phpman > perldoc > Net::LDAP::Entry(3pm)

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NAME
    Net::LDAP::Entry - An LDAP entry object

SYNOPSIS
     use Net::LDAP;

     $ldap = Net::LDAP->new ( $host );
     $mesg = $ldap->search ( @search_args );

     my $max = $mesg->count;
     for ( $i = 0 ; $i < $max ; $i++ ) {
       my $entry = $mesg->entry ( $i );
       foreach my $attr ( $entry->attributes ) {
         print join( "\n ", $attr, $entry->get_value( $attr ) ), "\n";
       }
     }

     # or

     use Net::LDAP::Entry;

     $entry = Net::LDAP::Entry->new;

     $entry->dn($dn);

     $entry->add (
       attr1 => 'value1',
       attr2 => [ qw(value1 value2) ]
     );

     $entry->delete ( 'unwanted' );

     $entry->replace (
       attr1 => 'newvalue',
       attr2 => [ qw(new values) ]
     );

     $entry->update ( $ldap ); # update directory server

     $entry2 = $entry->clone; # copies entry

     # new alternate syntax

     $entry = Net::LDAP::Entry->new ( $dn,
       attr1 => 'value1',
       attr2 => [ qw(value1 value2) ]
     )->add(
       attr3   => 'value'
     )->update( $ldap );

DESCRIPTION
    The Net::LDAP::Entry object represents a single entry in the directory. It is a container for
    attribute-value pairs.

    A Net::LDAP::Entry object can be used in two situations. The first and probably most common use
    is in the result of a search to the directory server.

    The other is where a new object is created locally and then a single command is sent to the
    directory server to add, modify or replace an entry. Entries for this purpose can also be
    created by reading an LDIF file with the Net::LDAP::LDIF module.

CONSTRUCTORS
    new ( )
        Create a new entry object with the changetype set to 'add'. Optionally, you can provide a DN
        and a list of arguments passed to the add method.

         Net::LDAP::Entry->new()

         # or
         Net::LDAP::Entry->new( $dn )

         # or
         Net::LDAP::Entry->new( $dn ,
          objectClass => [qw( top posixAccount )] , uid => 'admin'
         )

    clone ( )
        Returns a copy of the Net::LDAP::Entry object.

METHODS
    add ( ATTR => VALUE, ... )
        Add more attributes or values to the entry and returns the entry itself. Each "VALUE" should
        be a string if only a single value is wanted in the attribute, or a reference to an array of
        strings if multiple values are wanted. The values given will be added to the values which
        already exist for the given attributes.

         $entry->add ( 'sn' => 'Barr' );

         $entry->add ( 'street' => [ '1 some road','nowhere' ] );

        NOTE: these changes are local to the client and will not appear on the directory server
        until the "update" method is called. As "add" returns the entry, you can write something
        like.

         $entry->add ( 'sn' => 'Barr' )->update( $ldap );

    attributes ( OPTIONS )
        Return a list of attributes in this entry

        nooptions => 1
            Return a list of the attribute names excluding any options. For example for the entry

              name: Graham Barr
              name;en-us: Bob
              jpegPhoto;binary: **binary data**

            then

              @values = $entry->attributes;
              print "default: @values\n";

              @values = $entry->attributes ( nooptions => 1 );
              print "nooptions: @values\n";

            will output

              default: name name;en-us jpegPhoto;binary
              nooptions: name jpegPhoto

    changetype ( )
        Returns the type of operation that would be performed when the update method is called.

    changetype ( TYPE )
        Set the type of operation that will be performed when the update method is called to "TYPE".
        Returns the entry itself.

        Possible values for "TYPE" are

        add The update method will call the add method on the client object, which will result in
            the entry being added to the directory server.

        delete
            The update method will call the delete method on the client object, which will result in
            the entry being removed from the directory server.

             $entry->delete->update( $ldap )

        modify
            The update method will call the modify method on the client object, which will result in
            any changes that have been made locally being made to the entry on the directory server.

        moddn/modrdn
            The update method will call the moddn method on the client object, which will result in
            any DN changes that have been made locally being made to the entry on the directory
            server. These DN changes are specified by setting the entry attributes newrdn,
            deleteoldrdn, and (optionally) newsuperior.

    delete ( )
        Delete the entry from the server on the next call to "update".

    delete ( ATTR => [ VALUE, ... ], ... )
        Delete the values of given attributes from the entry. Values are references to arrays;
        passing a reference to an empty array is the same as passing "undef", and will result in the
        entire attribute being deleted. For example:

         $entry->delete ( 'mail' => [ 'foo.bar AT example.com' ] );
         $entry->delete ( 'description' => [ ], 'streetAddress' => [ ] );

        NOTE: these changes are local to the client and will not appear on the directory server
        until the "update" method is called.

    dn ( )
        Get the DN of the entry.

    dn ( DN )
        Set the DN for the entry, and return the previous value.

