slapd-ndb - MySQL NDB backend to slapd
The ndb backend to 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.
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.
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.
This backend is experimental. While intended to be a
general-purpose backend, it is currently missing a number of common LDAP
features. See the TODO file in the source directory for details.
These slapd.conf options apply to the ndb 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 slapd.conf(5) manual
page.
- 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 dbsocket directive.
- 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.
- dbpasswd
<password>
- The password for the dbuser.
- dbname <database
name>
- The name of the MySQL database to use.
- dbport
<port>
- The port number to use for the TCP connection to the MySQL server.
- dbsocket
<path>
- The socket to be used for connecting to a local MySQL server.
- dbflag
<integer>
- Client flags for the MySQL session. See the MySQL documentation for
details.
- dbconnect
<connectstring>
- The name or IP address of the host running the cluster manager. The
default is "localhost".
- dbconnections
<integer>
- The number of cluster connections to establish. Using up to 4 may improve
performance under heavier load. The default is 1.
- 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.
- 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.
- attrset <set>
<attrs>
- Specify a list of attributes to be treated as an attribute set. This
directive creates a table named set 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.
The ndb backend honors most access control semantics as
indicated in slapd.access(5).
- /etc/openldap/slapd.conf
- default slapd configuration file
slapd.conf(5), slapd-config(5), slapd(8),
slapadd(8), slapcat(8), slapindex(8), MySQL Cluster
documentation.
Howard Chu, with assistance from Johan Andersson et al @
MySQL.