library (libtool's ltdl)
+its value also affects the plugin search path.
+In general the search path is made of colon-separated paths; usually
+the user-defined path is searched first; then the value of the
+\fILTDL_LIBRARY_PATH\fP environment variable, if defined, is used;
+finally, the system-specific dynamic load path is attempted (e.g. on
+Linux the value of the environment variable \fILD_LIBRARY_PATH\fP).
+Please carefully read the documentation of ltdl because its behavior
+is very platform dependent.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.TP
+LOCALSTATEDIR/errors
+default plugin log file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd (8),
+.LP
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-accesslog.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-accesslog.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b517082
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-accesslog.5
@@ -0,0 +1,491 @@
+.TH SLAPO-ACCESSLOG 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2005-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-accesslog \- Access Logging overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Access Logging overlay can be used to record all accesses to a given
+backend database on another database. This allows all of the activity on
+a given database to be reviewed using arbitrary LDAP queries, instead of
+just logging to local flat text files. Configuration options are available
+for selecting a subset of operation types to log, and to automatically
+prune older log records from the logging database. Log records are stored
+with audit schema (see below) to assure their readability whether viewed
+as LDIF or in raw form.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the Access Logging overlay.
+They should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B logdb <suffix>
+Specify the suffix of a database to be used for storing the log records.
+The specified database must be defined elsewhere in the configuration.
+The access controls
+on the log database should prevent general access. The suffix entry
+of the log database will be created automatically by this overlay. The log
+entries will be generated as the immediate children of the suffix entry.
+.TP
+.B logops <operations>
+Specify which types of operations to log. The valid operation types are
+abandon, add, bind, compare, delete, extended, modify, modrdn, search,
+and unbind. Aliases for common sets of operations are also available:
+.RS
+.TP
+.B writes
+add, delete, modify, modrdn
+.TP
+.B reads
+compare, search
+.TP
+.B session
+abandon, bind, unbind
+.TP
+.B all
+all operations
+.RE
+.TP
+.B logbase <operations> <baseDN>
+Specify a set of operations that will only be logged if they occur under
+a specific subtree of the database. The operation types are as above for
+the
+.B logops
+setting, and delimited by a '|' character.
+.TP
+.B logold <filter>
+Specify a filter for matching against Deleted and Modified entries. If
+the entry matches the filter, the old contents of the entry will be
+logged along with the current request.
+.TP
+.B logoldattr <attr> ...
+Specify a list of attributes whose old contents are always logged in
+Modify and ModRDN requests. Usually only the contents of attributes that were
+actually modified will be logged; by default no old attributes are logged
+for ModRDN requests.
+.TP
+.B logpurge <age> <interval>
+Specify the maximum age for log entries to be retained in the database,
+and how often to scan the database for old entries. Both the
+.B age
+and
+.B interval
+are specified as a time span in days, hours, minutes, and seconds. The
+time format is [ddd+]hh:mm[:ss] i.e., the days and seconds components are
+optional but hours and minutes are required. Except for days, which can
+be up to 5 digits, each numeric field must be exactly two digits. For example
+.RS
+.RS
+.PD 0
+.TP
+logpurge 2+00:00 1+00:00
+.RE
+.PD
+would specify that the log database should be scanned every day for old
+entries, and entries older than two days should be deleted. When using a
+log database that supports ordered indexing on generalizedTime attributes,
+specifying an eq index on the
+.B reqStart
+attribute will greatly benefit the performance of the purge operation.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B logsuccess TRUE | FALSE
+If set to TRUE then log records will only be generated for successful
+requests, i.e., requests that produce a result code of 0 (LDAP_SUCCESS).
+If FALSE, log records are generated for all requests whether they
+succeed or not. The default is FALSE.
+
+.SH EXAMPLES
+.LP
+.nf
+ database bdb
+ suffix dc=example,dc=com
+ \...
+ overlay accesslog
+ logdb cn=log
+ logops writes reads
+ logbase search|compare ou=testing,dc=example,dc=com
+ logold (objectclass=person)
+
+ database bdb
+ suffix cn=log
+ \...
+ index reqStart eq
+ access to *
+ by dn.base="cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com" read
+.fi
+
+.SH SCHEMA
+The
+.B accesslog
+overlay utilizes the "audit" schema described herein.
+This schema is specifically designed for
+.B accesslog
+auditing and is not intended to be used otherwise. It is also
+noted that the schema described here is
+.I a work in
+.IR progress ,
+and hence subject to change without notice.
+The schema is loaded automatically by the overlay.
+
+The schema includes a number of object classes and associated
+attribute types as described below.
+
+There is
+a basic
+.B auditObject
+class from which two additional classes,
+.B auditReadObject
+and
+.B auditWriteObject
+are derived. Object classes for each type of LDAP operation are further
+derived from these classes. This object class hierarchy is designed to
+allow flexible yet efficient searches of the log based on either a specific
+operation type's class, or on more general classifications. The definition
+of the
+.B auditObject
+class is as follows:
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.1
+ NAME 'auditObject'
+ DESC 'OpenLDAP request auditing'
+ SUP top STRUCTURAL
+ MUST ( reqStart $ reqType $ reqSession )
+ MAY ( reqDN $ reqAuthzID $ reqControls $ reqRespControls $
+ reqEnd $ reqResult $ reqMessage $ reqReferral ) )
+.RE
+.P
+Note that all of the OIDs used in the logging schema currently reside
+under the OpenLDAP Experimental branch. It is anticipated that they
+will migrate to a Standard branch in the future.
+
+An overview of the attributes follows:
+.B reqStart
+and
+.B reqEnd
+provide the start and end time of the operation, respectively. They use
+generalizedTime syntax. The
+.B reqStart
+attribute is also used as the RDN for each log entry.
+
+The
+.B reqType
+attribute is a simple string containing the type of operation
+being logged, e.g.
+.BR add ,
+.BR delete ,
+.BR search ,
+etc. For extended operations, the type also includes the OID of the
+extended operation, e.g.
+.B extended(1.1.1.1)
+
+The
+.B reqSession
+attribute is an implementation-specific identifier that is common to
+all the operations associated with the same LDAP session. Currently this
+is slapd's internal connection ID, stored in decimal.
+
+The
+.B reqDN
+attribute is the distinguishedName of the target of the operation. E.g., for
+a Bind request, this is the Bind DN. For an Add request, this is the DN
+of the entry being added. For a Search request, this is the base DN of
+the search.
+
+The
+.B reqAuthzID
+attribute is the distinguishedName of the user that performed the operation.
+This will usually be the same name as was established at the start of a
+session by a Bind request (if any) but may be altered in various
+circumstances.
+
+The
+.B reqControls
+and
+.B reqRespControls
+attributes carry any controls sent by the client on the request and returned
+by the server in the response, respectively. The attribute values are just
+uninterpreted octet strings.
+
+The
+.B reqResult
+attribute is the numeric LDAP result code of the operation, indicating
+either success or a particular LDAP error code. An error code may be
+accompanied by a text error message which will be recorded in the
+.B reqMessage
+attribute.
+
+The
+.B reqReferral
+attribute carries any referrals that were returned with the result of the
+request.
+
+Operation-specific classes are defined with additional attributes to carry
+all of the relevant parameters associated with the operation:
+
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.4
+ NAME 'auditAbandon'
+ DESC 'Abandon operation'
+ SUP auditObject STRUCTURAL
+ MUST reqId )
+.RE
+.P
+For the
+.B Abandon
+operation the
+.B reqId
+attribute contains the message ID of the request that was abandoned.
+
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.5
+ NAME 'auditAdd'
+ DESC 'Add operation'
+ SUP auditWriteObject STRUCTURAL
+ MUST reqMod )
+.RE
+.P
+The
+.B Add
+class inherits from the
+.B auditWriteObject
+class. The Add and Modify classes are very similar. The
+.B reqMod
+attribute carries all of the attributes of the original entry being added.
+(Or in the case of a Modify operation, all of the modifications being
+performed.) The values are formatted as
+.RS
+.PD 0
+.TP
+attribute:<+|\-|=|#> [ value]
+.RE
+.RE
+.PD
+Where '+' indicates an Add of a value, '\-' for Delete, '=' for Replace,
+and '#' for Increment. In an Add operation, all of the reqMod values will
+have the '+' designator.
+.P
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.6
+ NAME 'auditBind'
+ DESC 'Bind operation'
+ SUP auditObject STRUCTURAL
+ MUST ( reqVersion $ reqMethod ) )
+.RE
+.P
+The
+.B Bind
+class includes the
+.B reqVersion
+attribute which contains the LDAP protocol version specified in the Bind
+as well as the
+.B reqMethod
+attribute which contains the Bind Method used in the Bind. This will be
+the string
+.B SIMPLE
+for LDAP Simple Binds or
+.B SASL(<mech>)
+for SASL Binds.
+Note that unless configured as a global overlay, only Simple Binds using
+DNs that reside in the current database will be logged.
+
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.7
+ NAME 'auditCompare'
+ DESC 'Compare operation'
+ SUP auditObject STRUCTURAL
+ MUST reqAssertion )
+.RE
+.P
+For the
+.B Compare
+operation the
+.B reqAssertion
+attribute carries the Attribute Value Assertion used in the compare request.
+
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.8
+ NAME 'auditDelete'
+ DESC 'Delete operation'
+ SUP auditWriteObject STRUCTURAL
+ MAY reqOld )
+.RE
+.P
+The
+.B Delete
+operation needs no further parameters. However, the
+.B reqOld
+attribute may optionally be used to record the contents of the entry prior
+to its deletion. The values are formatted as
+.RS
+.PD 0
+.TP
+attribute: value
+.RE
+.PD
+The
+.B reqOld
+attribute is only populated if the entry being deleted matches the
+configured
+.B logold
+filter.
+
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.9
+ NAME 'auditModify'
+ DESC 'Modify operation'
+ SUP auditWriteObject STRUCTURAL
+ MAY reqOld MUST reqMod )
+.RE
+.P
+The
+.B Modify
+operation contains a description of modifications in the
+.B reqMod
+attribute, which was already described above in the Add operation. It may
+optionally contain the previous contents of any modified attributes in the
+.B reqOld
+attribute, using the same format as described above for the Delete operation.
+The
+.B reqOld
+attribute is only populated if the entry being modified matches the
+configured
+.B logold
+filter.
+
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.10
+ NAME 'auditModRDN'
+ DESC 'ModRDN operation'
+ SUP auditWriteObject STRUCTURAL
+ MUST ( reqNewRDN $ reqDeleteOldRDN )
+ MAY ( reqNewSuperior $ reqOld ) )
+.RE
+.P
+The
+.B ModRDN
+class uses the
+.B reqNewRDN
+attribute to carry the new RDN of the request.
+The
+.B reqDeleteOldRDN
+attribute is a Boolean value showing
+.B TRUE
+if the old RDN was deleted from the entry, or
+.B FALSE
+if the old RDN was preserved.
+The
+.B reqNewSuperior
+attribute carries the DN of the new parent entry if the request specified
+the new parent.
+The
+.B reqOld
+attribute is only populated if the entry being modified matches the
+configured
+.B logold
+filter and contains attributes in the
+.B logoldattr
+list.
+
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.11
+ NAME 'auditSearch'
+ DESC 'Search operation'
+ SUP auditReadObject STRUCTURAL
+ MUST ( reqScope $ reqDerefAliases $ reqAttrsOnly )
+ MAY ( reqFilter $ reqAttr $ reqEntries $ reqSizeLimit $
+ reqTimeLimit ) )
+.RE
+.P
+For the
+.B Search
+class the
+.B reqScope
+attribute contains the scope of the original search request, using the
+values specified for the LDAP URL format. I.e.
+.BR base ,
+.BR one ,
+.BR sub ,
+or
+.BR subord .
+The
+.B reqDerefAliases
+attribute is one of
+.BR never ,
+.BR finding ,
+.BR searching ,
+or
+.BR always ,
+denoting how aliases will be processed during the search.
+The
+.B reqAttrsOnly
+attribute is a Boolean value showing
+.B TRUE
+if only attribute names were requested, or
+.B FALSE
+if attributes and their values were requested.
+The
+.B reqFilter
+attribute carries the filter used in the search request.
+The
+.B reqAttr
+attribute lists the requested attributes if specific attributes were
+requested.
+The
+.B reqEntries
+attribute is the integer count of how many entries were returned by
+this search request.
+The
+.B reqSizeLimit
+and
+.B reqTimeLimit
+attributes indicate what limits were requested on the search operation.
+
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.5.2.12
+ NAME 'auditExtended'
+ DESC 'Extended operation'
+ SUP auditObject STRUCTURAL
+ MAY reqData )
+.RE
+.P
+The
+.B Extended
+class represents an LDAP Extended Operation. As noted above, the actual OID of
+the operation is included in the
+.B reqType
+attribute of the parent class. If any optional data was provided with the
+request, it will be contained in the
+.B reqData
+attribute as an uninterpreted octet string.
+
+.SH NOTES
+The Access Log implemented by this overlay may be used for a variety of
+other tasks, e.g. as a ChangeLog for a replication mechanism, as well
+as for security/audit logging purposes.
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5).
+
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.P
+This module was written in 2005 by Howard Chu of Symas Corporation.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-auditlog.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-auditlog.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e98de87
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-auditlog.5
@@ -0,0 +1,60 @@
+.TH SLAPO-AUDITLOG 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2005-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-auditlog \- Audit Logging overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.d
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Audit Logging overlay can be used to record all changes on a given
+backend database to a specified log file. Changes are logged as standard
+LDIF, with an additional comment header giving the timestamp of the change
+and the identity of the user making the change.
+.LP
+For Add and Modify operations the identity comes from the modifiersName
+associated with the operation. This is usually the same as the requestor's
+identity, but may be set by other overlays to reflect other values.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+This
+.B slapd.conf
+option applies to the Audit Logging overlay.
+It should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B auditlog <filename>
+Specify the fully qualified path for the log file.
+.TP
+.B olcAuditlogFile <filename>
+For use with
+.B cn=config
+.SH EXAMPLE
+The following LDIF could be used to add this overlay to
+.B cn=config
+(adjust to suit)
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+dn: olcOverlay=auditlog,olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config
+changetype: add
+objectClass: olcOverlayConfig
+objectClass: olcAuditLogConfig
+olcOverlay: auditlog
+olcAuditlogFile: /tmp/auditlog.ldif
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+.LP
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.d
+default slapd configuration directory
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config(5).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-chain.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-chain.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..37804f4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-chain.5
@@ -0,0 +1,152 @@
+.TH SLAPO-CHAIN 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-chain \- chain overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B chain
+overlay to
+.BR slapd (8)
+allows automatic referral chasing.
+Any time a referral is returned (except for bind operations),
+it is chased by using an instance of the ldap backend.
+If operations are performed with an identity (i.e. after a bind),
+that identity can be asserted while chasing the referrals
+by means of the \fIidentity assertion\fP feature of back-ldap
+(see
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5)
+for details), which is essentially based on the
+.B proxied authorization
+control [RFC 4370].
+Referral chasing can be controlled by the client by issuing the
+\fBchaining\fP control
+(see \fIdraft-sermersheim-ldap-chaining\fP for details.)
+
+.LP
+The config directives that are specific to the
+.B chain
+overlay are prefixed by
+.BR chain\- ,
+to avoid potential conflicts with directives specific to the underlying
+database or to other stacked overlays.
+
+.LP
+There are very few chain overlay specific directives; however, directives
+related to the instances of the \fIldap\fP backend that may be implicitly
+instantiated by the overlay may assume a special meaning when used
+in conjunction with this overlay. They are described in
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+and they also need to be prefixed by
+.BR chain\- .
