ldapsearch man page on aLinux

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LDAPSEARCH(1)							 LDAPSEARCH(1)

NAME
       ldapsearch - LDAP search tool

SYNOPSIS
       ldapsearch  [-n] [-u] [-v] [-t] [-A] [-L[L[L]]] [-M[M]] [-d debuglevel]
       [-f file] [-D binddn]  [-W]  [-w passwd]	 [-y passwdfile]  [-H ldapuri]
       [-h ldaphost]	    [-p ldapport]	[-P 2|3]       [-b searchbase]
       [-s base|one|sub|children] [-a never|always|search|find] [-l timelimit]
       [-z sizelimit]	 [-O security-properties]   [-I]   [-Q]	  [-U authcid]
       [-R realm] [-x] [-X authzid] [-Y mech] [-Z[Z]] filter [attrs...]

DESCRIPTION
       ldapsearch  is  a  shell-accessible  interface  to  the	ldap_search(3)
       library call.

       ldapsearch  opens a connection to an LDAP server, binds, and performs a
       search using specified parameters.   The filter should conform  to  the
       string  representation  for  search filters as defined in RFC 2254.  If
       not provided, the default filter, (objectClass=*), is used.

       If ldapsearch finds one or more entries, the  attributes	 specified  by
       attrs  are returned.  If * is listed, all user attributes are returned.
       If + is listed, all operational attributes are returned.	 If  no	 attrs
       are  listed,  all user attributes are returned.	If only 1.1 is listed,
       no attributes will be returned.

OPTIONS
       -n     Show what would be done, but don't actually perform the  search.
	      Useful for debugging in conjunction with -v.

       -u     Include  the  User  Friendly Name form of the Distinguished Name
	      (DN) in the output.

       -v     Run in verbose mode, with many diagnostics written  to  standard
	      output.

       -t     Write  retrieved	non-printable  values  to  a  set of temporary
	      files.  This is useful for dealing with values  containing  non-
	      character data such as jpegPhoto or audio.

       -A     Retrieve	attributes  only (no values).  This is useful when you
	      just want to see if an attribute is present in an entry and  are
	      not interested in the specific values.

       -L     Search  results  are  display  in	 LDAP  Data Interchange Format
	      detailed in ldif(5).   A	single	-L  restricts  the  output  to
	      LDIFv1.	A  second  -L  disables comments.  A third -L disables
	      printing of the LDIF version.  The default is to use an extended
	      version of LDIF.

       -M[M]  Enable manage DSA IT control.  -MM makes control critical.

       -S attribute
	      Sort the entries returned based on attribute. The default is not
	      to sort entries returned.	 If attribute is a zero-length	string
	      (""),  the entries are sorted by the components of their Distin‐
	      guished Name.  See ldap_sort(3)  for  more  details.  Note  that
	      ldapsearch  normally prints out entries as it receives them. The
	      use of the -S option defeats this behavior, causing all  entries
	      to be retrieved, then sorted, then printed.

       -d debuglevel
	      Set  the LDAP debugging level to debuglevel.  ldapsearch must be
	      compiled with LDAP_DEBUG defined for this	 option	 to  have  any
	      effect.

       -f file
	      Read a series of lines from file, performing one LDAP search for
	      each line.  In this case, the filter given on the	 command  line
	      is  treated  as  a  pattern  where the first occurrence of %s is
	      replaced with a line from file.  If file is a single  -  charac‐
	      ter, then the lines are read from standard input.

       -x     Use simple authentication instead of SASL.

       -D binddn
	      Use the Distinguished Name binddn to bind to the LDAP directory.

       -W     Prompt for simple authentication.	 This is used instead of spec‐
	      ifying the password on the command line.

       -w passwd
	      Use passwd as the password for simple authentication.

       -y passwdfile
	      Use complete contents of passwdfile as the password  for	simple
	      authentication.

       -H ldapuri
	      Specify  URI(s) referring to the ldap server(s); only the proto‐
	      col/host/port fields are allowed; a list of  URI,	 separated  by
	      whitespace or commas is expected.

       -h ldaphost
	      Specify  an  alternate host on which the ldap server is running.
	      Deprecated in favor of -H.

       -p ldapport
	      Specify an alternate TCP port where the ldap server  is  listen‐
	      ing.  Deprecated in favor of -H.

       -b searchbase
	      Use  searchbase  as the starting point for the search instead of
	      the default.

       -s base|one|sub|children
	      Specify the scope of the search to be one of base, one, sub,  or
	      children	to specify a base object, one-level, subtree, or chil‐
	      dren search.  The default is sub.	 Note: children scope requires
	      LDAPv3 subordinate feature extension.

       -a never|always|search|find
	      Specify  how  aliases  dereferencing  is done.  Should be one of
	      never, always, search, or find to specify that aliases are never
	      dereferenced,  always dereferenced, dereferenced when searching,
	      or dereferenced only when	 locating  the	base  object  for  the
	      search.  The default is to never dereference aliases.

       -P 2|3 Specify the LDAP protocol version to use.

       -l timelimit
	      wait  at	most  timelimit	 seconds  for a search to complete.  A
	      timelimit of 0 (zero) or none means no limit.   A	 timelimit  of
	      max  means  the  maximum	integer	 allowable by the protocol.  A
	      server may impose a maximal timelimit which only the  root  user
	      may override.

