slapacl(8)



NAME

   slapacl - Check access to a list of attributes.

SYNOPSIS

   /usr/sbin/slapacl   -b DN  [-d debug-level]  [-D authcDN |  -U authcID]
   [-f slapd.conf]    [-F confdir]    [-o option[=value]]    [-u]     [-v]
   [-X authzID | -o  authzDN=DN] [attr[/access][:value]] [...]

DESCRIPTION

   slapacl  is  used to check the behavior of slapd(8) by verifying access
   to directory data according  to  the  access  control  list  directives
   defined in its configuration.  It opens the slapd.conf(5) configuration
   file or the slapd-config(5)  backend,  reads  in  the  access/olcAccess
   directives, and then parses the attr list given on the command-line; if
   none is given, access to the entry pseudo-attribute is tested.

OPTIONS

   -b DN  specify the DN which access is requested to;  the  corresponding
          entry is fetched from the database, and thus it must exist.  The
          DN is also used to determine what rules apply; thus, it must  be
          in the naming context of a configured database.  See also -u.

   -d debug-level
          enable  debugging  messages  as  defined by the specified debug-
          level; see slapd(8) for details.

   -D authcDN
          specify a DN to be used as identity  through  the  test  session
          when selecting appropriate <by> clauses in access lists.

   -f slapd.conf
          specify an alternative slapd.conf(5) file.

   -F confdir
          specify  a  config  directory.  If both -f and -F are specified,
          the config file will be read and converted to  config  directory
          format  and  written  to  the  specified  directory.  If neither
          option is specified, an  attempt  to  read  the  default  config
          directory  will  be made before trying to use the default config
          file. If a valid config directory exists then the default config
          file is ignored.

   -o option[=value]
          Specify  an  option  with a(n optional) value.  Possible generic
          options/values are:

                 syslog=<subsystems>  (see `-s' in slapd(8))
                 syslog-level=<level> (see `-S' in slapd(8))
                 syslog-user=<user>   (see `-l' in slapd(8))

          Possible options/values specific to slapacl are:

                 authzDN
                 domain
                 peername
                 sasl_ssf
                 sockname
                 sockurl
                 ssf
                 tls_ssf
                 transport_ssf

          See the related fields in slapd.access(5) for details.

   -u     do not fetch the entry from the database.  In this case, if  the
          entry does not exist, a fake entry with the DN given with the -b
          option is used, with no attributes.   As  a  consequence,  those
          rules  that depend on the contents of the target object will not
          behave as with the real object.  The DN given with the -b option
          is  still  used  to select what rules apply; thus, it must be in
          the naming context of a configured database.  See also -b.

   -U authcID
          specify an ID to be mapped to a DN as by means  of  authz-regexp
          or authz-rewrite rules (see slapd.conf(5) for details); mutually
          exclusive with -D.

   -v     enable verbose mode.

   -X authzID
          specify an authorization ID to be mapped to a DN as by means  of
          authz-regexp  or  authz-rewrite  rules  (see  slapd.conf(5)  for
          details); mutually exclusive with -o authzDN=DN.

EXAMPLES

   The command

        /usr/sbin/slapacl -f /etc/ldap/slapd.conf -v \
               -U bjorn -b "o=University of Michigan,c=US" \
            "o/read:University of Michigan"

   tests whether the user bjorn can access the attribute o  of  the  entry
   o=University of Michigan,c=US at read level.

SEE ALSO

   ldap(3), slapd(8), slaptest(8), slapauth(8)

   "OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

   OpenLDAP  Software  is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP Project
   <http://www.openldap.org/>.   OpenLDAP   Software   is   derived   from
   University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release.




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