+
+Note: this overlay is built into the \fIldap\fP backend; it is not
+a separate module.
+
+.TP
+.B overlay chain
+This directive adds the chain overlay to the current backend.
+The chain overlay may be used with any backend, but it is mainly
+intended for use with local storage backends that may return referrals.
+It is useless in conjunction with the \fIslapd\-ldap\fP and \fIslapd\-meta\fP
+backends because they already exploit the libldap specific referral chase
+feature.
+[Note: this may change in the future, as the \fBldap\fP(5) and
+\fBmeta\fP(5) backends might no longer chase referrals on their own.]
+.TP
+.B chain\-cache\-uri {FALSE|true}
+This directive instructs the \fIchain\fP overlay to cache
+connections to URIs parsed out of referrals that are not predefined,
+to be reused for later chaining.
+These URIs inherit the properties configured for the underlying
+\fBslapd\-ldap\fP(5) before any occurrence of the \fBchain\-uri\fP
+directive; basically, they are chained anonymously.
+.TP
+.B chain\-chaining [resolve=<r>] [continuation=<c>] [critical]
+This directive enables the \fIchaining\fP control
+(see \fIdraft-sermersheim-ldap-chaining\fP for details)
+with the desired resolve and continuation behaviors and criticality.
+The \fBresolve\fP parameter refers to the behavior while discovering
+a resource, namely when accessing the object indicated by the request DN;
+the \fBcontinuation\fP parameter refers to the behavior while handling
+intermediate responses, which is mostly significant for the search
+operation, but may affect extended operations that return intermediate
+responses.
+The values \fBr\fP and \fBc\fP can be any of
+.BR chainingPreferred ,
+.BR chainingRequired ,
+.BR referralsPreferred ,
+.BR referralsRequired .
+If the \fBcritical\fP flag affects the control criticality if provided.
+[This control is experimental and its support may change in the future.]
+.TP
+.B chain\-max\-depth <n>
+In case a referral is returned during referral chasing, further chasing
+occurs at most \fB<n>\fP levels deep. Set to \fB1\fP (the default)
+to disable further referral chasing.
+.TP
+.B chain\-return\-error {FALSE|true}
+In case referral chasing fails, the real error is returned instead
+of the original referral. In case multiple referral URIs are present,
+only the first error is returned. This behavior may not be always
+appropriate nor desirable, since failures in referral chasing might be
+better resolved by the client (e.g. when caused by distributed
+authentication issues).
+.TP
+.B chain\-uri <ldapuri>
+This directive instantiates a new underlying \fIldap\fP database
+and instructs it about which URI to contact to chase referrals.
+As opposed to what stated in \fBslapd\-ldap\fP(5), only one URI
+can appear after this directive; all subsequent \fBslapd\-ldap\fP(5)
+directives prefixed by \fBchain\-\fP refer to this specific instance
+of a remote server.
+.LP
+
+Directives for configuring the underlying ldap database may also
+be required, as shown in this example:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+overlay chain
+chain\-rebind\-as\-user FALSE
+
+chain\-uri "ldap://ldap1.example.com"
+chain\-rebind\-as\-user TRUE
+chain\-idassert\-bind bindmethod="simple"
+ binddn="cn=Auth,dc=example,dc=com"
+ credentials="secret"
+ mode="self"
+
+chain\-uri "ldap://ldap2.example.com"
+chain\-idassert\-bind bindmethod="simple"
+ binddn="cn=Auth,dc=example,dc=com"
+ credentials="secret"
+ mode="none"
+
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+Any valid directives for the ldap database may be used; see
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5)
+for details.
+Multiple occurrences of the \fBchain\-uri\fP directive may appear,
+to define multiple "trusted" URIs where operations with
+\fIidentity assertion\fP are chained.
+All URIs not listed in the configuration are chained anonymously.
+All \fBslapd\-ldap\fP(5) directives appearing before the first
+occurrence of \fBchain\-uri\fP are inherited by all URIs,
+unless specifically overridden inside each URI configuration.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Originally implemented by Howard Chu; extended by Pierangelo Masarati.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-collect.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-collect.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0435c98
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-collect.5
@@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
+.TH SLAPO-COLLECT 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2003-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-collect \- Collective attributes overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The collect overlay is used to provide a relatively coarse
+implementation of RFC 3671 collective attributes.
+In X.500, a collective attribute is "a user attribute whose
+values are the same for each member of an entry collection".
+
+Collective attributes are added to entries returned by a search operation
+when the entry is within the scope of the related ancestor.
+Collective attributes can only be modified when the modification affects
+the related ancestor.
+
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+This
+.B slapd.conf
+option applies to the collect overlay.
+It should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B collectinfo <DN> <attrlist>
+Specify the
+.B DN
+of the ancestor entry and the set of related collective attributes, where
+.B attrlist
+is a comma-separated list of attributes.
+The
+.B DN
+should be within the naming context of the database.
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+The
+.BR slapo\-collect (5)
+overlay supports dynamic configuration via
+.BR back-config .
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+This module was written in 2003 by Howard Chu.
+This man page was written in 2008 by Pierangelo Masarati.
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-constraint.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-constraint.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fa8acb1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-constraint.5
@@ -0,0 +1,149 @@
+.TH SLAPO-CONSTRAINT 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2005-2006 Hewlett-Packard Company
+.\" Copyright 2006-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-constraint \- Attribute Constraint Overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH 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.
+.LP
+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.
+.LP
+It constrains only LDAP \fIadd\fP, \fImodify\fP and \fIrename\fP commands
+and only seeks to control the \fIadd\fP and \fIreplace\fP values
+of \fImodify\fP and \fIrename\fP requests.
+.LP
+No constraints are applied for operations performed with the
+.I relax
+control set.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+This
+.B slapd.conf
+option applies to the constraint overlay.
+It should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B constraint_attribute <attribute_name>[,...] <type> <value> [<extra> [...]]
+Specifies the constraint which should apply to the comma-separated
+attribute list named as the first parameter.
+Five types of constraint are currently supported -
+.BR regex ,
+.BR size ,
+.BR count ,
+.BR uri ,
+and
+.BR set .
+
+The parameter following the
+.B regex
+type is a Unix style regular expression (See
+.BR regex (7)
+). The parameter following the
+.B 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
+.B 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
+.B size
+type can be used to enforce a limit on an attribute length, and the
+.B count
+type limits the number of values of an attribute.
+
+Extra parameters can occur in any order after those described above.
+.RS
+.TP
+.B <extra> : restrict=<uri>
+.RE
+
+.RS
+This extra parameter allows one to restrict the application of the corresponding
+constraint only to entries that match the
+.IR base ,
+.I scope
+and
+.I filter
+portions of the LDAP URI.
+The
+.IR base ,
+if present, must be within the naming context of the database.
+The
+.I scope
+is only used when the
+.I base
+is present; it defaults to
+.BR base .
+The other parameters of the URI are not allowed.
+.RE
+
+.LP
+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.
+.SH EXAMPLES
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+overlay constraint
+constraint_attribute jpegPhoto size 131072
+constraint_attribute userPassword count 3
+constraint_attribute mail regex ^[[:alnum:]]+@mydomain.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)"
+.fi
+
+.RE
+A specification like the above would reject any
+.B mail
+attribute which did not look like
+.BR "<alpha-numeric string>@mydomain.com" .
+It would also reject any
+.B title
+attribute whose values were not listed in the
+.B title
+attribute of any
+.B 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
+.B cn
+to be constructed by pairing values of the attributes
+.B sn
+and
+.BR givenName ,
+separated by a space, but only for entries derived from the objectClass
+.BR inetOrgPerson .
+.RE
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+This module was written in 2005 by Neil Dunbar of Hewlett-Packard and subsequently
+extended by Howard Chu and Emmanuel Dreyfus.
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-dds.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-dds.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a3d6d08
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-dds.5
@@ -0,0 +1,271 @@
+.TH SLAPO-DDS 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2005-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-dds \- Dynamic Directory Services overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B dds
+overlay to
+.BR slapd (8)
+implements dynamic objects as per RFC 2589.
+The name
+.B dds
+stands for
+Dynamic Directory Services.
+It allows one to define dynamic objects, characterized by the
+.B dynamicObject
+objectClass.
+
+Dynamic objects have a limited lifetime, determined by a time-to-live
+(TTL) that can be refreshed by means of a specific
+.B refresh
+extended operation.
+This operation allows one to set the Client Refresh Period (CRP),
+namely the period between refreshes that is required to preserve the
+dynamic object from expiration.
+The expiration time is computed by adding the requested TTL to the
+current time.
+When dynamic objects reach the end of their lifetime without being
+further refreshed, they are automatically deleted.
+There is no guarantee of immediate deletion, so clients should not count
+on it.
+
+Dynamic objects can have subordinates, provided these also are dynamic
+objects.
+RFC 2589 does not specify what the behavior of a dynamic directory
+service should be when a dynamic object with (dynamic) subordinates
+expires.
+In this implementation, the lifetime of dynamic objects with subordinates
+is prolonged until all the dynamic subordinates expire.
+
+
+This
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+directive adds the
+.B dds
+overlay to the current database:
+
+.TP
+.B overlay dds
+
+.LP
+The database must have a
+.B rootdn
+specified, otherwise, the
+.B dds
+overlay will not be able to delete expired objects. The
+.B dds
+overlay may be used with any backend that implements the
+.BR add ,
+.BR modify ,
+.BR search ,
+and
+.BR delete
+operations.
+Since its use may result in many internal entry lookups, adds
+and deletes, it should be best used in conjunction with backends
+that have reasonably good write performances.
+
+.LP
+The config directives that are specific to the
+.B dds
+overlay are prefixed by
+.BR dds\- ,
+to avoid potential conflicts with directives specific to the underlying
+database or to other stacked overlays.
+
+.TP
+.B dds\-max\-ttl <ttl>
+Specifies the max TTL value.
+This is also the default TTL newly created
+dynamic objects receive, unless
+.B dds\-default\-ttl
+is set.
+When the client with a refresh extended operation requests a TTL higher
+than it, sizeLimitExceeded is returned.
+This value must be between 86400 (1 day, the default) and 31557600
+(1 year plus 6 hours, as per RFC 2589).
+
+.TP
+.B dds\-min\-ttl <ttl>
+Specifies the min TTL value; clients requesting a lower TTL by means
+of the refresh extended operation actually obtain this value as CRP.
+If set to 0 (the default), no lower limit is set.
+
+.TP
+.B dds\-default\-ttl <ttl>
+Specifies the default TTL value that newly created dynamic objects get.
+If set to 0 (the default), the
+.B dds\-max\-ttl
+is used.
+
+.TP
+.B dds\-interval <ttl>
+Specifies the interval between expiration checks; defaults to 1 hour.
+
+.TP
+.B dds\-tolerance <ttl>
+Specifies an extra time that is added to the timer that actually wakes up
+the thread that will delete an expired dynamic object.
+So the nominal lifetime of the entry is that specified in the
+.B entryTtl
+attribute, but its lifetime will actually be
+.BR "entryTtl + tolerance" .
+Note that there is no guarantee that the lifetime of a dynamic object
+will be
+.I exactly
+the requested TTL; due to implementation details, it may be longer, which
+is allowed by RFC 2589.
+By default, tolerance is 0.
+
+.TP
+.B dds\-max\-dynamicObjects <num>
+Specifies the maximum number of dynamic objects that can simultaneously exist
+within a naming context.
+This allows one to limit the amount of resources (mostly in terms of
+run-queue size) that are used by dynamic objects.
+By default, no limit is set.
+
+.TP
+.B dds\-state {TRUE|false}
+Specifies if the Dynamic Directory Services feature is enabled or not.
+By default it is; however, a proxy does not need to keep track of dynamic
+objects itself, it only needs to inform the frontend that support for
+dynamic objects is available.
+
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+The
+.B dds
+overlay restricts the refresh operation by requiring
+.B manage
+access to the
+.B entryTtl
+attribute (see
+.BR slapd.access (5)
+for details about the
+.B manage
+access privilege).
+Since the
+.B entryTtl
+is an operational, NO-USER-MODIFICATION attribute, no direct write access
+to it is possible.
+So the
+.B dds
+overlay turns refresh extended operation into an internal modification to
+the value of the
+.B entryTtl
+attribute with the
+.B relax
+control set.
+
+RFC 2589 recommends that anonymous clients should not be allowed to refresh
+a dynamic object.
+This can be implemented by appropriately crafting access control to obtain
+the desired effect.
+
+Example: restrict refresh to authenticated clients
+
+.RS
+.nf
+access to attrs=entryTtl
+ by users manage
+ by * read
+
+.fi
+.RE
+Example: restrict refresh to the creator of the dynamic object
+
+.RS
+.nf
+access to attrs=entryTtl
+ by dnattr=creatorsName manage
+ by * read
+
+.fi
+.RE
+Another suggested usage of dynamic objects is to implement dynamic meetings;
+in this case, all the participants to the meeting are allowed to refresh
+the meeting object, but only the creator can delete it (otherwise it will
+be deleted when the TTL expires)
+
+Example: assuming \fIparticipant\fP is a valid DN-valued attribute,
+allow users to start a meeting and to join it; restrict refresh
+to the participants; restrict delete to the creator
+
+.RS
+.nf
+access to dn.base="cn=Meetings"
+ attrs=children
+ by users write
+
+access to dn.onelevel="cn=Meetings"
+ attrs=entry
+ by dnattr=creatorsName write
+ by * read
+
+access to dn.onelevel="cn=Meetings"
+ attrs=participant
+ by dnattr=creatorsName write
+ by users selfwrite
+ by * read
+
+access to dn.onelevel="cn=Meetings"
+ attrs=entryTtl
+ by dnattr=participant manage
+ by * read
+
+.fi
+.RE
+
+.SH REPLICATION
+This implementation of RFC 2589 provides a restricted interpretation of how
+dynamic objects replicate. Only the provider takes care of handling dynamic
+object expiration, while consumers simply see the dynamic object as a plain
+object.
+
+When replicating these objects, one needs to explicitly exclude the
+.B dynamicObject
+class and the
+.B entryTtl
+attribute.
+This implementation of RFC 2589 introduces a new operational attribute,
+.BR entryExpireTimestamp ,
+that contains the expiration timestamp. This must be excluded from
+replication as well.
+
+The quick and dirty solution is to set
+.B schemacheck=off
+in the syncrepl configuration
+and, optionally, exclude the operational attributes from replication, using
+
+.RS
+.nf
+syncrepl ...
+ exattrs=entryTtl,entryExpireTimestamp
+.fi
+.RE
+
+In any case the overlay must be either statically built in or run-time loaded
+by the consumer, so that it is aware of the
+.B entryExpireTimestamp
+operational attribute; however, it must not be configured in the shadow
+database.
+Currently, there is no means to remove the
+.B dynamicObject
+class from the entry; this may be seen as a feature, since it allows one to see
+the dynamic properties of the object.
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Implemented by Pierangelo Masarati.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-dyngroup.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-dyngroup.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3530497
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-dyngroup.5
@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
+.TH SLAPO-DYNGROUP 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2005-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-dyngroup \- Dynamic Group overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Dynamic Group overlay allows clients to use LDAP Compare operations
+to test the membership of a dynamic group the same way they would check
+against a static group. Compare operations targeting a group's static
+member attribute will be intercepted and tested against the configured
+dynamic group's URL attribute.
+.LP
+Note that this intercept only happens if the actual
+Compare operation does not return a LDAP_COMPARE_TRUE result. So if a
+group has both static and dynamic members, the static member list will
+be checked first.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+This
+.B slapd.conf
+option applies to the Dynamic Group overlay.
