node-ldif
Nodejs LDIF (LDAP Data Interchange Format) parser based on RFC2849
Unless you are an LDAP aficionado you may not know about the LDIF format.
I was surprised to learn that no LDIF parsing library existed for node. So
I wrote one, with peg.js.
Now I'll never have to use that cursed perl script again!
Design Goals
- 100% RFC-compliance; should comprehend any valid LDIF file
- Parsed records stored internally intact
- Methods are provided to extract record data in various formats
- Outputs exactly compatilble LDIF for any parsed record or file
- Automatic decoding and outputting of base64 data
- No external library dependencies; pure Node Javascript
Usage
Installation
Install easily with npm!
npm install ldif
Parsing
Parsing strings
var ldif = require('ldif'),
file = './rfc/example1.ldif',
input = require('fs').readFileSync(file,'utf8');
console.log(ldif.parse(input));
After reading the file, it's parsed as a string.
There's also a shorthand to read in a file (synchronously, as above):
File parsing shorthand
var ldif = require('ldif');
console.log(ldif.parseFile('./rfc/example1.ldif'));
Parsing an LDIF file returns an object format for an entire LDIF file.
In this case, example1.ldif specifies contents of two LDAP records.
Shifting records from parsed file
var ldif = require('ldif');
file = ldif.parseFile('./rfc/example1.ldif');
var record = file.shift();
Records are stored in an internal format, using classic
Javascript objects. The type or value specified in a type
property for all objects, but they can also be tested for
specific constructor types:
var ldif = require('ldif');
file = ldif.parseFile('./rfc/example1.ldif');
(file instanceof ldif.Container) === true
(file.shift() instanceof ldif.Record) === true
Converting
Record to plain object
var ldif = require('ldif');
file = ldif.parseFile('./rfc/example1.ldif'),
output_options = {};
var record = file.shift();
console.log(record.toObject(output_options));
Output of the above code is this:
{ dn: 'cn=Barbara Jensen, ou=Product Development, dc=airius, dc=com',
attributes:
{ objectclass: [ 'top', 'person', 'organizationalPerson' ],
cn: [ 'Barbara Jensen', 'Barbara J Jensen', 'Babs Jensen' ],
sn: 'Jensen',
uid: 'bjensen',
telephonenumber: '+1 408 555 1212',
description: 'A big sailing fan.' } }
Notice the default behavior outputs attribute key/value pairs
that have values of either an array or single string. Since an
attribute can be single- or multi-valued, this format makes
sense in most cases.
toObject(options)
The behavior of toObject()
can be altered with options below.
Option | Type | Description | Deafult |
---|
flatten | boolean | Flatten single values into strings | true |
single | boolean | Overrides flatten, only returns single values | false |
decode | boolean | Decode values (not yet well-defined, leave true) | true |
preserveOptions | boolean | Outputs any attribute options | true |
preferOptions | array | Prefer these options when preserveOptions is false | [ ] |
Outputting LDIF for parsed files
All parsed data can be written back to LDIF format using a
toLDIF()
method (on files or entries).
var ldif = require('ldif');
file = ldif.parseFile('./rfc/example1.ldif');
console.log(file.toLDIF());
console.log(file.shift().toLDIF());
Note: toLDIF()
method folds lines by default at 78 characters.
If you want to change this value call toLDIF(width)
where width
is an integer.
Test suite
To run the test suite, use npm test
(you'll need the dev dependencies
of mocha and chai installed).
TODO
- Streaming read interface (coming soon--probably as a seperate package)
- Construct and alter objects through code (document this)
- More complete documentation
- Test suite