2.0 KiB
OpenLDAP container
Beware that this is intended for development purposes only and should not be used in production.
Make sure the latest Docker version in installed and the Docker daemon is running.
Building the container image
Before being able to use this container you must build it. Just run make build
from within the openldap
directory in the root of this project.
The created Docker image should be now present in your library.
% docker images 'unit/slapd'
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
unit/slapd latest c04d952b53d3 2 minutes ago 8.92MB
This will also create in the openldap
directory in the root of this repository
two files containing the private key and the server certificate for the just
built docker image.
% ls -l *.pem
-rw-r--r-- 1 crudo users 1265 16 dic 22.25 cert.pem
-rw------- 1 crudo users 1704 16 dic 22.25 key.pem
Running the container image
Just run make run
. This will start an OpenLDAP daemon bound to 127.0.0.1
on port 389
.
The root user DN is cn=root,dn=unit,dc=macaomilano,dc=org
and its password
is root
.
Sending SIGINT
(or pressing Ctrl+C
) will stop the daemon and remove the
running docker instance..
Issuing client commands
In order to operate LDAP commands you need the ldapsearch
and ldapmodify
binaries.
Such commands require some environment variables to be set. The make shell
command will start a new shell with those variables already set. Currently
only Zsh is supported.
Populating the server
The init.ldif
file that can be found in the openldap
directory in the root
of this repository contains a basic structure that can be imported to the
OpenLDAP directory server. Just run make populate
from withing the same directory.
Inspecting the server
Running the command make inspect
from within the openldap
directory in
the root of this repository will show all the stored information in the
OpenLDAP directory server.