+It should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B attrpair <memberAttr> <URLattr>
+Specify the attributes to be compared. A compare operation on the
+.I memberAttr
+will cause the
+.I URLattr
+to be evaluated for the result.
+.SH EXAMPLES
+.nf
+ database bdb
+ ...
+ overlay dyngroup
+ attrpair member memberURL
+.fi
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Howard Chu
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-dynlist.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-dynlist.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9bf27d4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-dynlist.5
@@ -0,0 +1,212 @@
+.TH SLAPO-DYNLIST 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-dynlist \- Dynamic List overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B dynlist
+overlay to
+.BR slapd (8)
+allows expansion of dynamic groups and more.
+Any time an entry with a specific objectClass (defined in the overlay configuration) is being returned,
+the LDAP URI-valued occurrences of a specific attribute (also defined in the overlay configuration) are
+expanded into the corresponding entries, and the values
+of the attributes listed in the URI are added to the original
+entry.
+No recursion is allowed, to avoid potential infinite loops.
+
+Since the resulting entry is dynamically constructed,
+it does not exist until it is constructed while being returned.
+As a consequence, dynamically added attributes do not participate
+in the filter matching phase of the search request handling.
+In other words, \fIfiltering for dynamically added attributes always fails\fP.
+
+The resulting entry must comply with the LDAP data model, so constraints
+are enforced.
+For example, if a \fISINGLE\-VALUE\fP attribute is listed,
+only the first value found during the list expansion appears in the final entry.
+The above described behavior is disabled when the \fImanageDSAit\fP
+control (RFC 3296) is used.
+In that case, the contents of the dynamic group entry is returned;
+namely, the URLs are returned instead of being expanded.
+
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+The config directives that are specific to the
+.B dynlist
+overlay must be prefixed by
+.BR dynlist\- ,
+to avoid potential conflicts with directives specific to the underlying
+database or to other stacked overlays.
+
+.TP
+.B overlay dynlist
+This directive adds the dynlist overlay to the current database,
+or to the frontend, if used before any database instantiation; see
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details.
+
+.LP
+This
+.B slapd.conf
+configuration option is defined for the dynlist overlay. It may have multiple
+occurrences, and it must appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B dynlist\-attrset <group-oc> [<URI>] <URL-ad> [[<mapped-ad>:]<member-ad> ...]
+The value
+.B group\-oc
+is the name of the objectClass that triggers the dynamic expansion of the
+data.
+
+The optional
+.B URI
+restricts expansion only to entries matching the \fIDN\fP,
+the \fIscope\fP and the \fIfilter\fP portions of the URI.
+
+The value
+.B URL-ad
+is the name of the attributeDescription that contains the URI that is
+expanded by the overlay; if none is present, no expansion occurs.
+If the intersection of the attributes requested by the search operation
+(or the asserted attribute for compares) and the attributes listed
+in the URI is empty, no expansion occurs for that specific URI.
+It must be a subtype of \fIlabeledURI\fP.
+
+The value
+.B member-ad
+is optional; if present, the overlay behaves as a dynamic group: this
+attribute will list the DN of the entries resulting from the internal search.
+In this case, the \fIattrs\fP portion of the URIs in the
+.B URL-ad
+attribute must be absent, and the \fIDN\fPs
+of all the entries resulting from the expansion of the URIs are listed
+as values of this attribute.
+Compares that assert the value of the
+.B member-ad
+attribute of entries with
+.B group-oc
+objectClass apply as if the DN of the entries resulting from the expansion
+of the URI were present in the
+.B group-oc
+entry as values of the
+.B member-ad
+attribute.
+
+Alternatively,
+.B mapped-ad
+can be used to remap attributes obtained through expansion.
+.B member-ad
+attributes are not filled by expanded DN, but are remapped as
+.B mapped-ad
+attributes. Multiple mapping statements can be used.
+
+.LP
+The dynlist overlay may be used with any backend, but it is mainly
+intended for use with local storage backends.
+In case the URI expansion is very resource-intensive and occurs frequently
+with well-defined patterns, one should consider adding a proxycache
+later on in the overlay stack.
+
+.SH AUTHORIZATION
+By default the expansions are performed using the identity of the current
+LDAP user.
+This identity may be overridden by setting the
+.B dgIdentity
+attribute in the group's entry to the DN of another LDAP user.
+In that case the dgIdentity will be used when expanding the URIs in the object.
+Setting the dgIdentity to a zero-length string will cause the expansions
+to be performed anonymously.
+Note that the dgIdentity attribute is defined in the
+.B dyngroup
+schema, and this schema must be loaded before the dgIdentity
+authorization feature may be used.
+If the
+.B dgAuthz
+attribute is also present in the group's entry, its values are used
+to determine what identities are authorized to use the
+.B dgIdentity
+to expand the group.
+Values of the
+.B dgAuthz
+attribute must conform to the (experimental) \fIOpenLDAP authz\fP syntax.
+
+.SH EXAMPLE
+This example collects all the email addresses of a database into a single
+entry; first of all, make sure that slapd.conf contains the directives:
+
+.LP
+.nf
+ include /path/to/dyngroup.schema
+ # ...
+
+ database <database>
+ # ...
+
+ overlay dynlist
+ dynlist\-attrset groupOfURLs memberURL
+.fi
+.LP
+and that slapd loads dynlist.la, if compiled as a run-time module;
+then add to the database an entry like
+.LP
+.nf
+ dn: cn=Dynamic List,ou=Groups,dc=example,dc=com
+ objectClass: groupOfURLs
+ cn: Dynamic List
+ memberURL: ldap:///ou=People,dc=example,dc=com?mail?sub?(objectClass=person)
+.fi
+
+If no <attrs> are provided in the URI, all (non-operational) attributes are
+collected.
+
+This example implements the dynamic group feature on the
+.B member
+attribute:
+
+.LP
+.nf
+ include /path/to/dyngroup.schema
+ # ...
+
+ database <database>
+ # ...
+
+ overlay dynlist
+ dynlist\-attrset groupOfURLs memberURL member
+.fi
+.LP
+
+A dynamic group with dgIdentity authorization could be created with an
+entry like
+.LP
+.nf
+ dn: cn=Dynamic Group,ou=Groups,dc=example,dc=com
+ objectClass: groupOfURLs
+ objectClass: dgIdentityAux
+ cn: Dynamic Group
+ memberURL: ldap:///ou=People,dc=example,dc=com??sub?(objectClass=person)
+ dgIdentity: cn=Group Proxy,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com
+.fi
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+The
+.BR slapo\-dynlist (5)
+overlay supports dynamic configuration via
+.BR back-config .
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.P
+This module was written in 2004 by Pierangelo Masarati for SysNet s.n.c.
+.P
+Attribute remapping was contributed in 2008 by Emmanuel Dreyfus.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-memberof.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-memberof.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cbf3203
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-memberof.5
@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
+.TH SLAPO-MEMBEROF 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-memberof \- Reverse Group Membership overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B memberof
+overlay to
+.BR slapd (8)
+allows automatic reverse group membership maintenance.
+Any time a group entry is modified, its members are modified as appropriate
+in order to keep a DN-valued "is member of" attribute updated with the DN
+of the group.
+
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+The config directives that are specific to the
+.B memberof
+overlay must be prefixed by
+.BR memberof\- ,
+to avoid potential conflicts with directives specific to the underlying
+database or to other stacked overlays.
+
+.TP
+.B overlay memberof
+This directive adds the memberof overlay to the current database; see
+.BR slapd.conf (5)
+for details.
+
+.LP
+The following
+.B slapd.conf
+configuration options are defined for the memberof overlay.
+
+.TP
+.BI memberof\-group\-oc \ <group-oc>
+The value
+.I <group-oc>
+is the name of the objectClass that triggers the reverse group membership
+update.
+It defaults to \fIgroupOfNames\fP.
+
+.TP
+.BI memberof\-member\-ad \ <member-ad>
+The value
+.I <member-ad>
+is the name of the attribute that contains the names of the members
+in the group objects; it must be DN-valued.
+It defaults to \fImember\fP.
+
+.TP
+.BI memberof\-memberof\-ad \ <memberof-ad>
+The value
+.I <memberof-ad>
+is the name of the attribute that contains the names of the groups
+an entry is member of; it must be DN-valued. Its contents are
+automatically updated by the overlay.
+It defaults to \fImemberOf\fP.
+
+.TP
+.BI memberof\-dn \ <dn>
+The value
+.I <dn>
+contains the DN that is used as \fImodifiersName\fP for internal
+modifications performed to update the reverse group membership.
+It defaults to the \fIrootdn\fP of the underlying database.
+
+.TP
+.BI "memberof\-dangling {" ignore ", " drop ", " error "}"
+This option determines the behavior of the overlay when, during
+a modification, it encounters dangling references.
+The default is
+.IR ignore ,
+which may leave dangling references.
+Other options are
+.IR drop ,
+which discards those modifications that would result in dangling
+references, and
+.IR error ,
+which causes modifications that would result in dangling references
+to fail.
+
+.TP
+.BI memberof\-dangling\-error \ <error-code>
+If
+.BR memberof\-dangling
+is set to
+.IR error ,
+this configuration parameter can be used to modify the response code
+returned in case of violation. It defaults to "constraint violation",
+but other implementations are known to return "no such object" instead.
+
+.TP
+.BI "memberof\-refint {" true "|" FALSE "}"
+This option determines whether the overlay will try to preserve
+referential integrity or not.
+If set to
+.IR TRUE ,
+when an entry containing values of the "is member of" attribute is modified,
+the corresponding groups are modified as well.
+
+.LP
+The memberof overlay may be used with any backend that provides full
+read-write functionality, but it is mainly intended for use
+with local storage backends. The maintenance operations it performs
+are internal to the server on which the overlay is configured and
+are never replicated. Consumer servers should be configured with their
+own instances of the memberOf overlay if it is desired to maintain
+these memberOf attributes on the consumers. Note that slapo-memberOf
+is not compatible with syncrepl based replication, and should not be
+used in a replicated environment. An alternative is to use slapo-dynlist
+to emulate slapo-memberOf behavior.
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+The
+.BR slapo\-memberof (5)
+overlay supports dynamic configuration via
+.BR back-config .
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.P
+This module was written in 2005 by Pierangelo Masarati for SysNet s.n.c.
+
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-pbind.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-pbind.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..170dba0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-pbind.5
@@ -0,0 +1,61 @@
+.TH SLAPO-PBIND 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2010-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-pbind \- proxy bind overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B pbind
+overlay to
+.BR slapd (8)
+forwards Simple Binds on a local database to a remote
+LDAP server instead of processing them locally. The remote
+connection is managed using an instance of the ldap backend.
+
+.LP
+The
+.B pbind
+overlay uses a subset of the \fIldap\fP backend's config directives. They
+are described in more detail in
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5).
+
+Note: this overlay is built into the \fIldap\fP backend; it is not a
+separate module.
+
+.TP
+.B overlay pbind
+This directive adds the proxy bind overlay to the current backend.
+The proxy bind overlay may be used with any backend, but it is mainly
+intended for use with local storage backends.
+
+.TP
+.B uri <ldapurl>
+LDAP server to use.
+
+.TP
+.B tls <TLS parameters>
+Specify the use of TLS.
+
+.TP
+.B network\-timeout <time>
+Set the network timeout.
+
+.TP
+.B quarantine <quarantine parameters>
+Turns on quarantine of URIs that returned
+.IR LDAP_UNAVAILABLE .
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Howard Chu
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-pcache.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-pcache.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dd61392
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-pcache.5
@@ -0,0 +1,323 @@
+.TH SLAPO-PCACHE 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" Copyright 2001, Pierangelo Masarati, All rights reserved. <ando@sys-net.it>
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-pcache \- proxy cache overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B pcache
+overlay to
+.BR slapd (8)
+allows caching of LDAP search requests (queries) in a local database.
+For an incoming query, the
+proxy cache determines its corresponding \fBtemplate\fP. If the template
+was specified as cacheable using the \fBpcacheTemplate\fP directive
+and the request is contained in a cached request, it is answered from
+the proxy cache.
+Otherwise, the search is performed as usual and cacheable search results
+are saved in the cache for use in future queries.
+.LP
+
+A template is defined by a filter string and an index identifying a set of
+attributes. The \fBtemplate string\fP for a query can be obtained by
+removing assertion values from the RFC 4515 representation of its search
+filter. A query belongs to a template if its template string and set of
+projected attributes correspond to a cacheable template.
+Examples of template strings are \fB(mail=)\fP, \fB(|(sn=)(cn=))\fP,
+\fB(&(sn=)(givenName=))\fP.
+
+.LP
+The config directives that are specific to the
+.B pcache
+overlay can be prefixed by
+.BR pcache\- ,
+to avoid conflicts with directives specific to the underlying database
+or to other stacked overlays. This may be particularly useful for those
+directives that refer to the backend used for local storage.
+The following cache specific directives can be used to configure the proxy
+cache:
+.TP
+.B overlay pcache
+This directive adds the proxy cache overlay to the current backend. The
+proxy cache overlay may be used with any backend but is intended for use
+with the
+.BR ldap ,
+.BR meta ,
+and
+.BR sql
+backends. Please note that the underlying backend must have a configured
+.BR rootdn.
+.TP
+.B pcache <database> <max_entries> <numattrsets> <entry_limit> <cc_period>
+The directive enables proxy caching in the current backend and sets general
+cache parameters. A <database> backend will be used internally to maintain
+the cached entries. The chosen database will need to be configured as well,
+as shown below. Cache replacement is invoked when the cache size grows to
+<max_entries> entries and continues till the cache size drops below this size.
+<numattrsets> should be equal to the number of following \fBpcacheAttrset\fP
+directives. Queries are cached only if they correspond to a cacheable template
+(specified by the \fBpcacheTemplate\fP directive) and the number of entries
+returned is less than <entry_limit>. Consistency check is performed every
+<cc_period> duration (specified in secs). In each cycle queries with expired
+"time to live(\fBTTL\fP)" are removed. A sample cache configuration is:
+.LP
+.RS
+pcache \fBmdb 10000 1 50 100\fP
+.RE
+
+.TP
+.B pcacheAttrset <index> <attrs...>
+Used to associate a set of attributes <attrs..> with an <index>. Each attribute
+set is associated with an integer from 0 to <numattrsets>\-1. These indices are
+used by the \fBpcacheTemplate\fP directive to define cacheable templates.
+A set of attributes cannot be empty. A set of attributes can contain the
+special attributes "*" (all user attributes), "+" (all operational attributes)
+or both; in the latter case, any other attribute is redundant and should
+be avoided for clarity. A set of attributes can contain "1.1" as the only
+attribute; in this case, only the presence of the entries is cached.
+Attributes prefixed by "undef:" need not be present in the schema.
+
+.TP
+.B pcacheMaxQueries <queries>
+Specify the maximum number of queries to cache. The default is 10000.
+
+.TP
+.B pcacheValidate { TRUE | FALSE }
+Check whether the results of a query being cached can actually be returned
+from the cache by the proxy DSA. When enabled, the entries being returned
+while caching the results of a query are checked to ensure consistency
+with the schema known to the proxy DSA. In case of failure, the query
+is not cached. By default, the check is off.
+
+.TP
+.B pcacheOffline { TRUE | FALSE }
+Set the cache to offline mode. While offline, the consistency checker
+will be stopped and no expirations will occur. This allows the cache
+contents to be used indefinitely while the proxy is cut off from network
+access to the remote DSA. The default is FALSE, i.e. consistency
+checks and expirations will be performed.