        NOTE: these changes are local to the client and will not appear on the directory server
        until the "update" method is called.

    ldif ( OPTION => VALUE, ... )
        Returns the entry as an LDIF string. Possible options are all options "new" in
        Net::LDAP::LDIF allows, with two being treated special:

        change => VALUE
            If given a true value then the LDIF will be generated as a change record. If false, then
            the LDIF generated will represent the entry content. If unspecified then it will default
            to true if the entry has changes and false if no changes have been applied to the entry.

        version => VALUE
            No matter what value is passed, it will be ignored, and treated as if 0 were given.

    dump ( [ FILEHANDLE ] )
        Dump the entry to the given filehandle.

        This method is intended for debugging purposes and does not treat binary attributes
        specially. It also does not deal properly with entries resulting from LDIF change records.

        See Net::LDAP::LDIF on how to generate LDIF output.

        If "FILEHANDLE" is omitted "STDOUT" is used by default.

    exists ( ATTR )
        Returns "TRUE" if the entry has an attribute called "ATTR".

    get_value ( ATTR, OPTIONS )
        Get the values for the attribute "ATTR". In a list context returns all values for the given
        attribute, or the empty list if the attribute does not exist. In a scalar context returns
        the first value for the attribute or undef if the attribute does not exist.

        alloptions => 1
            The result will be a hash reference. The keys of the hash will be the options and the
            hash value will be the values for those attributes. For example if an entry had:

             name: Graham Barr
             name;en-us: Bob

            Then a get for attribute "name" with alloptions set to a true value

             $ref = $entry->get_value ( 'name', alloptions => 1 );

            will return a hash reference that would be like

             {
               ''       => [ 'Graham Barr' ],
               ';en-us' => [ 'Bob' ]
             }

            If alloptions is not set or is set to false only the attribute values for the exactly
            matching name are returned.

        nooptions => 1
            Instead of only returning the values of the exactly matching attribute name, get the
            attribute values of all attributes with the base name given. I.e. in the example above,
            calling

             @array = $entry->get_value ( 'name', nooptions => 1 );

            will yield

             ( 'Graham Barr', 'Bob' )

            The name of this option has neen chosen for consistency with the equally named option in
            the attributes method.

        asref => 1
            The result will be a reference to an array containing all the values for the attribute,
            or "undef" if the attribute does not exist.

             $scalar = $entry->get_value ( 'name' );

            $scalar will be the first value for the "name" attribute, or "undef" if the entry does
            not contain a "name" attribute.

             $ref = $entry->get_value ( 'name', asref => 1 );

            $ref will be a reference to an array, which will have all the values for the "name"
            attribute. If the entry does not have an attribute called "name" then $ref will be
            "undef".

        NOTE: In the interest of performance the array references returned by "get_value" may be
        references to structures held inside the entry object. These values and their contents
        should NOT be modified directly.

    replace ( ATTR => VALUE, ... )
        Similar to "add", except that the values given will replace any values that already exist
        for the given attributes.

        NOTE: these changes are local to the client and will not appear on the directory server
        until the "update" method is called.

    update ( CLIENT [, OPTIONS ] )
        Update the directory server with any changes that have been made locally to the attributes
        of this entry. This means any calls that have been made to add, replace or delete since the
        last call to changetype or update was made.

        This method can also be used to modify the DN of the entry on the server, by specifying
        moddn or modrdn as the changetype, and setting the entry attributes newrdn, deleteoldrdn,
        and (optionally) newsuperior.

        "CLIENT" is a "Net::LDAP" object where the update will be sent to.

        "OPTIONS" may be options to the "Net::LDAP" actions on CLIENT corresponding to the entry's
        changetype.

        The result will be an object of type Net::LDAP::Message as returned by the add, modify or
        delete method called on CLIENT.

        Alternatively "CLIENT" can also be a "Net::LDAP::LDIF" object, that must be an LDIF file
        opened for writing.

        In this case, the entry, together with any "OPTIONS" is passed as arguments to the
        "write_entry" method of the "CLIENT" object.

        Here too, the result is an object class "Net::LDAP::Message". On error, the error code is
        "LDAP_OTHER" with the LDIF error message in the error text.

SEE ALSO
    Net::LDAP, Net::LDAP::LDIF

AUTHOR
    Graham Barr <gbarr AT pobox.com>.

    Please report any bugs, or post any suggestions, to the perl-ldap mailing list
    <perl-ldap AT perl.org>.

COPYRIGHT
    Copyright (c) 1997-2004 Graham Barr. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can
    redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

Net::LDAP::Entry(3pm)
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION CONSTRUCTORS METHODS SEE ALSO AUTHOR COPYRIGHT

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