The Ldap Component
The Ldap Component
The Ldap component provides a means to connect to an LDAP server (OpenLDAP or Active Directory).
Installation
$ composer require symfony/ldap
Note
If you install this component outside of a Symfony application, you must require the vendor/autoload.php
file in your code to enable the class autoloading mechanism provided by Composer. Read this article for more details.
Usage
The Symfony\Component\Ldap\Ldap
class provides methods to authenticate and query against an LDAP server.
The Ldap
class uses an Symfony\Component\Ldap\Adapter\AdapterInterface
to communicate with an LDAP server. The adapter
for PHP’s built-in LDAP extension, for example, can be configured using the following options:
host
IP or hostname of the LDAP server
port
Port used to access the LDAP server
version
The version of the LDAP protocol to use
encryption
The encryption protocol: ssl
, tls
or none
(default)
connection_string
You may use this option instead of host
and port
to connect to the LDAP server
optReferrals
Specifies whether to automatically follow referrals returned by the LDAP server
options
LDAP server’s options as defined in ConnectionOptions
For example, to connect to a start-TLS secured LDAP server:
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Ldap;
$ldap = Ldap::create('ext_ldap', [
'host' => 'my-server',
'encryption' => 'ssl',
]);
Or you could directly specify a connection string:
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Ldap;
$ldap = Ldap::create('ext_ldap', ['connection_string' => 'ldaps://my-server:636']);
The bind() method authenticates a previously configured connection using both the distinguished name (DN) and the password of a user:
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Ldap;
// ...
$ldap->bind($dn, $password);
Caution
When the LDAP server allows unauthenticated binds, a blank password will always be valid.
Once bound (or if you enabled anonymous authentication on your LDAP server), you may query the LDAP server using the query() method:
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Ldap;
// ...
$query = $ldap->query('dc=symfony,dc=com', '(&(objectclass=person)(ou=Maintainers))');
$results = $query->execute();
foreach ($results as $entry) {
// Do something with the results
}
By default, LDAP entries are lazy-loaded. If you wish to fetch all entries in a single call and do something with the results’ array, you may use the toArray() method:
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Ldap;
// ...
$query = $ldap->query('dc=symfony,dc=com', '(&(objectclass=person)(ou=Maintainers))');
$results = $query->execute()->toArray();
// Do something with the results array
By default, LDAP queries use the Symfony\Component\Ldap\Adapter\QueryInterface::SCOPE_SUB
scope, which corresponds to the LDAP_SCOPE_SUBTREE
scope of the ldap_search function. You can also use SCOPE_BASE
(related to the LDAP_SCOPE_BASE
scope of ldap_read) and SCOPE_ONE
(related to the LDAP_SCOPE_ONELEVEL
scope of ldap_list):
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Adapter\QueryInterface;
$query = $ldap->query('dc=symfony,dc=com', '...', ['scope' => QueryInterface::SCOPE_ONE]);
Use the filter
option to only retrieve some specific attributes:
$query = $ldap->query(‘dc=symfony,dc=com’, ‘…’, [‘filter’ => [‘cn’, ‘mail’]);
Creating or Updating Entries
The Ldap component provides means to create new LDAP entries, update or even delete existing ones:
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Entry;
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Ldap;
// ...
$entry = new Entry('cn=Fabien Potencier,dc=symfony,dc=com', [
'sn' => ['fabpot'],
'objectClass' => ['inetOrgPerson'],
]);
$entryManager = $ldap->getEntryManager();
// Creating a new entry
$entryManager->add($entry);
// Finding and updating an existing entry
$query = $ldap->query('dc=symfony,dc=com', '(&(objectclass=person)(ou=Maintainers))');
$result = $query->execute();
$entry = $result[0];
$phoneNumber = $entry->getAttribute('phoneNumber');
$isContractor = $entry->hasAttribute('contractorCompany');
$entry->setAttribute('email', ['[email protected]']);
$entryManager->update($entry);
// Adding or removing values to a multi-valued attribute is more efficient than using update()
$entryManager->addAttributeValues($entry, 'telephoneNumber', ['+1.111.222.3333', '+1.222.333.4444']);
$entryManager->removeAttributeValues($entry, 'telephoneNumber', ['+1.111.222.3333', '+1.222.333.4444']);
// Removing an existing entry
$entryManager->remove(new Entry('cn=Test User,dc=symfony,dc=com'));
Batch Updating
Use the entry manager’s applyOperations() method to update multiple attributes at once:
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Entry;
use Symfony\Component\Ldap\Ldap;
// ...
$entry = new Entry('cn=Fabien Potencier,dc=symfony,dc=com', [
'sn' => ['fabpot'],
'objectClass' => ['inetOrgPerson'],
]);
$entryManager = $ldap->getEntryManager();
// Adding multiple email addresses at once
$entryManager->applyOperations($entry->getDn(), [
new UpdateOperation(LDAP_MODIFY_BATCH_ADD, 'mail', '[email protected]'),
new UpdateOperation(LDAP_MODIFY_BATCH_ADD, 'mail', '[email protected]'),
]);
Possible operation types are LDAP_MODIFY_BATCH_ADD
, LDAP_MODIFY_BATCH_REMOVE
, LDAP_MODIFY_BATCH_REMOVE_ALL
, LDAP_MODIFY_BATCH_REPLACE
. Parameter $values
must be NULL
when using LDAP_MODIFY_BATCH_REMOVE_ALL
operation type.
This work, including the code samples, is licensed under a Creative Commons BY-SA 3.0 license.