+
+.TP
+.B pcachePersist { TRUE | FALSE }
+Specify whether the cached queries should be saved across restarts
+of the caching proxy, to provide hot startup of the cache. Only non-expired
+queries are reloaded. The default is FALSE.
+
+.BR CAVEAT :
+of course, the configuration of the proxy cache must not change
+across restarts; the pcache overlay does not perform any consistency
+checks in this sense.
+In detail, this option should be disabled unless the existing
+.B pcacheAttrset
+and
+.B pcacheTemplate
+directives are not changed neither in order nor in contents.
+If new sets and templates are added, or if other details of the pcache
+overlay configuration changed, this feature should not be affected.
+
+.TP
+.B pcacheTemplate <template_string> <attrset_index> <ttl> [<negttl> [<limitttl> [<ttr>]]]
+Specifies a cacheable template and "time to live" <ttl> of queries
+belonging to the template. An optional <negttl> can be used to specify
+that negative results (i.e., queries that returned zero entries)
+should also be cached for the specified amount of time. Negative
+results are not cached by default (<negttl> set to 0).
+An optional <limitttl> can be used to specify that results
+hitting a sizelimit should also be cached for the specified amount of time.
+Results hitting a sizelimit are not cached by default (<limitttl> set to 0).
+An optional <ttr> "time to refresh" can be used to specify that cached
+entries should be automatically refreshed after a certain time. Entries
+will only be refreshed while they have not expired, so the <ttl> should
+be larger than the <ttr> for this option to be useful. Entries are not
+refreshed by default (<ttr> set to 0).
+
+.TP
+.B pcacheBind <filter_template> <attrset_index> <ttr> <scope> <base>
+Specifies a template for caching Simple Bind credentials based on an
+already defined \fBpcacheTemplate\fP. The <filter_template> is similar
+to a <template_string> except that it may have some values present. Its
+purpose is to allow the overlay to generate filters similar to what other
+applications do when they do a Search immediately before a Bind. E.g.,
+if a client like nss_ldap is configured to search for a user with the
+filter "(&(objectClass=posixAccount)(uid=<username>))" then the corresponding
+template "(&(objectClass=posixAccount)(uid=))" should be used here. When
+converted to a regular template e.g. "(&(objectClass=)(uid=))" this
+template and the <attrset_index> must match an already defined
+\fBpcacheTemplate\fP clause. The "time to refresh" <ttr> determines the
+time interval after which the cached credentials may be refreshed. The
+first Bind request that occurs after that time will trigger the refresh
+attempt. Refreshes are not performed when the overlay is Offline. There
+is no "time to live" parameter for the Bind credentials; the credentials
+will expire according to the \fBpcacheTemplate\fP ttl. The <scope> and
+<base> should match the search scope and base used by the authentication
+clients. The cached credentials are not stored in cleartext, they are
+hashed using the default password hash.
+By default Bind caching is not enabled.
+
+.TP
+.B pcachePosition { head | tail }
+Specifies whether the response callback should be placed at the
+.B tail
+(the default) or at the
+.B head
+(actually, wherever the stacking sequence would make it appear)
+of the callback list. This affects how the overlay interacts with other
+overlays, since the proxycache overlay should be executed as early
+as possible (and thus configured as late as possible), to get
+a chance to return the cached results; however, if executed early
+at response, it would cache entries that may be later "massaged"
+by other databases and thus returned \fIafter\fP massaging the first
+time, and \fIbefore\fP massaging when cached.
+
+.TP
+There are some constraints:
+
+all values must be positive;
+
+.B <entry_limit>
+must be less than or equal to
+.BR <max_entries> ;
+
+.B <numattrsets>
+attribute sets SHOULD be defined by using the directive
+.BR pcacheAttrset ;
+
+all attribute sets SHOULD be referenced by (at least) one
+.B pcacheTemplate
+directive;
+
+.LP
+The following adds a template with filter string \fB(&(sn=)(givenName=))\fP
+and attributes mail, postaladdress, telephonenumber and a TTL of 1 hour.
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+pcacheAttrset \fB0 mail postaladdress telephonenumber\fP
+pcacheTemplate \fB(&(sn=)(givenName=)) 0 3600\fP
+.fi
+.RE
+
+.LP
+Directives for configuring the underlying database must also be given, as
+shown here:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+directory /var/tmp/cache
+cachesize 100
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+Any valid directives for the chosen database type may be used. Indexing
+should be used as appropriate for the queries being handled. In addition,
+an equality index on the \fBpcacheQueryid\fP attribute should be configured, to
+assist in the removal of expired query data.
+.SH BACKWARD COMPATIBILITY
+The configuration keywords have been renamed and the older form is
+deprecated. These older keywords are still recognized but may disappear
+in future releases.
+
+.TP
+.B proxycache
+use pcache
+
+.TP
+.B proxyattrset
+use pcacheAttrset
+
+.TP
+.B proxycachequeries
+use pcacheMaxQueries
+
+.TP
+.B proxycheckcacheability
+use pcacheValidate
+
+.TP
+.B proxysavequeries
+use pcachePersist
+
+.TP
+.B proxytemplate
+use pcacheTemplate
+
+.TP
+.B response-callback
+use pcachePosition
+
+.SH CAVEATS
+Caching data is prone to inconsistencies because updates on the remote server
+will not be reflected in the response of the cache at least (and at most)
+for the duration of the
+.B pcacheTemplate
+.BR TTL .
+These inconsistencies can be minimized by careful use of the TTR.
+
+The remote server should expose the
+.B objectClass
+attribute because the underlying database that actually caches the entries
+may need it for optimal local processing of the queries.
+
+The proxy server should contain all the schema information required for caching.
+Significantly, it needs the schema of attributes used in the query templates.
+If the objectClass attribute is used in a query template, it needs the definition
+of the objectClasses of the entries it is supposed to cache.
+It is the responsibility of the proxy administrator to keep the proxy schema
+lined up with that of the proxied server.
+
+Another potential (and subtle) inconsistency may occur when data is retrieved
+with different identities and specific per-identity access control
+is enforced by the remote server.
+If data was retrieved with an identity that collected only partial results
+because of access rules enforcement on the remote server, other users
+with different access privileges on the remote server will get different
+results from the remote server and from the cache.
+If those users have higher access privileges on the remote server, they will
+get from the cache only a subset of the results they would get directly
+from the remote server; but if they have lower access privileges, they will
+get from the cache a superset of the results they would get directly
+from the remote server.
+Either occurrence may or may not be acceptable, based on the security policy
+of the cache and of the remote server.
+It is important to note that in this case the proxy is violating the security
+of the remote server by disclosing to an identity data that was collected
+by another identity.
+For this reason, it is suggested that, when using
+.BR back-ldap ,
+proxy caching be used in conjunction with the
+.I identity assertion
+feature of
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5)
+(see the
+.B idassert\-bind
+and the
+.B idassert\-authz
+statements), so that remote server interrogation occurs with a vanilla identity
+that has some relatively high
+.B search
+and
+.B read
+access privileges, and the "real" access control is delegated to the proxy's ACLs.
+Beware that since only the cached fraction of the real datum is available
+to the cache, it may not be possible to enforce the same access rules that
+are defined on the remote server.
+When security is a concern, cached proxy access must be carefully tailored.
+.SH FILES
+
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+.BR slapd\-meta (5),
+.BR slapd\-sql (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Originally implemented by Apurva Kumar as an extension to back-meta;
+turned into an overlay by Howard Chu.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-ppolicy.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-ppolicy.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4810966
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-ppolicy.5
@@ -0,0 +1,836 @@
+.TH SLAPO_PPOLICY 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2004-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-ppolicy \- Password Policy overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+.LP
+The
+.B ppolicy
+overlay
+is an implementation of the most recent IETF Password
+Policy proposal for LDAP. When instantiated, it intercepts,
+decodes and applies specific password policy controls to overall
+use of a backend database, changes to user password fields, etc.
+.P
+The overlay provides a variety of password control mechanisms. They
+include password aging -- both minimum and maximum ages, password
+reuse and duplication control, account time-outs, mandatory password
+resets, acceptable password content, and even grace logins.
+Different groups of users may be associated with different password
+policies, and there is no limit to the number of password policies
+that may be created.
+.P
+Note that some of the policies do not take effect when the operation
+is performed with the
+.B rootdn
+identity; all the operations, when performed with any other identity,
+may be subjected to constraints, like access control. This overlay
+requires a rootdn to be configured on the database.
+.P
+Note that the IETF Password Policy proposal for LDAP makes sense
+when considering a single-valued password attribute, while
+the userPassword attribute allows multiple values. This implementation
+enforces a single value for the userPassword attribute, despite
+its specification.
+.P
+In addition to supporting the IETF Password Policy, this module can
+send the Netscape Password validity controls when configured to do so.
+
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+configuration options apply to the ppolicy overlay. They should appear
+after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B ppolicy_default <policyDN>
+Specify the DN of the pwdPolicy object to use when no specific policy is
+set on a given user's entry. If there is no specific policy for an entry
+and no default is given, then no policies will be enforced.
+.TP
+.B ppolicy_forward_updates
+Specify that policy state changes that result from Bind operations (such
+as recording failures, lockout, etc.) on a consumer should be forwarded
+to a provider instead of being written directly into the consumer's local
+database. This setting is only useful on a replication consumer, and
+also requires the
+.B updateref
+setting and
+.B chain
+overlay to be appropriately configured.
+.TP
+.B ppolicy_hash_cleartext
+Specify that cleartext passwords present in Add and Modify requests should
+be hashed before being stored in the database. This violates the X.500/LDAP
+information model, but may be needed to compensate for LDAP clients that
+don't use the Password Modify extended operation to manage passwords. It
+is recommended that when this option is used that compare, search, and
+read access be denied to all directory users.
+.TP
+.B ppolicy_use_lockout
+A client will always receive an LDAP
+.B InvalidCredentials
+response when
+Binding to a locked account. By default, when a Password Policy control
+was provided on the Bind request, a Password Policy response will be
+included with no special error code set. This option changes the
+Password Policy response to include the
+.B AccountLocked
+error code. Note
+that sending the
+.B AccountLocked
+error code provides useful information
+to an attacker; sites that are sensitive to security issues should not
+enable this option.
+.TP
+.B ppolicy_send_netscape_controls
+If set, ppolicy will send the password policy expired (2.16.840.1.113730.3.4.4)
+and password policy expiring (2.16.840.1.113730.3.4.5) controls when
+appropriate. The controls are not sent for bind requests where the Password
+policy control has already been requested. Default is not to send the controls.
+
+.SH OBJECT CLASS
+The
+.B ppolicy
+overlay depends on the
+.B pwdPolicy
+object class. The definition of that class is as follows:
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.2.1
+ NAME 'pwdPolicy'
+ AUXILIARY
+ SUP top
+ MUST ( pwdAttribute )
+ MAY (
+ pwdMinAge $ pwdMaxAge $ pwdInHistory $
+ pwdCheckQuality $ pwdMinLength $
+ pwdExpireWarning $ pwdGraceAuthnLimit $
+ pwdLockout $ pwdLockoutDuration $
+ pwdMaxFailure $ pwdFailureCountInterval $
+ pwdMustChange $ pwdAllowUserChange $
+ pwdSafeModify $ pwdMaxRecordedFailure ) )
+.RE
+
+This implementation also provides an additional
+.B pwdPolicyChecker
+objectclass, used for password quality checking (see below).
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4754.2.99.1
+ NAME 'pwdPolicyChecker'
+ AUXILIARY
+ SUP top
+ MAY ( pwdCheckModule ) )
+.RE
+.P
+Every account that should be subject to password policy control should
+have a
+.B
+pwdPolicySubentry
+attribute containing the DN of a valid
+.B pwdPolicy
+entry, or they can simply use the configured default.
+In this way different users may be managed according to
+different policies.
+
+.SH OBJECT CLASS ATTRIBUTES
+.P
+Each one of the sections below details the meaning and use of a particular
+attribute of this
+.B pwdPolicy
+object class.
+.P
+
+.B pwdAttribute
+.P
+This attribute contains the name of the attribute to which the password
+policy is applied. For example, the password policy may be applied
+to the
+.B userPassword
+attribute.
+.P
+Note: in this implementation, the only
+value accepted for
+.B pwdAttribute
+is
+.IR " userPassword ".
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.1
+ NAME 'pwdAttribute'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38 )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdMinAge
+.P
+This attribute contains the number of seconds that must elapse
+between modifications allowed to the password. If this attribute
+is not present, zero seconds is assumed (i.e. the password may be
+modified whenever and however often is desired).
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.2
+ NAME 'pwdMinAge'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdMaxAge
+.P
+This attribute contains the number of seconds after which a modified
+password will expire. If this attribute is not present, or if its
+value is zero (0), then passwords will not expire.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.3
+ NAME 'pwdMaxAge'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdInHistory
+.P
+This attribute is used to specify the maximum number of used
+passwords that will be stored in the
+.B pwdHistory
+attribute. If the
+.B pwdInHistory
+attribute is not present, or if its value is
+zero (0), used passwords will not be stored in
+.B pwdHistory
+and thus any previously-used password may be reused.
+No history checking occurs if the password is being modified by the
+.BR rootdn ,
+although the password is saved in the history.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.4
+ NAME 'pwdInHistory'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdCheckQuality
+.P
+This attribute indicates if and how password syntax will be checked
+while a password is being modified or added. If this attribute is
+not present, or its value is zero (0), no syntax checking will be
+done. If its value is one (1), the server will check the syntax,
+and if the server is unable to check the syntax,
+whether due to a client-side hashed password or some other reason,
+it will be
+accepted. If its value is two (2), the server will check the syntax,
+and if the server is unable to check the syntax it will return an
+error refusing the password.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.5
+ NAME 'pwdCheckQuality'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdMinLength
+.P
+When syntax checking is enabled
+(see also the
+.B pwdCheckQuality
+attribute), this attribute contains the minimum
+number of characters that will be accepted in a password. If this
+attribute is not present, minimum password length is not
+enforced. If the server is unable to check the length of the password,
+whether due to a client-side hashed password or some other reason,
+the server will, depending on the
+value of
+.BR pwdCheckQuality ,
+either accept the password
+without checking it (if
+.B pwdCheckQuality
+is zero (0) or one (1)) or refuse it (if
+.B pwdCheckQuality
+is two (2)).
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.6
+ NAME 'pwdMinLength'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdExpireWarning
+.P
+This attribute contains the maximum number of seconds before a
+password is due to expire that expiration warning messages will be
+returned to a user who is authenticating to the directory.
+If this attribute is not
+present, or if the value is zero (0), no warnings will be sent.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.7
+ NAME 'pwdExpireWarning'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdGraceAuthnLimit
+.P
+This attribute contains the number of times that an expired password
+may be used to authenticate a user to the directory. If this
+attribute is not present or if its value is zero (0), users with
+expired passwords will not be allowed to authenticate to the
+directory.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.8
+ NAME 'pwdGraceAuthnLimit'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdLockout
+.P
+This attribute specifies the action that should be taken
+by the directory when a user has made a number of failed attempts
+to authenticate to the directory. If
+.B pwdLockout
+is set (its value is "TRUE"), the user will not be allowed to
+attempt to authenticate to the directory after there have been a
+specified number of consecutive failed bind attempts. The maximum
+number of consecutive failed bind attempts allowed is specified by
+the
+.B pwdMaxFailure
+attribute. If
+.B pwdLockout
+is not present, or if its value is "FALSE", the password may be
+used to authenticate no matter how many consecutive failed bind
+attempts have been made.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.9
+ NAME 'pwdLockout'
+ EQUALITY booleanMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdLockoutDuration
+.P
+This attribute contains the number of seconds during
+which the password cannot be used to authenticate the
+user to the directory due to too many consecutive failed
+bind attempts.
