From 7731832751ab9f3c6ddeb66f186d3d7fa1934a6d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2024 13:11:40 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 2.4.57+dfsg. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- doc/man/man5/slapo-dds.5 | 271 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 271 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/man/man5/slapo-dds.5 (limited to 'doc/man/man5/slapo-dds.5') 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 +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 +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 +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 +Specifies the interval between expiration checks; defaults to 1 hour. + +.TP +.B dds\-tolerance +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 +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. -- cgit v1.2.3