Package Exports
- ldapjs
- ldapjs/lib/client/client
- ldapjs/lib/client/client.js
- ldapjs/lib/controls
- ldapjs/lib/controls/index.js
- ldapjs/lib/errors
- ldapjs/lib/errors/codes
- ldapjs/lib/errors/codes.js
- ldapjs/lib/errors/index.js
- ldapjs/lib/index.js
- ldapjs/lib/messages
- ldapjs/lib/messages/index.js
- ldapjs/lib/messages/search_response
- ldapjs/lib/messages/search_response.js
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (ldapjs) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
LDAPjs
LDAPjs makes the LDAP protocol a first class citizen in Node.js.
Usage
For full docs, head on over to http://ldapjs.org.
var ldap = require('ldapjs');
var server = ldap.createServer();
server.search('dc=example', function(req, res, next) {
var obj = {
dn: req.dn.toString(),
attributes: {
objectclass: ['organization', 'top'],
o: 'example'
}
};
if (req.filter.matches(obj.attributes))
res.send(obj);
res.end();
});
server.listen(1389, function() {
console.log('ldapjs listening at ' + server.url);
});
To run that, assuming you've got the OpenLDAP client on your system:
ldapsearch -H ldap://localhost:1389 -x -b dc=example objectclass=*
Installation
npm install ldapjs
Node.js Version Support
As of ldapjs@3
we only support the active Node.js LTS releases.
See https://github.com/nodejs/release#release-schedule for the LTS
release schedule.
For a definitive list of Node.js version we support, see the version matrix we test against in our CI configuration.
Note: given the release date of ldapjs@3
, and the short window of time that
Node.js v14 had remaining on its LTS window, we opted to not support Node.js
v14 with ldapjs@3
(we released late February 2023 and v14 goes into
maintenance in late April 2023). Also, Node.js v14 will be end-of-life (EOL) on
September 11, 2023; this is a very shortened EOL timeline and makes it even
more reasonable to not support it at this point.
License
MIT.