+(See also
+.B pwdLockout
+and
+.BR pwdMaxFailure .)
+If
+.B pwdLockoutDuration
+is not present, or if its value is zero (0), the password
+cannot be used to authenticate the user to the directory
+again until it is reset by an administrator.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.10
+ NAME 'pwdLockoutDuration'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdMaxFailure
+.P
+This attribute contains the number of consecutive failed bind
+attempts after which the password may not be used to authenticate
+a user to the directory.
+If
+.B pwdMaxFailure
+is not present, or its value is zero (0), then a user will
+be allowed to continue to attempt to authenticate to
+the directory, no matter how many consecutive failed
+bind attempts have occurred with that user's DN.
+(See also
+.B pwdLockout
+and
+.BR pwdLockoutDuration .)
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.11
+ NAME 'pwdMaxFailure'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdMaxRecordedFailure
+.P
+This attribute contains the maximum number of failed bind
+attempts to store in a user's entry.
+If
+.B pwdMaxRecordedFailure
+is not present, or its value is zero (0), then it defaults
+to the value of
+.BR pwdMaxFailure .
+If that value is also 0, the default is 5.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.16
+ NAME 'pwdMaxRecordedFailure'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdFailureCountInterval
+.P
+This attribute contains the number of seconds after which old
+consecutive failed bind attempts are purged from the failure counter,
+even though no successful authentication has occurred.
+If
+.B pwdFailureCountInterval
+is not present, or its value is zero (0), the failure
+counter will only be reset by a successful authentication.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.12
+ NAME 'pwdFailureCountInterval'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdMustChange
+.P
+This attribute specifies whether users must change their passwords
+when they first bind to the directory after a password is set or
+reset by the administrator, or not. If
+.B pwdMustChange
+has a value of "TRUE", users must change their passwords when they
+first bind to the directory after a password is set or reset by
+the administrator. If
+.B pwdMustChange
+is not present, or its value is "FALSE",
+users are not required to change their password upon binding after
+the administrator sets or resets the password.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.13
+ NAME 'pwdMustChange'
+ EQUALITY booleanMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdAllowUserChange
+.P
+This attribute specifies whether users are allowed to change their own
+passwords or not. If
+.B pwdAllowUserChange
+is set to "TRUE", or if the attribute is not present, users will be
+allowed to change their own passwords. If its value is "FALSE",
+users will not be allowed to change their own passwords.
+.LP
+Note: this implies that when
+.B pwdAllowUserChange
+is set to "TRUE",
+users will still be able to change the password of another user,
+subjected to access control.
+This restriction only applies to modifications of ones's own password.
+It should also be noted that
+.B pwdAllowUserChange
+was defined in the specification to provide rough access control
+to the password attribute in implementations that do not allow fine-grain
+access control.
+Since OpenLDAP provides fine-grain access control, the use of this attribute
+is discouraged; ACLs should be used instead
+(see
+.BR slapd.access (5)
+for details).
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.14
+ NAME 'pwdAllowUserChange'
+ EQUALITY booleanMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdSafeModify
+.P
+This attribute denotes whether the user's existing password must be sent
+along with their new password when changing a password. If
+.B pwdSafeModify
+is set to "TRUE", the existing password must be sent
+along with the new password. If the attribute is not present, or
+its value is "FALSE", the existing password need not be sent
+along with the new password.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.15
+ NAME 'pwdSafeModify'
+ EQUALITY booleanMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdCheckModule
+.P
+This attribute names a user-defined loadable module that must
+instantiate the check_password() function. This function
+will be called to further check a new password if
+.B pwdCheckQuality
+is set to one (1) or two (2),
+after all of the built-in password compliance checks have
+been passed. This function will be called according to this
+function prototype:
+.RS 4
+int
+.I check_password
+(char *pPasswd, char **ppErrStr, Entry *pEntry);
+.RE
+The
+.B pPasswd
+parameter contains the clear-text user password, the
+.B ppErrStr
+parameter contains a double pointer that allows the function
+to return human-readable details about any error it encounters.
+The optional
+.B pEntry
+parameter, if non-NULL, carries a pointer to the
+entry whose password is being checked.
+If
+.B ppErrStr
+is NULL, then
+.I funcName
+must NOT attempt to use it/them.
+A return value of LDAP_SUCCESS from the called
+function indicates that the password is ok, any other value
+indicates that the password is unacceptable. If the password is
+unacceptable, the server will return an error to the client, and
+.B ppErrStr
+may be used to return a human-readable textual explanation of the
+error. The error string must be dynamically allocated as it will
+be free()'d by slapd.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4754.1.99.1
+ NAME 'pwdCheckModule'
+ EQUALITY caseExactIA5Match
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.26
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+.P
+Note:
+The user-defined loadable module named by
+.B pwdCheckModule
+must be in
+.B slapd's
+standard executable search PATH.
+.P
+Note:
+.B pwdCheckModule
+is a non-standard extension to the LDAP password
+policy proposal.
+
+.SH OPERATIONAL ATTRIBUTES
+.P
+The operational attributes used by the
+.B ppolicy
+module are stored in the user's entry. Most of these attributes
+are not intended to be changed directly by users; they are there
+to track user activity. They have been detailed here so that
+administrators and users can both understand the workings of
+the
+.B ppolicy
+module.
+
+.P
+Note that the current IETF Password Policy proposal does not define
+how these operational attributes are expected to behave in a
+replication environment. In general, authentication attempts on
+a replica server only affect the copy of the operational attributes
+on that replica and will not affect any attributes for
+a user's entry on the provider. Operational attribute changes
+resulting from authentication attempts on a provider
+will usually replicate to the replicas (and also overwrite
+any changes that originated on the replica).
+These behaviors are not guaranteed and are subject to change
+when a formal specification emerges.
+
+.B userPassword
+.P
+The
+.B userPassword
+attribute is not strictly part of the
+.B ppolicy
+module. It is, however, the attribute that is tracked and controlled
+by the module. Please refer to the standard OpenLDAP schema for
+its definition.
+
+.B pwdPolicySubentry
+.P
+This attribute refers directly to the
+.B pwdPolicy
+subentry that is to be used for this particular directory user.
+If
+.B pwdPolicySubentry
+exists, it must contain the DN of a valid
+.B pwdPolicy
+object. If it does not exist, the
+.B ppolicy
+module will enforce the default password policy rules on the
+user associated with this authenticating DN. If there is no
+default, or the referenced subentry does not exist, then no
+policy rules will be enforced.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.23
+ NAME 'pwdPolicySubentry'
+ DESC 'The pwdPolicy subentry in effect for
+ this object'
+ EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12
+ SINGLE\-VALUE
+ NO\-USER\-MODIFICATION
+ USAGE directoryOperation)
+.RE
+
+.B pwdChangedTime
+.P
+This attribute denotes the last time that the entry's password was
+changed. This value is used by the password expiration policy to
+determine whether the password is too old to be allowed to be used
+for user authentication. If
+.B pwdChangedTime
+does not exist, the user's password will not expire.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.16
+ NAME 'pwdChangedTime'
+ DESC 'The time the password was last changed'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24
+ EQUALITY generalizedTimeMatch
+ ORDERING generalizedTimeOrderingMatch
+ SINGLE\-VALUE
+ NO\-USER\-MODIFICATION
+ USAGE directoryOperation)
+.RE
+
+.B pwdAccountLockedTime
+.P
+This attribute contains the time that the user's account was locked.
+If the account has been locked, the password may no longer be used to
+authenticate the user to the directory. If
+.B pwdAccountLockedTime
+is set to 000001010000Z, the user's account has been permanently locked
+and may only be unlocked by an administrator. Note that account locking
+only takes effect when the
+.B pwdLockout
+password policy attribute is set to "TRUE".
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.17
+ NAME 'pwdAccountLockedTime'
+ DESC 'The time an user account was locked'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24
+ EQUALITY generalizedTimeMatch
+ ORDERING generalizedTimeOrderingMatch
+ SINGLE\-VALUE
+ NO\-USER\-MODIFICATION
+ USAGE directoryOperation)
+.RE
+
+.B pwdFailureTime
+.P
+This attribute contains the timestamps of each of the consecutive
+authentication failures made upon attempted authentication to this
+DN (i.e. account). If too many timestamps accumulate here (refer to
+the
+.B pwdMaxFailure
+password policy attribute for details),
+and the
+.B pwdLockout
+password policy attribute is set to "TRUE", the
+account may be locked.
+(Please also refer to the
+.B pwdLockout
+password policy attribute.)
+Excess timestamps beyond those allowed by
+.B pwdMaxFailure
+or
+.B pwdMaxRecordedFailure
+may also be purged. If a successful authentication is made to this
+DN (i.e. to this user account), then
+.B pwdFailureTime
+will be cleansed of entries.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.19
+ NAME 'pwdFailureTime'
+ DESC 'The timestamps of the last consecutive
+ authentication failures'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24
+ EQUALITY generalizedTimeMatch
+ ORDERING generalizedTimeOrderingMatch
+ NO\-USER\-MODIFICATION
+ USAGE directoryOperation )
+.RE
+
+.B pwdHistory
+.P
+This attribute contains the history of previously used passwords
+for this DN (i.e. for this user account).
+The values of this attribute are stored in string format as follows:
+
+.RS 4
+
+pwdHistory=
+.RS 4
+time "#" syntaxOID "#" length "#" data
+.RE
+
+time=
+.RS 4
+GeneralizedTime as specified in section 3.3.13 of [RFC4517]
+.RE
+
+.P
+syntaxOID = numericoid
+.RS 4
+This is the string representation of the dotted-decimal OID that
+defines the syntax used to store the password. numericoid is
+described in section 1.4 of [RFC4512].
+.RE
+
+length = NumericString
+.RS 4
+The number of octets in the data. NumericString is described in
+section 3.3.23 of [RFC4517].
+.RE
+
+data =
+.RS 4
+Octets representing the password in the format specified by syntaxOID.
+.RE
+
+.RE
+
+This format allows the server to store and transmit a history of
+passwords that have been used. In order for equality matching
+on the values in this attribute to function properly, the time
+field is in GMT format.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.20
+ NAME 'pwdHistory'
+ DESC 'The history of user passwords'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40
+ EQUALITY octetStringMatch
+ NO\-USER\-MODIFICATION
+ USAGE directoryOperation)
+.RE
+
+.B pwdGraceUseTime
+This attribute contains the list of timestamps of logins made after
+the user password in the DN has expired. These post-expiration
+logins are known as "\fIgrace logins\fP".
+If too many
+.I grace logins
+have been used (please refer to the
+.B pwdGraceAuthnLimit
+password policy attribute), then the DN will no longer be allowed
+to be used to authenticate the user to the directory until the
+administrator changes the DN's
+.B userPassword
+attribute.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.21
+ NAME 'pwdGraceUseTime'
+ DESC 'The timestamps of the grace login once the password has expired'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.24
+ EQUALITY generalizedTimeMatch
+ NO\-USER\-MODIFICATION
+ USAGE directoryOperation)
+.RE
+
+.B pwdReset
+.P
+This attribute indicates whether the user's password has been reset
+by the administrator and thus must be changed upon first use of this
+DN for authentication to the directory. If
+.B pwdReset
+is set to "TRUE", then the password was reset and the user must change
+it upon first authentication. If the attribute does not exist, or
+is set to "FALSE", the user need not change their password due to
+administrative reset.
+.LP
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.42.2.27.8.1.22
+ NAME 'pwdReset'
+ DESC 'The indication that the password has
+ been reset'
+ EQUALITY booleanMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7
+ SINGLE\-VALUE
+ USAGE directoryOperation)
+.RE
+
+.SH EXAMPLES
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+database bdb
+suffix dc=example,dc=com
+\|...
+overlay ppolicy
+ppolicy_default "cn=Standard,ou=Policies,dc=example,dc=com"
+.fi
+.RE
+
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR ldap (3),
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapo\-chain (5).
+.LP
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
+.LP
+IETF LDAP password policy proposal by P. Behera, L. Poitou and J.
+Sermersheim: documented in IETF document
+"draft-behera-ldap-password-policy-09.txt".
+
+.SH BUGS
+The LDAP Password Policy specification is not yet an approved standard,
+and it is still evolving. This code will continue to be in flux until the
+specification is finalized.
+
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.P
+This module was written in 2004 by Howard Chu of Symas Corporation
+with significant input from Neil Dunbar and Kartik Subbarao of Hewlett-Packard.
+.P
+This manual page borrows heavily and shamelessly from the specification
+upon which the password policy module it describes is based. This
+source is the
+IETF LDAP password policy proposal by P. Behera, L.
+Poitou and J. Sermersheim.
+The proposal is fully documented in
+the
+IETF document named draft-behera-ldap-password-policy-09.txt,
+written in July of 2005.
+.P
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-refint.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-refint.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ad02016
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-refint.5
@@ -0,0 +1,78 @@
+.TH SLAPO-REFINT 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2004-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-refint \- Referential Integrity overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Referential Integrity overlay can be used with a backend database such as
+.BR slapd\-bdb (5)
+to maintain the cohesiveness of a schema which utilizes reference attributes.
+.LP
+Integrity is maintained by updating database records which contain the named
+attributes to match the results of a
+.B modrdn
+or
+.B delete
+operation. For example, if the integrity attribute were configured as
+.BR manager ,
+deletion of the record "uid=robert,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" would trigger a
+search for all other records which have a
+.B manager
+attribute containing that DN. Entries matching that search would have their
+.B manager
+attribute removed.
+Or, renaming the same record into "uid=george,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"
+would trigger a search for all other records which have a
+.B manager
+attribute containing that DN.
+Entries matching that search would have their
+.B manager
+attribute deleted and replaced by the new DN.
+.LP
+.B rootdn
+must be set for the database. refint runs as the rootdn
+to gain access to make its updates.
+.B rootpw
+is not needed.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the Referential Integrity overlay.
+They should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B refint_attributes <attribute> [...]
+Specify one or more attributes for which integrity will be maintained
+as described above.
+.TP
+.B refint_nothing <string>
+Specify an arbitrary value to be used as a placeholder when the last value
+would otherwise be deleted from an attribute. This can be useful in cases
+where the schema requires the existence of an attribute for which referential
+integrity is enforced. The attempted deletion of a required attribute will
+otherwise result in an Object Class Violation, causing the request to fail.
+The string must be a valid DN.
+.TP
+.B refint_modifiersname <DN>
+Specify the DN to be used as the modifiersName of the internal modifications
+performed by the overlay.
+It defaults to "\fIcn=Referential Integrity Overlay\fP".
+.LP
+Modifications performed by this overlay are not propagated during
+replication. This overlay must be configured identically on
+replication consumers in order to maintain full synchronization
+with the provider.
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5).
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-retcode.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-retcode.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..789c4ca
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-retcode.5
@@ -0,0 +1,257 @@
+.TH SLAPO-RETCODE 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" Copyright 2001, Pierangelo Masarati, All rights reserved. <ando@sys-net.it>
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-retcode \- return code overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B retcode
+overlay to
+.BR slapd (8)
+is useful to test the behavior of clients when server-generated erroneous
+and/or unusual responses occur, e.g. error codes, referrals,
+excessive response times and so on.
+
+The error responses are generated according to different strategies.
+.LP
+In the first case, all operations targeted at a specific configurable
+subtree cause the object related to the request DN to be looked up
+and checked for return code data: a response code, plus an optional
+textual message, an optional configurable delay, an optional matched DN
+field, and, when the response code is "referral", a (list of) referral(s).
