Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | XavRsl |
Maintainer Contact: | contact@xavrsl.fr (Xavier Roussel) |
Package Create Date: | 2013-04-03 |
Package Last Update: | 2016-12-23 |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-11-19 03:05:06 |
Package Statistics | |
---|---|
Total Downloads: | 3,896 |
Monthly Downloads: | 1 |
Daily Downloads: | 0 |
Total Stars: | 22 |
Total Watchers: | 6 |
Total Forks: | 18 |
Total Open Issues: | 5 |
This package is an attempt to provide a way to search through an Ldap Directory like you would query a database with Eloquent.
It now also comes with a AuthUserProvider so that you can hook it in as a AuthProvider for your Laravel app. In order to accomplish that, I have stolen very large pieces of this great package : Adldap2/Adldap2-Laravel
The only reason why I'm not using Adldap2-Laravel for my projects is because it doesn't support OpenLdap yet, so if you use ActiveDirectory, go check it out !
Require it from your command line :
composer require xavrsl/ldap
Add the service provider to config/app :
Xavrsl\Ldap\LdapServiceProvider::class,
Add the facade to the alias array (also in config/app):
'Ldap' => Xavrsl\Ldap\Facades\Ldap::class,
You then need to publish and customize the config file to indicate the location of your ldap server and also set your dn, attributes etc. :
php artisan vendor:publish
You're now ready to use this package !
First remember to set ALL your config parameters. All sections have been well documented in the comments. Any attribute that you want to retrieve MUST be specified in the 'attributes' array. This may seem strange but the reason I built this package was because I needed a way to query an LDAP Directory every two seconds on a big list of users. So I needed Caching. The only way I was able to cache all the fields was by providing a retrieved attributes array.
// First possibility, with find/where methods and get
Ldap::find('people')->where('uid', 8162)->get('displayname');
// Second possibility, using an alias for the get method
Ldap::find('people')->where('uid', 8162)->displayname;
// Third possibility, attribute in camelCase format
Ldap::find('people')->where('uid', 8162)->displayName;
// If default attribute is set to 'uid' in conf, you can use the short method
Ldap::people(8162)->displayname;
All those possibilities should return the same string (our user's displayname) :
Bobby Blake
// Let's directly use the short method
Ldap::people(8162)->get('displayname, mail');
// May as well use an array instead of a string
Ldap::people(8162)->get(['displayName', 'mail']);
This should return :
array(1) [
'8162' => array(2) [
'displayname' => string (11) "Bobby Blake"
'mail' => string (22) "bobby.blake@domain.org"
]
]
If you change the key in your config to some attribute like 'login' for exemple, you get :
array(1) [
'bobblake' => array(2) [
'displayname' => string (11) "Bobby Blake"
'mail' => string (22) "bobby.blake@domain.org"
]
]
NOTE : You don't need to add the 'key' attribute's value in the 'attributes' array in the config. The package does that for you.
// Let's use the short method again
Ldap::people('8162, 128')->get('displayname, mail');
// Same thing using arrays
Ldap::people(['8162', '128'])->get(['displayName', 'mail']);
// Longer syntax
Ldap::find('people')->where('uid', ['8162', '128'])->get(['displayName', 'mail']);
// Base your search on another attribute
Ldap::find('people')->where('login', ['bobblake', 'johndoe'])->get(['displayName', 'mail']);
This should return :
array(2) [
'108' => array(2) [
'displayname' => string (8) "John Doe"
'mail' => string (20) "john.doe@domain.org"
]
'8162' => array(2) [
'displayname' => string (11) "Bobby Blake"
'mail' => string (22) "bobby.blake@domain.org"
]
]
You can also return all the attributes you've set in the 'attributes' config property :
// The long way
Ldap::find('people')->where('login', ['bobblake', 'johndoe'])->get();
// The short way
Ldap::people('108, 8162')->get();
// The long way
Ldap::find('people')->where('login', 'bob*')->get(['displayName', 'mail']);
// The short way (assuming you have set the 'filter' attribute to 'login' in config)
Ldap::people('bob*')->get(['displayName', 'mail']);
// Also works with multiple wildcards
Ldap::people('bob*, john*')->get(['displayName', 'mail']);
You get a result looking something like this :
array(2) [
'108' => array(2) [
'displayname' => string (8) "John Doe"
'mail' => string (20) "john.doe@domain.org"
]
'4021' => array(2) [
'displayname' => string (10) "John Smith"
'mail' => string (22) "john.smith@domain.org"
]
'8162' => array(2) [
'displayname' => string (11) "Bobby Blake"
'mail' => string (22) "bobby.blake@domain.org"
]
'9520' => array(2) [
'displayname' => string (12) "Bob McCormac"
'mail' => string (24) "bobby.mccormac@domain.org"
]
]
You get the idea !!
// Depending on the filter attribute you've set in the config
Ldap::auth('bobblake', 'm7V3ryStr0ngP@ssw0rd!')
Will simply return TRUE or FALSE.
NOTE : Don't forget to set the dn attribute in config for user authentication.
There is still a lot of work ahead to make this package complete. Here's a list of what you could expect in the future :