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Net::LDAP::FilterMatch - LDAP entry matching

Abstract

This extension of the class Net::LDAP::Filter provides entry matching functionality on the Perl side. Given an entry it will tell whether the entry matches the filter object. It can be used on its own or as part of a Net::LDAP::Server based LDAP server.

Authors

Hans Klunder <hans.klunder@bigfoot.com> Peter Marschall <peter@adpm.de> perl v5.32.0 2021-01-03 Net::LDAP::FilterMatch(3pm)

Method

match ( ENTRY [ ,SCHEMA ] ) Return whether ENTRY matches the filter object. If a schema object is provided, the selection of matching algorithms will be derived from schema. In case of error undef is returned. For approximate matching like (cn~=Schmidt) there are several modules that can be used. By default the following modules will be tried in this order: String::Approx Text::Metaphone Text::Soundex If none of these modules is found it will fall back on a simple regexp algorithm. If you want to specifically use one implementation only, simply do use Net::LDAP::FilterMatch qw(Text::Soundex);

Name

Net::LDAP::FilterMatch - LDAP entry matching

See Also

Net::LDAP::Filter

Synopsis

use Net::LDAP::Entry; use Net::LDAP::Filter; use Net::LDAP::FilterMatch; my $entry = new Net::LDAP::Entry; $entry->dn("cn=dummy entry"); $entry->add ( 'cn' => 'dummy entry', 'street' => [ '1 some road','nowhere' ] ); my @filters = (qw/(cn=dummy*) (ou=*) (&(cn=dummy*)(street=*road)) (&(cn=dummy*)(!(street=nowhere)))/); for (@filters) { my $filter = Net::LDAP::Filter->new($_); print $_,' : ', $filter->match($entry) ? 'match' : 'no match' ,"\n"; }

See Also