+.LP
+Well-known response codes from standard track documents are provided
+in \fBretcode.conf\fP, which can be included after instantiating
+the overlay.
+.LP
+In the second case, objects of classes inherited from
+the \fBerrAbsObject\fP, like \fBerrObject\fP or \fBerrAuxObject\fP,
+when returned as intermediate responses of a search request, are changed
+into the response dictated by their content.
+.LP
+A third mode causes objects to be looked up from the underlying database
+to discover if their class inherits from \fBerrABsObject\fP;
+in that case, their content is used to compute the corresponding response.
+.LP
+The behavior is disabled by using the \fBmanageDSAit\fP control (RFC 3296);
+in that case, the resulting object, either present in the directory
+or dynamically generated by the overlay, or contained in the request,
+is handled as usual.
+.LP
+The config directives that are specific to the
+.B retcode
+overlay must be prefixed by
+.BR retcode\- ,
+to avoid conflicts with directives specific to the underlying database
+or to other stacked overlays. The following specific directives
+can be used to configure the retcode overlay:
+.TP
+.B retcode\-parent <DN>
+This directive defines the parent DN where dynamically generated
+entries reside.
+If not defined, the suffix of the database is used.
+.HP
+.hy 0
+.B retcode\-item <RDN> <errCode> [op=<oplist>] [text=<message>]
+.B [ref=<referral>] [sleeptime=<sec>] [matched=<DN>]
+.B [unsolicited=<OID>[:<data>]] [flags=[\{pre|post\}\-]disconnect[,...]]
+.RS
+A dynamically generated entry, located below \fBretcode\-parent\fP.
+The \fBerrCode\fP is the number of the response code;
+it can be in any format supported by
+.BR strtol (3).
+The optional \fBoplist\fP is a list of operations that cause
+response code generation; if absent, all operations are affected.
+The \fBmatched\fP field is the matched DN that is returned
+along with the error, while the \fBtext\fP field is an optional
+diagnostics message.
+The \fBref\fP field is only allowed for the \fBreferral\fP
+response code.
+The \fBsleeptime\fP field causes
+.BR slapd (8)
+to sleep the specified number of seconds before proceeding
+with the operation.
+The \fBunsolicited\fP field can be used to cause the return
+of an RFC 4511 unsolicited response message; if \fBOID\fP
+is not "0", an extended response is generated, with the optional
+\fBdata\fP appended.
+If \fBflags\fP contains \fBdisconnect\fP, or \fBpre\-disconnect\fP,
+.BR slapd (8)
+disconnects abruptly, without notice; \fBpost\-disconnect\fP
+causes disconnection right after sending response as appropriate.
+.RE
+.TP
+.B retcode\-indir
+Enables exploitation of in-directory stored errAbsObject.
+May result in a lot of unnecessary overhead.
+.TP
+.B retcode\-sleep [\-]<n>
+Defines a sleep time in seconds that is spent before actually handling
+any operation.
+If negative, a random time between 0 and the absolute value of the argument
+is used.
+
+.SH SCHEMA
+The
+.B retcode
+overlay utilizes the "return code" schema described herein.
+This schema is specifically designed for use with this
+overlay and is not intended to be used otherwise.
+It is also noted that the schema described here is
+.I a work in
+.IR progress ,
+and hence subject to change without notice.
+The schema is loaded automatically by the overlay.
+
+The schema includes a number of object classes and associated
+attribute types as described below.
+
+.LP
+The error code:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.1.1
+ NAME ( 'errCode' )
+ DESC 'LDAP error code'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ ORDERING integerOrderingMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+.LP
+The operations that trigger the response code:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.1.2
+ NAME ( 'errOp' )
+ DESC 'Operations the errObject applies to'
+ EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15 )
+.RE
+.LP
+The text message:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.1.3
+ NAME ( 'errText' )
+ DESC 'LDAP error textual description'
+ EQUALITY caseIgnoreMatch
+ SUBSTR caseIgnoreSubstringsMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.15
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+.LP
+The sleep time before the response is actually returned to the client:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.1.4
+ NAME ( 'errSleepTime' )
+ DESC 'Time to wait before returning the error'
+ EQUALITY integerMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.27
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+.LP
+The matched DN returned to the client:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.1.5
+ NAME ( 'errMatchedDN' )
+ DESC 'Value to be returned as matched DN'
+ EQUALITY distinguishedNameMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.12
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+.LP
+The OID to be returned as extended response OID
+in RFC 4511 unsolicited responses
+("0" generates a regular response with msgid set to 0):
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.1.6
+ NAME ( 'errUnsolicitedOID' )
+ DESC 'OID to be returned within unsolicited response'
+ EQUALITY objectIdentifierMatch
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.38
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+.LP
+The octet string to be returned as extended response data
+in RFC 4511 unsolicited response:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.1.7
+ NAME ( 'errUnsolicitedData' )
+ DESC 'Data to be returned within unsolicited response'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+.LP
+If TRUE,
+.BR slapd (8)
+disconnects abruptly without notice; if FALSE, it disconnects
+after sending response as appropriate:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.1.8
+ NAME ( 'errDisconnect' )
+ DESC 'Disconnect without notice'
+ SYNTAX 1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.7
+ SINGLE\-VALUE )
+.RE
+.LP
+The abstract class that triggers the overlay:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.3.0
+ NAME ( 'errAbsObject' )
+ SUP top ABSTRACT
+ MUST ( errCode )
+ MAY ( cn $ description $ errOp $ errText $ errSleepTime
+ $ errMatchedDN ) )
+.RE
+.LP
+The standalone structural objectclass for specifically created data:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.3.1
+ NAME ( 'errObject' )
+ SUP errAbsObject STRUCTURAL )
+.RE
+.LP
+The auxiliary objectclass to alter the behavior of existing objects:
+.RS 4
+( 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.11.4.3.2
+ NAME ( 'errAuxObject' )
+ SUP errAbsObject AUXILIARY )
+.RE
+
+.SH EXAMPLE
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+overlay retcode
+retcode\-parent "ou=RetCodes,dc=example,dc=com"
+
+# retcode.conf is found in tests/data/ of the source tree
+include ./retcode.conf
+
+# Wait 10 seconds, then return success (0x00)
+retcode\-item "cn=Success after 10 seconds" 0x00 sleeptime=10
+# Wait 10 seconds, then return timelimitExceeded (0x03)
+retcode\-item "cn=Timelimit after 10 seconds" 0x03 sleeptime=10
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+.LP
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd (8).
+The
+.BR slapo\-retcode (5)
+overlay supports dynamic configuration via
+.BR back-config .
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.P
+This module was written in 2005 by Pierangelo Masarati for SysNet s.n.c.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-rwm.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-rwm.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d4690cf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-rwm.5
@@ -0,0 +1,675 @@
+.TH SLAPO-RWM 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 1998-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See the COPYRIGHT file.
+.\" Copyright 2004, Pierangelo Masarati, All rights reserved. <ando@sys-net.it>
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.\"
+.\" Portions of this document should probably be moved to slapd-ldap(5)
+.\" and maybe manual pages for librewrite.
+.\"
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-rwm \- rewrite/remap overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The
+.B rwm
+overlay to
+.BR slapd (8)
+performs basic DN/data rewrite and objectClass/attributeType mapping.
+Its usage is mostly intended to provide virtual views of existing data
+either remotely, in conjunction with the proxy backend described in
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+or locally, in conjunction with the relay backend described in
+.BR slapd\-relay (5).
+.LP
+This overlay is experimental.
+.SH MAPPING
+An important feature of the
+.B rwm
+overlay is the capability to map objectClasses and attributeTypes
+from the local set (or a subset of it) to a foreign set, and vice versa.
+This is accomplished by means of the
+.B rwm\-map
+directive.
+.TP
+.B rwm\-map "{attribute | objectclass} [<local name> | *] {<foreign name> | *}"
+Map attributeTypes and objectClasses from the foreign server to
+different values on the local slapd.
+The reason is that some attributes might not be part of the local
+slapd's schema, some attribute names might be different but serve the
+same purpose, etc.
+If local or foreign name is `*', the name is preserved.
+If local name is omitted, the foreign name is removed.
+Unmapped names are preserved if both local and foreign name are `*',
+and removed if local name is omitted and foreign name is `*'.
+.LP
+The local
+.I objectClasses
+and
+.I attributeTypes
+must be defined in the local schema; the foreign ones do not have to,
+but users are encouraged to explicitly define the remote attributeTypes
+and the objectClasses they intend to map. All in all, when remapping
+a remote server via back-ldap (\fBslapd\-ldap\fP(5))
+or back-meta (\fBslapd\-meta\fP(5))
+their definition can be easily obtained by querying the \fIsubschemaSubentry\fP
+of the remote server; the problem should not exist when remapping a local
+database.
+Note, however, that the decision whether to rewrite or not attributeTypes
+with
+.IR "distinguishedName syntax" ,
+requires the knowledge of the attributeType syntax.
+See the REWRITING section for details.
+.LP
+Note that when mapping DN-valued attributes from local to remote,
+first the DN is rewritten, and then the attributeType is mapped;
+while mapping from remote to local, first the attributeType is mapped,
+and then the DN is rewritten.
+As such, it is important that the local attributeType is appropriately
+defined as using the distinguishedName syntax.
+Also, note that there are DN-related syntaxes (i.e. compound types with
+a portion that is DN-valued), like nameAndOptionalUID,
+whose values are currently not rewritten.
+.LP
+If the foreign type of an attribute mapping is not defined on the local
+server, it might be desirable to have the attribute values normalized after
+the mapping process. Not normalizing the values can lead to wrong results,
+when the
+.B rwm
+overlay is used together with e.g. the
+.B pcache
+overlay. This normalization can be enabled by means of the
+.B rwm\-normalize\-mapped\-attrs
+directive.
+.TP
+.B rwm\-normalize\-mapped\-attrs {yes|no}
+Set this to "yes", if the
+.B rwm
+overlay should try to normalize the values of attributes that are mapped from
+an attribute type that is unknown to the local server. The default value of
+this setting is "no".
+.TP
+.B rwm-drop-unrequested-attrs {yes|no}
+Set this to "yes", if the
+.B rwm
+overlay should drop attributes that are not explicitly requested
+by a search operation.
+When this is set to "no", the
+.B rwm
+overlay will leave all attributes in place, so that subsequent modules
+can further manipulate them.
+In any case, unrequested attributes will be omitted from search results
+by the frontend, when the search entry response package is encoded.
+The default value of this setting is "yes".
+.SH SUFFIX MASSAGING
+A basic feature of the
+.B rwm
+overlay is the capability to perform suffix massaging between a virtual
+and a real naming context by means of the
+.B rwm\-suffixmassage
+directive.
+This, in conjunction with proxy backends,
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5)
+and
+.BR slapd\-meta (5),
+or with the relay backend,
+.BR slapd\-relay (5),
+allows one to create virtual views of databases.
+A distinguishing feature of this overlay is that, when instantiated
+before any database, it can modify the DN of requests
+.I before
+database selection.
+For this reason, rules that rewrite the empty DN ("")
+or the subschemaSubentry DN (usually "cn=subschema"),
+would prevent clients from reading the root DSE or the DSA's schema.
+.TP
+.B rwm\-suffixmassage "[<virtual naming context>]" "<real naming context>"
+Shortcut to implement naming context rewriting; the trailing part
+of the DN is rewritten from the virtual to the real naming context
+in the bindDN, searchDN, searchFilterAttrDN, compareDN, compareAttrDN,
+addDN, addAttrDN, modifyDN, modifyAttrDN, modrDN, newSuperiorDN,
+deleteDN, exopPasswdDN, and from the real to the virtual naming context
+in the searchEntryDN, searchAttrDN and matchedDN rewrite contexts.
+By default no rewriting occurs for the searchFilter
+and for the referralAttrDN and referralDN rewrite contexts.
+If no \fI<virtual naming context>\fP is given, the first suffix of the
+database is used; this requires the
+.B rwm\-suffixmassage
+directive be defined \fIafter\fP the database
+.B suffix
+directive.
+The
+.B rwm\-suffixmassage
+directive automatically sets the
+.B rwm\-rewriteEngine
+to
+.BR ON .
+.LP
+See the REWRITING section for details.
+.SH REWRITING
+A string is rewritten according to a set of rules, called a `rewrite
+context'.
+The rules are based on POSIX (''extended'') regular expressions with
+substring matching; basic variable substitution and map resolution
+of substrings is allowed by specific mechanisms detailed in the following.
+The behavior of pattern matching/substitution can be altered by a set
+of flags.
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+<rewrite context> ::= <rewrite rule> [...]
+<rewrite rule> ::= <pattern> <action> [<flags>]
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+The underlying concept is to build a lightweight rewrite module
+for the slapd server (initially dedicated to the LDAP backend):
+.LP
+.SH Passes
+An incoming string is matched against a set of
+.IR rewriteRules .
+Rules are made of a
+.IR "regex match pattern" ,
+a
+.I "substitution pattern"
+and a set of actions, described by a set of
+.IR "optional flags" .
+In case of match, string rewriting is performed according to the
+substitution pattern that allows one to refer to substrings matched in the
+incoming string.
+The actions, if any, are finally performed.
+Each rule is executed recursively, unless altered by specific action
+flags; see "Action Flags" for details.
+A default limit on the recursion level is set, and can be altered
+by the
+.B rwm\-rewriteMaxPasses
+directive, as detailed in the "Additional Configuration Syntax" section.
+The substitution pattern allows map resolution of substrings.
+A map is a generic object that maps a substitution pattern to a value.
+The flags are divided in "Pattern Matching Flags" and "Action Flags";
+the former alter the regex match pattern behavior, while the latter
+alter the actions that are taken after substitution.
+.SH "Pattern Matching Flags"
+.TP
+.B `C'
+honors case in matching (default is case insensitive)
+.TP
+.B `R'
+use POSIX ''basic'' regular expressions (default is ''extended'')
+.TP
+.B `M{n}'
+allow no more than
+.B n
+recursive passes for a specific rule; does not alter the max total count
+of passes, so it can only enforce a stricter limit for a specific rule.
+.SH "Action Flags"
+.TP
+.B `:'
+apply the rule once only (default is recursive)
+.TP
+.B `@'
+stop applying rules in case of match; the current rule is still applied
+recursively; combine with `:' to apply the current rule only once
+and then stop.
+.TP
+.B `#'
+stop current operation if the rule matches, and issue an `unwilling to
+perform' error.
+.TP
+.B `G{n}'
+jump
+.B n
+rules back and forth (watch for loops!).
+Note that `G{1}' is implicit in every rule.
+.TP
+.B `I'
+ignores errors in rule; this means, in case of error, e.g. issued by a
+map, the error is treated as a missed match.
+The `unwilling to perform' is not overridden.
+.TP
+.B `U{n}'
+uses
+.B
+n
+as return code if the rule matches; the flag does not alter the recursive
+behavior of the rule, so, to have it performed only once, it must be used
+in combination with `:', e.g.
+.B `:U{32}'
+returns the value `32' (indicating noSuchObject) after exactly
+one execution of the rule, if the pattern matches.
+As a consequence, its behavior is equivalent to `@', with the return
+code set to
+.BR n ;
+or, in other words, `@' is equivalent to `U{0}'.
+Positive errors are allowed, indicating the related LDAP error codes
+as specified in \fIdraft-ietf-ldapbis-protocol\fP.
+.LP
+The ordering of the flags can be significant.
+For instance: `IG{2}' means ignore errors and jump two lines ahead
+both in case of match and in case of error, while `G{2}I' means ignore
+errors, but jump two lines ahead only in case of match.