       -z sizelimit
	      retrieve at most sizelimit entries for a search.	A sizelimit of
	      0 (zero) or none means no limit.	A sizelimit of max  means  the
	      maximum  integer allowable by the protocol.  A server may impose
	      a maximal sizelimit which only the root user may override.

       -O security-properties
	      Specify SASL security properties.

       -I     Enable SASL Interactive mode.  Always  prompt.   Default	is  to
	      prompt only as needed.

       -Q     Enable SASL Quiet mode.  Never prompt.

       -U authcid
	      Specify  the authentication ID for SASL bind. The form of the ID
	      depends on the actual SASL mechanism used.

       -R realm
	      Specify the realm of authentication ID for SASL bind.  The  form
	      of the realm depends on the actual SASL mechanism used.

       -X authzid
	      Specify  the  requested authorization ID for SASL bind.  authzid
	      must be one of the following formats: dn:<distinguished name> or
	      u:<username>

       -Y mech
	      Specify  the  SASL  mechanism  to be used for authentication. If
	      it's not specified, the program will choose the  best  mechanism
	      the server knows.

       -Z[Z]  Issue StartTLS (Transport Layer Security) extended operation. If
	      you use -ZZ, the command will require the operation to  be  suc‐
	      cessful.

OUTPUT FORMAT
       If  one	or  more  entries are found, each entry is written to standard
       output in LDAP Data Interchange Format or ldif(5):

	   version: 1

	   # bjensen, example, net
	   dn: uid=bjensen,dc=example,dc=net
	   objectClass: person
	   objectClass: dcObject
	   uid: bjensen
	   cn: Barbara Jensen
	   sn: Jensen
	   ...

       If the -t option is used, the URI of a temporary file is used in	 place
       of  the	actual value.  If the -A option is given, only the "attribute‐
       name" part is written.

EXAMPLE
       The following command:

	   ldapsearch -LLL "(sn=smith)" cn sn telephoneNumber

       will perform a subtree search (using the default search base and	 other
       parameters  defined in ldap.conf(5)) for entries with a surname (sn) of
       smith.  The common name (cn), surname (sn) and  telephoneNumber	values
       will  be	 retrieved  and	 printed to standard output.  The output might
       look something like this if two entries are found:

	   dn: uid=jts,dc=example,dc=com
	   cn: John Smith
	   cn: John T. Smith
	   sn: Smith
	   sn;lang-en: Smith
	   sn;lang-de: Schmidt
	   telephoneNumber: 1 555 123-4567

	   dn: uid=sss,dc=example,dc=com
	   cn: Steve Smith
	   cn: Steve S. Smith
	   sn: Smith
	   sn;lang-en: Smith
	   sn;lang-de: Schmidt
	   telephoneNumber: 1 555 765-4321

       The command:

	   ldapsearch -LLL -u -t "(uid=xyz)" jpegPhoto audio

       will perform a subtree search using the default search base for entries
       with  user  id of "xyz".	 The user friendly form of the entry's DN will
       be output after the line that contains the DN itself, and the jpegPhoto
       and audio values will be retrieved and written to temporary files.  The
       output might look like this if one entry with one value for each of the
       requested attributes is found:

	   dn: uid=xyz,dc=example,dc=com
	   ufn: xyz, example, com
	   audio:< file:///tmp/ldapsearch-audio-a19924
	   jpegPhoto:< file:///tmp/ldapsearch-jpegPhoto-a19924

       This command:

	   ldapsearch -LLL -s one -b "c=US" "(o=University*)" o description

       will perform a one-level search at the c=US level for all entries whose
       organization name (o) begins begins with University.  The  organization
       name  and description attribute values will be retrieved and printed to
       standard output, resulting in output similar to this:

	   dn: o=University of Alaska Fairbanks,c=US
	   o: University of Alaska Fairbanks
	   description: Preparing Alaska for a brave new yesterday
	   description: leaf node only

	   dn: o=University of Colorado at Boulder,c=US
	   o: University of Colorado at Boulder
	   description: No personnel information
	   description: Institution of education and research

	   dn: o=University of Colorado at Denver,c=US
	   o: University of Colorado at Denver
	   o: UCD
	   o: CU/Denver
	   o: CU-Denver
	   description: Institute for Higher Learning and Research

	   dn: o=University of Florida,c=US
	   o: University of Florida
	   o: UFl
	   description: Warper of young minds

	   ...

DIAGNOSTICS
       Exit status is zero if no errors occur.	Errors result  in  a  non-zero
       exit status and a diagnostic message being written to standard error.

SEE ALSO
       ldapadd(1),  ldapdelete(1), ldapmodify(1), ldapmodrdn(1), ldap.conf(5),
       ldif(5), ldap(3), ldap_search(3)

AUTHOR
       The OpenLDAP Project <http://www.openldap.org/>

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       OpenLDAP	 is  developed	and  maintained	 by   The   OpenLDAP   Project
       (http://www.openldap.org/).   OpenLDAP  is  derived  from University of
       Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release.

OpenLDAP 2.3.24			  2006/05/30			 LDAPSEARCH(1)
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