Overview
This library is a wrapper around ldapjs providing convenience with a few core principles:
- Focus on promises and async iterators, do away with callbacks and event-emitting streams
- Always use a connection pool
- Hide everything having to do with acquiring/releasing connections
- Provide an easy way to configure with environment variables
Getting Started
Standard connection
An Ldap instance represents a connection pool. You will want to make a single pool and export it so that it can
be imported in any other code file in your project.
import Ldap from 'ldap-async'
export const ldap = new Ldap({
url: 'ldap://yourhost:10389',
host: 'yourhost',
port: 10389,
secure: false,
poolSize: 5,
bindDN: 'cn=root',
bindCredentials: 'secret',
timeout: 30000
})
async function main() {
const person = await ldap.get('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com')
}
main().catch(e => console.error(e))
Connect with environment variables
When working in docker, it's common to keep configuration in environment variables. In order to
make that easy, this library provides a convenient way to import a singleton pool created with the following
environment variables:
LDAP_HOST
LDAP_PORT // default is 389 or 636 if you set LDAP_SECURE
LDAP_SECURE // set truthy to use ldaps protocol
LDAP_DN // the DN with which to bind
LDAP_PASS // the password for the bind DN
LDAP_POOLSIZE (default: 5)
This way, connecting is very simple, and you don't have to worry about creating a singleton pool for the
rest of your codebase to import, because it's done for you:
import ldap from 'ldap-async/client'
async function main() {
const person = await ldap.get('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com')
}
main().catch(e => console.error(e))
CommonJS imports
You must refer to .default
when importing with require
:
const Ldap = require('ldap-async').default
const ldap = require('ldap-async/client').default
Basic Usage
Convenience methods are provided that allow you to specify the kind of operation you are about
to do and the type of return data you expect. For now only get, search, and setAttribute are implemented.
Querying
const person = await ldap.get('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com')
console.log(person)
const people = await ldap.search('ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', { scope: 'sub', filter: 'objectclass=person' })
console.log(people)
await ldap.setAttribute('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', 'email', 'newemail@company.com')
await ldap.pushAttribute('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', 'email', 'newemail@company.com')
await ldap.pullAttribute('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', 'email', ['newemail@company.com'])
await ldap.add('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', { })
await ldap.remove('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com')
await ldap.modifyDN('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', 'cn=yourself')
await ldap.addMember('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', 'cn=yourgroup,ou=groups,dc=yourdomain,dc=com')
await ldap.removeMember('cn=you,ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', 'cn=yourgroup,ou=groups,dc=yourdomain,dc=com')
Escaping
When you construct LDAP search query strings, it's important to escape any input strings to prevent injection attacks. LDAP has two kinds of strings with different escaping requirements, so we provide a template literal helper for each.
For DN strings, use ldap.dn
:
const person = await ldap.get(ldap.dn`cn=${myCN},ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com`)
For filter strings, use ldap.filter
:
const people = await ldap.search('ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', {
scope: 'sub',
filter: ldap.filter`givenName=${n}`
})
More complex queries may also use ldap.filter
inside a map function, such as this one that finds many users by their names:
const people = await ldap.search('ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', {
scope: 'sub',
filter: `(|${myNames.map(n => ldap.filter`(givenName=${n})`).join('')})`
})
Filter helpers
For convenience, a few helper functions are provided to help you construct LDAP filters: in
, any
, all
, and anyall
. These functions take care of escaping for you.
- Everyone named John or Mary:
ldap.in(['John', 'Mary'], 'givenName')
- Everyone named John or with the surname Smith
ldap.any({ givenName: 'John', sn: 'Smith' })
- Everyone named John Smith
ldap.all({ givenName: 'John', sn: 'Smith' })
- Everyone named John Smith or Mary Scott
ldap.anyall([{ givenName: 'John', sn: 'Smith' }, { givenName: 'Mary', sn: 'Scott' }])
Note that any
, all
and anyall
can accept an optional wildcard
parameter if you want users to be able to provide wildcards. Other special characters like parentheses will be properly escaped.
Advanced Usage
Streaming
To avoid using too much memory on huge datasets, we provide a stream
method that performs the same as search
but returns a node Readable
. It is recommended to use the async iterator pattern:
const stream = ldap.stream('ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com', {
scope: 'sub',
filter: ldap.in(myNames, 'givenName')
})
for await (const person of stream) {
}
for await
is very safe, as break
ing the loop or throwing an error inside the loop will clean up the stream appropriately.
Since .stream()
returns a Readable
in object mode, you can easily do other things with
it like .pipe()
it to another stream processor. When using the stream without for await
, you must call stream.destroy()
if you do not want to finish processing it and carefully use try {} finally {}
to destroy it in case your code throws an error. Failure to do so will leak a connection from the pool.
Typescript
This library is written in typescript and provides its own types. For added convenience, methods that return
objects will accept a generic so that you can specify the return type you expect:
interface LDAPPerson {
cn: string
givenName: string
}
const person = ldap.get<LDAPPerson>(ldap.dn`cn=${myCN},ou=people,dc=yourdomain,dc=com`)