+.LP
+More flags (mainly Action Flags) will be added as needed.
+.SH "Pattern Matching"
+See
+.BR regex (7)
+and/or
+.BR re_format (7).
+.SH "Substitution Pattern Syntax"
+Everything starting with `$' requires substitution;
+.LP
+the only obvious exception is `$$', which is turned into a single `$';
+.LP
+the basic substitution is `$<d>', where `<d>' is a digit;
+0 means the whole string, while 1-9 is a submatch, as discussed in
+.BR regex (7)
+and/or
+.BR re_format (7).
+.LP
+a `$' followed by a `{' invokes an advanced substitution.
+The pattern is:
+.LP
+.RS
+`$' `{' [ <operator> ] <name> `(' <substitution> `)' `}'
+.RE
+.LP
+where <name> must be a legal name for the map, i.e.
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+<name> ::= [a-z][a-z0-9]* (case insensitive)
+<operator> ::= `>' `|' `&' `&&' `*' `**' `$'
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+and <substitution> must be a legal substitution
+pattern, with no limits on the nesting level.
+.LP
+The operators are:
+.TP
+.B >
+sub-context invocation; <name> must be a legal, already defined
+rewrite context name
+.TP
+.B |
+external command invocation; <name> must refer to a legal, already
+defined command name (NOT IMPLEMENTED YET)
+.TP
+.B &
+variable assignment; <name> defines a variable in the running
+operation structure which can be dereferenced later; operator
+.B &
+assigns a variable in the rewrite context scope; operator
+.B &&
+assigns a variable that scopes the entire session, e.g. its value
+can be dereferenced later by other rewrite contexts
+.TP
+.B *
+variable dereferencing; <name> must refer to a variable that is
+defined and assigned for the running operation; operator
+.B *
+dereferences a variable scoping the rewrite context; operator
+.B **
+dereferences a variable scoping the whole session, e.g. the value
+is passed across rewrite contexts
+.TP
+.B $
+parameter dereferencing; <name> must refer to an existing parameter;
+the idea is to make some run-time parameters set by the system
+available to the rewrite engine, as the client host name, the bind DN
+if any, constant parameters initialized at config time, and so on;
+no parameter is currently set by either
+.B back\-ldap
+or
+.BR back\-meta ,
+but constant parameters can be defined in the configuration file
+by using the
+.B rewriteParam
+directive.
+.LP
+Substitution escaping has been delegated to the `$' symbol,
+which is used instead of `\e' in string substitution patterns
+because `\e' is already escaped by slapd's low level parsing routines;
+as a consequence, regex escaping requires
+two `\e' symbols, e.g. `\fB.*\e.foo\e.bar\fP' must
+be written as `\fB.*\e\e.foo\e\e.bar\fP'.
+.\"
+.\" The symbol can be altered at will by redefining the related macro in
+.\" "rewrite-int.h".
+.\"
+.SH "Rewrite Context"
+A rewrite context is a set of rules which are applied in sequence.
+The basic idea is to have an application initialize a rewrite
+engine (think of Apache's mod_rewrite ...) with a set of rewrite
+contexts; when string rewriting is required, one invokes the
+appropriate rewrite context with the input string and obtains the
+newly rewritten one if no errors occur.
+.LP
+Each basic server operation is associated to a rewrite context;
+they are divided in two main groups: client \-> server and
+server \-> client rewriting.
+.LP
+client \-> server:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+(default) if defined and no specific context
+ is available
+bindDN bind
+searchDN search
+searchFilter search
+searchFilterAttrDN search
+compareDN compare
+compareAttrDN compare AVA
+addDN add
+addAttrDN add AVA (DN portion of "ref" excluded)
+modifyDN modify
+modifyAttrDN modify AVA (DN portion of "ref" excluded)
+referralAttrDN add/modify DN portion of referrals
+ (default to none)
+renameDN modrdn (the old DN)
+newSuperiorDN modrdn (the new parent DN, if any)
+newRDN modrdn (the new relative DN)
+deleteDN delete
+exopPasswdDN password modify extended operation DN
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+server \-> client:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+searchEntryDN search (only if defined; no default;
+ acts on DN of search entries)
+searchAttrDN search AVA (only if defined; defaults
+ to searchEntryDN; acts on DN-syntax
+ attributes of search results)
+matchedDN all ops (only if applicable; defaults
+ to searchEntryDN)
+referralDN all ops (only if applicable; defaults
+ to none)
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+.SH "Basic Configuration Syntax"
+All rewrite/remap directives start with the prefix
+.BR rwm\- ;
+for backwards compatibility with the historical
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5)
+and
+.BR slapd\-meta (5)
+builtin rewrite/remap capabilities, the prefix may be omitted,
+but this practice is strongly discouraged.
+.TP
+.B rwm\-rewriteEngine { on | off }
+If `on', the requested rewriting is performed; if `off', no
+rewriting takes place (an easy way to stop rewriting without
+altering too much the configuration file).
+.TP
+.B rwm\-rewriteContext <context name> "[ alias <aliased context name> ]"
+<Context name> is the name that identifies the context, i.e. the name
+used by the application to refer to the set of rules it contains.
+It is used also to reference sub contexts in string rewriting.
+A context may alias another one.
+In this case the alias context contains no rule, and any reference to
+it will result in accessing the aliased one.
+.TP
+.B rwm\-rewriteRule "<regex match pattern>" "<substitution pattern>" "[ <flags> ]"
+Determines how a string can be rewritten if a pattern is matched.
+Examples are reported below.
+.SH "Additional Configuration Syntax"
+.TP
+.B rwm\-rewriteMap "<map type>" "<map name>" "[ <map attrs> ]"
+Allows one to define a map that transforms substring rewriting into
+something else.
+The map is referenced inside the substitution pattern of a rule.
+.TP
+.B rwm\-rewriteParam <param name> <param value>
+Sets a value with global scope, that can be dereferenced by the
+command `${$paramName}'.
+.TP
+.B rwm\-rewriteMaxPasses <number of passes> [<number of passes per rule>]
+Sets the maximum number of total rewriting passes that can be
+performed in a single rewrite operation (to avoid loops).
+A safe default is set to 100; note that reaching this limit is still
+treated as a success; recursive invocation of rules is simply
+interrupted.
+The count applies to the rewriting operation as a whole, not
+to any single rule; an optional per-rule limit can be set.
+This limit is overridden by setting specific per-rule limits
+with the `M{n}' flag.
+
+.SH "MAPS"
+Currently, few maps are builtin but additional map types may be
+registered at runtime.
+
+Supported maps are:
+.TP
+.B LDAP <URI> [bindwhen=<when>] [version=<version>] [binddn=<DN>] [credentials=<cred>]
+The
+.B LDAP
+map expands a value by performing a simple LDAP search.
+Its configuration is based on a mandatory URI, whose
+.B attrs
+portion must contain exactly one attribute
+(use
+.B entryDN
+to fetch the DN of an entry).
+If a multi-valued attribute is used, only the first value is considered.
+
+The parameter
+.B bindwhen
+determines when the connection is established.
+It can take the values
+.BR now ,
+.BR later ,
+and
+.BR everytime ,
+respectively indicating that the connection should be created at startup,
+when required, or any time it is used.
+In the former two cases, the connection is cached, while in the latter
+a fresh new one is used all times. This is the default.
+
+The parameters
+.B binddn
+and
+.B credentials
+represent the DN and the password that is used to perform an authenticated
+simple bind before performing the search operation; if not given,
+an anonymous connection is used.
+
+The parameter
+.B version
+can be 2 or 3 to indicate the protocol version that must be used.
+The default is 3.
+
+.TP
+.B slapd <URI>
+The
+.B slapd
+map expands a value by performing an internal LDAP search.
+Its configuration is based on a mandatory URI, which must begin with
+.B "ldap:///"
+(i.e., it must be an LDAP URI and it must not specify a host).
+As with the
+LDAP map, the
+.B attrs
+portion must contain exactly one attribute, and if
+a multi-valued attribute is used, only the first value is considered.
+
+.SH "REWRITE CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES"
+.nf
+# set to `off' to disable rewriting
+rwm\-rewriteEngine on
+
+# the rules the "suffixmassage" directive implies
+rwm\-rewriteEngine on
+# all dataflow from client to server referring to DNs
+rwm\-rewriteContext default
+rwm\-rewriteRule "(.+,)?<virtualnamingcontext>$" "$1<realnamingcontext>" ":"
+# empty filter rule
+rwm\-rewriteContext searchFilter
+# all dataflow from server to client
+rwm\-rewriteContext searchEntryDN
+rwm\-rewriteRule "(.+,)?<realnamingcontext>$" "$1<virtualnamingcontext>" ":"
+rwm\-rewriteContext searchAttrDN alias searchEntryDN
+rwm\-rewriteContext matchedDN alias searchEntryDN
+# misc empty rules
+rwm\-rewriteContext referralAttrDN
+rwm\-rewriteContext referralDN
+
+# Everything defined here goes into the `default' context.
+# This rule changes the naming context of anything sent
+# to `dc=home,dc=net' to `dc=OpenLDAP, dc=org'
+
+rwm\-rewriteRule "(.+,)?dc=home,[ ]?dc=net$"
+ "$1dc=OpenLDAP, dc=org" ":"
+
+# since a pretty/normalized DN does not include spaces
+# after rdn separators, e.g. `,', this rule suffices:
+
+rwm\-rewriteRule "(.+,)?dc=home,dc=net$"
+ "$1dc=OpenLDAP,dc=org" ":"
+
+# Start a new context (ends input of the previous one).
+# This rule adds blanks between DN parts if not present.
+rwm\-rewriteContext addBlanks
+rwm\-rewriteRule "(.*),([^ ].*)" "$1, $2"
+
+# This one eats blanks
+rwm\-rewriteContext eatBlanks
+rwm\-rewriteRule "(.*), (.*)" "$1,$2"
+
+# Here control goes back to the default rewrite
+# context; rules are appended to the existing ones.
+# anything that gets here is piped into rule `addBlanks'
+rwm\-rewriteContext default
+rwm\-rewriteRule ".*" "${>addBlanks($0)}" ":"
+
+.\" # Anything with `uid=username' is looked up in
+.\" # /etc/passwd for gecos (I know it's nearly useless,
+.\" # but it is there just as a guideline to implementing
+.\" # custom maps).
+.\" # Note the `I' flag that leaves `uid=username' in place
+.\" # if `username' does not have a valid account, and the
+.\" # `:' that forces the rule to be processed exactly once.
+.\" rwm\-rewriteContext uid2Gecos
+.\" rwm\-rewriteRule "(.*)uid=([a\-z0\-9]+),(.+)"
+.\" "$1cn=$2{xpasswd},$3" "I:"
+.\"
+.\" # Finally, in a bind, if one uses a `uid=username' DN,
+.\" # it is rewritten in `cn=name surname' if possible.
+.\" rwm\-rewriteContext bindDN
+.\" rwm\-rewriteRule ".*" "${>addBlanks(${>uid2Gecos($0)})}" ":"
+.\"
+# Rewrite the search base according to `default' rules.
+rwm\-rewriteContext searchDN alias default
+
+# Search results with OpenLDAP DN are rewritten back with
+# `dc=home,dc=net' naming context, with spaces eaten.
+rwm\-rewriteContext searchEntryDN
+rwm\-rewriteRule "(.*[^ ],)?[ ]?dc=OpenLDAP,[ ]?dc=org$"
+ "${>eatBlanks($1)}dc=home,dc=net" ":"
+
+# Bind with email instead of full DN: we first need
+# an ldap map that turns attributes into a DN (the
+# argument used when invoking the map is appended to
+# the URI and acts as the filter portion)
+rwm\-rewriteMap ldap attr2dn "ldap://host/dc=my,dc=org?dn?sub"
+
+# Then we need to detect DN made up of a single email,
+# e.g. `mail=someone@example.com'; note that the rule
+# in case of match stops rewriting; in case of error,
+# it is ignored. In case we are mapping virtual
+# to real naming contexts, we also need to rewrite
+# regular DNs, because the definition of a bindDN
+# rewrite context overrides the default definition.
+rwm\-rewriteContext bindDN
+rwm\-rewriteRule "^mail=[^,]+@[^,]+$" "${attr2dn($0)}" ":@I"
+
+# This is a rather sophisticated example. It massages a
+# search filter in case who performs the search has
+# administrative privileges. First we need to keep
+# track of the bind DN of the incoming request, which is
+# stored in a variable called `binddn' with session scope,
+# and left in place to allow regular binding:
+rwm\-rewriteContext bindDN
+rwm\-rewriteRule ".+" "${&&binddn($0)}$0" ":"
+
+# A search filter containing `uid=' is rewritten only
+# if an appropriate DN is bound.
+# To do this, in the first rule the bound DN is
+# dereferenced, while the filter is decomposed in a
+# prefix, in the value of the `uid=<arg>' AVA, and
+# in a suffix. A tag `<>' is appended to the DN.
+# If the DN refers to an entry in the `ou=admin' subtree,
+# the filter is rewritten OR-ing the `uid=<arg>' with
+# `cn=<arg>'; otherwise it is left as is. This could be
+# useful, for instance, to allow apache's auth_ldap-1.4
+# module to authenticate users with both `uid' and
+# `cn', but only if the request comes from a possible
+# `cn=Web auth,ou=admin,dc=home,dc=net' user.
+rwm\-rewriteContext searchFilter
+rwm\-rewriteRule "(.*\e\e()uid=([a\-z0\-9_]+)(\e\e).*)"
+ "${**binddn}<>${&prefix($1)}${&arg($2)}${&suffix($3)}"
+ ":I"
+rwm\-rewriteRule "^[^,]+,ou=admin,dc=home,dc=net$"
+ "${*prefix}|(uid=${*arg})(cn=${*arg})${*suffix}" ":@I"
+rwm\-rewriteRule ".*<>$" "${*prefix}uid=${*arg}${*suffix}" ":"
+
+# This example shows how to strip unwanted DN-valued
+# attribute values from a search result; the first rule
+# matches DN values below "ou=People,dc=example,dc=com";
+# in case of match the rewriting exits successfully.
+# The second rule matches everything else and causes
+# the value to be rejected.
+rwm\-rewriteContext searchEntryDN
+rwm\-rewriteRule ".+,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com$" "$0" ":@"
+rwm\-rewriteRule ".*" "" "#"
+.fi
+.SH "MAPPING EXAMPLES"
+The following directives map the object class `groupOfNames' to
+the object class `groupOfUniqueNames' and the attribute type
+`member' to the attribute type `uniqueMember':
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+map objectclass groupOfNames groupOfUniqueNames
+map attribute uniqueMember member
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+This presents a limited attribute set from the foreign
+server:
+.LP
+.RS
+.nf
+map attribute cn *
+map attribute sn *
+map attribute manager *
+map attribute description *
+map attribute *
+.fi
+.RE
+.LP
+These lines map cn, sn, manager, and description to themselves, and
+any other attribute gets "removed" from the object before it is sent
+to the client (or sent up to the LDAP server). This is obviously a
+simplistic example, but you get the point.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+.BR slapd\-meta (5),
+.BR slapd\-relay (5),
+.BR slapd (8),
+.BR regex (7),
+.BR re_format (7).
+.SH AUTHOR
+Pierangelo Masarati; based on back-ldap rewrite/remap features
+by Howard Chu, Pierangelo Masarati.
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-sssvlv.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-sssvlv.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d213270
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-sssvlv.5
@@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
+.TH SLAPO-SSSVLV 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2009-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copyright 2009 Symas Corporation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-sssvlv \- Server Side Sorting and Virtual List View overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+This overlay implements the LDAP Server Side Sorting (RFC2891) control
+as well as the Virtual List View control. It also replaces the default
+implementation of the LDAP PagedResults (RFC2696) control, to ensure
+that it works with Sorting. The overlay can be used with any backend
+or globally for all backends.
+
+Since a complete result set must be generated in memory before sorting can
+be performed, processing sort requests can have a large impact on the
+server's memory use. As such, any connection is limited to having only
+a limited number of sort requests active at a time. Additional limits may
+be configured as described below.
+
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the SSSVLV overlay.
+They should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B sssvlv\-max <num>
+Set the maximum number of concurrent sort requests allowed across all
+connections. The default is one half of the number of server threads.
+.TP
+.B sssvlv\-maxkeys <num>
+Set the maximum number of keys allowed in a sort request. The default is 5.
+.TP
+.B sssvlv\-maxperconn <num>
+Set the maximum number of concurrent paged search requests per connection. The default is 5. The number of concurrent requests remains limited by
+.B sssvlv-max.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.d
+default slapd configuration directory
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5).
+.LP
+"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
+.LP
+IETF LDAP Virtual List View proposal by D. Boreham, J. Sermersheim,
+and A. Kashi in IETF document "draft-ietf-ldapext-ldapv3-vlv-09.txt".
+.SH AUTHOR
+Howard Chu
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-syncprov.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-syncprov.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1d76812
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-syncprov.5
@@ -0,0 +1,73 @@
+.TH SLAPO-SYNCPROV 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2004-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-syncprov \- Sync Provider overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Sync Provider overlay implements the provider-side support for the
+LDAP Content Synchronization (RFC4533) as well as syncrepl replication
+support. The overlay
+can be used with any backend that maintains entryCSN and entryUUID
+attributes for its entries. It also creates a contextCSN attribute in
+the root entry of the database.
+
+The contextCSN is updated for every write operation performed against the
+database. To reduce database contention, the contextCSN is only updated in
+memory. The value is written to the database on server shutdown and read into
+memory on startup, and maintained in memory thereafter. Checkpoints may be
+configured to write the contextCSN into the underlying database to minimize
+recovery time after an unclean shutdown.
+
+On databases that support inequality indexing, it is mandatory to set an
+eq index on the entryCSN attribute when using this overlay.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the Sync Provider overlay.
+They should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B syncprov\-checkpoint <ops> <minutes>
+After a write operation has succeeded, write the contextCSN to the underlying
+database if
+.B <ops>
+write operations or more than
+.B <minutes>
+time have passed
+since the last checkpoint. Checkpointing is disabled by default.
+.TP
+.B syncprov\-sessionlog <ops>
+Configures an in-memory session log for recording information about write
+operations made on the database. The
+.B <ops>
+specifies the number of operations that are recorded in the log. All write
+operations (except Adds) are recorded in the log.
+When using the session log, it is helpful to set an eq index on the
+entryUUID attribute in the underlying database.
+.TP
+.B syncprov\-nopresent TRUE | FALSE
+Specify that the Present phase of refreshing should be skipped. This value
+should only be set TRUE for a syncprov instance on top of a log database
+(such as one managed by the accesslog overlay).
+The default is FALSE.
+.TP
+.B syncprov\-reloadhint TRUE | FALSE
+Specify that the overlay should honor the reloadHint flag in the Sync
+Control. It must be set TRUE when using the accesslog overlay for
+delta-based syncrepl replication support.
+The default is FALSE.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapo\-accesslog (5).
+OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide.
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.so ../Project
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-translucent.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-translucent.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2345715
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-translucent.5
@@ -0,0 +1,133 @@
+.TH SLAPO-TRANSLUCENT 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2004-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-translucent \- Translucent Proxy overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Translucent Proxy overlay can be used with a backend database such as
+.BR slapd\-bdb (5)
+to create a "translucent proxy". Entries retrieved from a remote LDAP
+server may have some or all attributes overridden, or new attributes
+added, by entries in the local database before being presented to the
+client.
+.LP
+A
+.BR search
+operation is first populated with entries from the remote LDAP server, the
+attributes of which are then overridden with any attributes defined in the
+local database. Local overrides may be populated with the
+.BR add ,
+.B modify ,
+and
+.B modrdn
+operations, the use of which is restricted to the root user.
+.LP
+A
+.BR compare
+operation will perform a comparison with attributes defined in the local
+database record (if any) before any comparison is made with data in the
+remote database.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+The Translucent Proxy overlay uses a proxied database,
+typically a (set of) remote LDAP server(s), which is configured with the options shown in
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5),
+.BR slapd\-meta (5)
+or similar.
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options are specific to the Translucent Proxy overlay; they must appear
+after the
+.B overlay
+directive that instantiates the
+.B translucent
+overlay.
+.TP
+.B translucent_strict
+By default, attempts to delete attributes in either the local or remote
+databases will be silently ignored. The
+.B translucent_strict
+directive causes these modifications to fail with a Constraint Violation.
+.TP
+.B translucent_no_glue
+This configuration option disables the automatic creation of "glue" records
+for an
+.B add
+or
+.B modrdn
+operation, such that all parents of an entry added to the local database
+must be created by hand. Glue records are always created for a
+.B modify
+operation.
+.TP
+.B translucent_local <attr[,attr...]>
+Specify a list of attributes that should be searched for in the local database
+when used in a search filter. By default, search filters are only handled by
+the remote database. With this directive, search filters will be split into a
+local and remote portion, and local attributes will be searched locally.
+.TP
+.B translucent_remote <attr[,attr...]>
+Specify a list of attributes that should be searched for in the remote database
+when used in a search filter. This directive complements the
+.B translucent_local
+directive. Attributes may be specified as both local and remote if desired.
+.LP
+If neither
+.B translucent_local
+nor
+.B translucent_remote
+are specified, the default behavior is to search the remote database with the
+complete search filter. If only
+.B translucent_local
+is specified, searches will only be run on the local database. Likewise, if only
+.B translucent_remote
+is specified, searches will only be run on the remote database. In any case, both
+the local and remote entries corresponding to a search result will be merged
+before being returned to the client.
+
+.TP
+.B translucent_bind_local
+Enable looking for locally stored credentials for simple bind when binding
+to the remote database fails. Disabled by default.
+
+.TP
+.B translucent_pwmod_local
+Enable RFC 3062 Password Modification extended operation on locally stored
+credentials. The operation only applies to entries that exist in the remote
+database. Disabled by default.
+
+.SH ACCESS CONTROL
+Access control is delegated to either the remote DSA(s) or to the local database
+backend for
+.B auth
+and
+.B write
+operations.
+It is delegated to the remote DSA(s) and to the frontend for
+.B read
+operations.
+Local access rules involving data returned by the remote DSA(s) should be designed
+with care. In fact, entries are returned by the remote DSA(s) only based on the
+remote fraction of the data, based on the identity the operation is performed as.
+As a consequence, local rules might only be allowed to see a portion
+of the remote data.
+
+.SH CAVEATS
+.LP
+The Translucent Proxy overlay will disable schema checking in the local database,
+so that an entry consisting of overlay attributes need not adhere to the
+complete schema.
+.LP
+Because the translucent overlay does not perform any DN rewrites, the local
+and remote database instances must have the same suffix. Other configurations
+will probably fail with No Such Object and other errors.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5),
+.BR slapd\-ldap (5).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-unique.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-unique.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e04b214
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-unique.5
@@ -0,0 +1,175 @@
+.TH SLAPO-UNIQUE 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2004-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-unique \- Attribute Uniqueness overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Attribute Uniqueness overlay can be used with a backend database such as
+.BR slapd\-mdb (5)
+to enforce the uniqueness of some or all attributes within a
+scope. This subtree defaults to all objects within the subtree of the
+database for which the Uniqueness overlay is configured.
+.LP
+Uniqueness is enforced by searching the subtree to ensure that the values of
+all attributes presented with an
+.BR add ,
+.B modify
+or
+.B modrdn
+operation are unique within the scope.
+For example, if uniqueness were enforced for the
+.B uid
+attribute, the subtree would be searched for any other records which also
+have a
+.B uid
+attribute containing the same value. If any are found, the request is
+rejected.
+.LP
+The search is performed using the rootdn of the database, to avoid issues
+with ACLs preventing the overlay from seeing all of the relevant data. As
+such, the database must have a rootdn configured.
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.B slapd.conf
+options apply to the Attribute Uniqueness overlay.
+They should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+.B unique_uri <[strict ][ignore ]URI[URI...]...>
+Configure the base, attributes, scope, and filter for uniqueness
+checking. Multiple URIs may be specified within a domain,
+allowing complex selections of objects. Multiple
+.B unique_uri
+statements or
+.B olcUniqueURI
+attributes will create independent domains, each with their own
+independent lists of URIs and ignore/strict settings.
+
+Keywords
+.B strict
+and
+.B ignore
+have to be enclosed in quotes (") together with the URI.
+
+The LDAP URI syntax is a subset of
+.B RFC-4516,
+and takes the form:
+
+ldap:///[base dn]?[attributes...]?scope[?filter]
+
+The
+.B base dn
+defaults to that of the back-end database.
+Specified base dns must be within the subtree of the back-end database.
+
+If no
+.B attributes
+are specified, the URI applies to all non-operational attributes.
+
+The
+.B scope
+component is effectively mandatory, because LDAP URIs default to
+.B base
+scope, which is not valid for uniqueness, because groups of one object
+are always unique. Scopes of
+.B sub
+(for subtree) and
+.B one
+for one-level are valid.
+
+The
+.B filter
+component causes the domain to apply uniqueness constraints only to
+matching objects. e.g.
+.B ldap:///?cn?sub?(sn=e*)
+would require unique
+.B cn
+attributes for all objects in the subtree of the back-end database whose
+.B sn
+starts with an e.
+
+It is possible to assert uniqueness upon all non-operational
+attributes except those listed by prepending the keyword
+.B ignore
+If not configured, all non-operational (e.g., system) attributes must be
+unique. Note that the
+.B attributes
+list of an
+.B ignore
+URI should generally contain the
+.BR objectClass ,
+.BR dc ,
+.B ou
+and
+.B o
+attributes, as these will generally not be unique, nor are they operational
+attributes.
+
+It is possible to set strict checking for the uniqueness domain by
+prepending the keyword
+.B strict.
+By default, uniqueness is not enforced
+for null values. Enabling
+.B strict
+mode extends the concept of uniqueness to include null values, such
+that only one attribute within a subtree will be allowed to have a
+null value. Strictness applies to all URIs within a uniqueness
+domain, but some domains may be strict while others are not.
+.LP
+It is not possible to set both URIs and legacy slapo\-unique configuration
+parameters simultaneously. In general, the legacy configuration options
+control pieces of a single unfiltered subtree domain.
+.TP
+.B unique_base <basedn>
+This legacy configuration parameter should be converted to the
+.B base dn
+component of the above
+.B unique_uri
+style of parameter.
+.TP
+.B unique_ignore <attribute...>
+This legacy configuration parameter should be converted to a
+.B unique_uri
+parameter with
+.B ignore
+keyword as described above.
+.TP
+.B unique_attributes <attribute...>
+This legacy configuration parameter should be converted to a
+.B unique_uri
+parameter, as described above.
+.TP
+.B unique_strict <attribute...>
+This legacy configuration parameter should be converted to a
+.B strict
+keyword prepended to a
+.B unique_uri
+parameter, as described above.
+.SH CAVEATS
+.LP
+.B unique_uri
+cannot be used with the old-style of configuration, and vice versa.
+.B unique_uri
+can implement everything the older system can do, however.
+.LP
+Typical attributes for the
+.B ignore ldap:///...
+URIs are intentionally not hardcoded into the overlay to allow for
+maximum flexibility in meeting site-specific requirements.
+.LP
+Replication and operations with
+.B manageDsaIt
+control are allowed to bypass this enforcement. It is therefore important that
+all servers accepting writes have this overlay configured in order to maintain
+uniqueness in a replicated DIT.
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+default slapd configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5).
diff --git a/doc/man/man5/slapo-valsort.5 b/doc/man/man5/slapo-valsort.5
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..63cbcd7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/man/man5/slapo-valsort.5
@@ -0,0 +1,97 @@
+.TH SLAPO-VALSORT 5 "RELEASEDATE" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION"
+.\" Copyright 2005-2021 The OpenLDAP Foundation All Rights Reserved.
+.\" Copying restrictions apply. See COPYRIGHT/LICENSE.
+.\" $OpenLDAP$
+.SH NAME
+slapo\-valsort \- Value Sorting overlay to slapd
+.SH SYNOPSIS
+ETCDIR/slapd.conf
+.SH DESCRIPTION
+The Value Sorting overlay can be used with a backend database to sort the
+values of specific multi-valued attributes within a subtree. The sorting
+occurs whenever the attributes are returned in a search response.
+.LP
+Sorting can be specified in ascending or descending order, using either
+numeric or alphanumeric sort methods. Additionally, a "weighted" sort can
+be specified, which uses a numeric weight prepended to the attribute values.
+The weighted sort is always performed in ascending order, but may be combined
+with the other methods for values that all have equal weights. The weight
+is specified by prepending an integer weight {<\fIweight\fP>}
+in front of each value of the attribute for which weighted sorting is
+desired. This weighting factor is stripped off and not returned in search
+results unless the valsort control is specified (1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.5.14).
+
+The valsort control requires a value consisting of a Sequence that contains
+a boolean flag. The weighting factor is only returned if the boolean value is TRUE. In
+.BR lber-encode (3)
+format, the required value must conform to "{b}" syntax.
+
+.SH CONFIGURATION
+These
+.I slapd.conf
+options apply to the Value Sorting overlay.
+They should appear after the
+.B overlay
+directive.
+.TP
+valsort\-attr <\fIattribute\fP> <\fIbaseDN\fP> (<\fIsort-method\fP> | weighted [<\fIsort-method\fP>])
+Configure a sorting method for the specified
+.I attribute
+in the subtree rooted at
+.IR baseDN .
+The
+.I sort-method
+may be one of
+.BR alpha\-ascend ,
+.BR alpha\-descend ,
+.BR numeric\-ascend ,
+or
+.BR numeric\-descend .
+If the special
+.B weighted
+method is specified, a secondary
+.I sort-method
+may also be specified. It is an
+error to specify an alphanumeric
+.I sort-method
+for an attribute with Integer
+or NumericString syntax, and it is an error to specify a numeric
+.I sort-method
+for an attribute with a syntax other than Integer or NumericString.
+.SH EXAMPLES
+.LP
+.nf
+ database bdb
+ suffix dc=example,dc=com
+ ...
+ overlay valsort
+ valsort\-attr member ou=groups,dc=example,dc=com alpha\-ascend
+.fi
+
+To invoke
+.BR ldapsearch (1)
+with the valsort control, the control value must be set appropriately.
+The following octets represent the desired "{b}" encoding:
+.LP
+.nf
+ 0x30 0x03 0x01 0x01 0xff
+.fi
+
+The control can be sent from the command-line using the base64
+encoding of the value:
+.LP
+.nf
+ ldapsearch \-E 1.3.6.1.4.1.4203.666.5.14=::MAMBAf8=
+.fi
+
+.SH FILES
+.TP
+\fIETCDIR/slapd.conf\fP
+default \fBslapd\fP configuration file
+.SH SEE ALSO
+.BR slapd.conf (5),
+.BR slapd\-config (5).
+.SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
+.P
+This module was written in 2005 by Howard Chu of Symas Corporation. The
+work was sponsored by Stanford University.