mirror of
https://git.openldap.org/openldap/openldap.git
synced 2024-12-21 03:10:25 +08:00
210 lines
8.7 KiB
Plaintext
210 lines
8.7 KiB
Plaintext
# $OpenLDAP$
|
|
# Copyright 2007 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
|
|
# COPYING RESTRICTIONS APPLY, see COPYRIGHT.
|
|
|
|
H1: Changes Since Previous Release
|
|
|
|
The following sections attempt to summarize the new features and changes in OpenLDAP
|
|
software since the 2.3.x release and the OpenLDAP Admin Guide.
|
|
|
|
H2: New Guide Sections
|
|
|
|
In order to make the Admin Guide more thorough and cover the majority of questions
|
|
asked on the OpenLDAP mailing lists and scenarios discussed there, we have added the following new sections:
|
|
|
|
* {{SECT:When should I use LDAP?}}
|
|
* {{SECT:When should I not use LDAP?}}
|
|
* {{SECT:LDAP vs RDBMS}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Backends}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Overlays}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Replication}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Maintenance}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Monitoring}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Tuning}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Troubleshooting}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Changes Since Previous Release}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Upgrading from 2.3.x}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Configuration File Examples}}
|
|
* {{SECT:Glossary}}
|
|
|
|
Also, the table of contents is now 3 levels deep to ease navigation.
|
|
|
|
|
|
H2: New Features and Enhancements in 2.4
|
|
|
|
H3: Better {{B:cn=config}} functionality
|
|
|
|
There is a new slapd-config(5) manpage for the {{B:cn=config}} backend. The
|
|
original design called for auto-renaming of config entries when you insert or
|
|
delete entries with ordered names, but that was not implemented in 2.3. It is
|
|
now in 2.4. This means, e.g., if you have
|
|
|
|
> olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config
|
|
> olcSuffix: dc=example,dc=com
|
|
|
|
and you want to add a new subordinate, now you can ldapadd:
|
|
|
|
> olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config
|
|
> olcSuffix: dc=foo,dc=example,dc=com
|
|
|
|
This will insert a new BDB database in slot 1 and bump all following databases
|
|
down one, so the original BDB database will now be named:
|
|
|
|
> olcDatabase={2}bdb,cn=config
|
|
> olcSuffix: dc=example,dc=com
|
|
|
|
H3: Better {{B:cn=schema}} functionality
|
|
|
|
In 2.3 you were only able to add new schema elements, not delete or modify
|
|
existing elements. In 2.4 you can modify schema at will. (Except for the
|
|
hardcoded system schema, of course.)
|
|
|
|
H3: More sophisticated Syncrepl configurations
|
|
|
|
The original implementation of Syncrepl in OpenLDAP 2.2 was intended to support
|
|
multiple consumers within the same database, but that feature never worked and
|
|
was removed from OpenLDAP 2.3; you could only configure a single consumer in
|
|
any database.
|
|
|
|
In 2.4 you can configure multiple consumers in a single database. The configuration
|
|
possibilities here are quite complex and numerous. You can configure consumers
|
|
over arbitrary subtrees of a database (disjoint or overlapping). Any portion
|
|
of the database may in turn be provided to other consumers using the Syncprov
|
|
overlay. The Syncprov overlay works with any number of consumers over a single
|
|
database or over arbitrarily many glued databases.
|
|
|
|
H3: N-Way Multimaster Replication
|
|
|
|
As a consequence of the work to support multiple consumer contexts, the syncrepl
|
|
system now supports full N-Way multimaster replication with entry-level conflict
|
|
resolution. There are some important constraints, of course: In order to maintain
|
|
consistent results across all servers, you must maintain tightly synchronized
|
|
clocks across all participating servers (e.g., you must use NTP on all servers).
|
|
|
|
The entryCSNs used for replication now record timestamps with microsecond resolution,
|
|
instead of just seconds. The delta-syncrepl code has not been updated to support
|
|
multimaster usage yet, that will come later in the 2.4 cycle.
|
|
|
|
H3: Replicating {{slapd}} Configuration (syncrepl and {{B:cn=config}})
|
|
|
|
Syncrepl was explicitly disabled on cn=config in 2.3. It is now fully supported
|
|
in 2.4; you can use syncrepl to replicate an entire server configuration from
|
|
one server to arbitrarily many other servers. It's possible to clone an entire
|
|
running slapd using just a small (less than 10 lines) seed configuration, or
|
|
you can just replicate the schema subtrees, etc. Tests 049 and 050 in the test
|
|
suite provide working examples of these capabilities.
|
|
|
|
|
|
H3: Push-Mode Replication
|
|
|
|
In 2.3 you could configure syncrepl as a full push-mode replicator by using it
|
|
in conjunction with a back-ldap pointed at the target server. But because the
|
|
back-ldap database needs to have a suffix corresponding to the target's suffix,
|
|
you could only configure one instance per slapd.
|
|
|
|
In 2.4 you can define a database to be "hidden", which means that its suffix is
|
|
ignored when checking for name collisions, and the database will never be used
|
|
to answer requests received by the frontend. Using this "hidden" database feature
|
|
allows you to configure multiple databases with the same suffix, allowing you to
|
|
set up multiple back-ldap instances for pushing replication of a single database
|
|
to multiple targets. There may be other uses for hidden databases as well (e.g.,
|
|
using a syncrepl consumer to maintain a *local* mirror of a database on a separate filesystem).
|
|
|
|
|
|
H3: More extensive TLS configuration control
|
|
|
|
In 2.3, the TLS configuration in slapd was only used by the slapd listeners. For
|
|
outbound connections used by e.g. back-ldap or syncrepl their TLS parameters came
|
|
from the system's ldap.conf file.
|
|
|
|
In 2.4 all of these sessions inherit their settings from the main slapd configuration,
|
|
but settings can be individually overridden on a per-config-item basis. This is
|
|
particularly helpful if you use certificate-based authentication and need to use a
|
|
different client certificate for different destinations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
H3: Performance enhancements
|
|
|
|
Too many to list. Some notable changes - ldapadd used to be a couple of orders
|
|
of magnitude slower than "slapadd -q". It's now at worst only about half the
|
|
speed of slapadd -q. Some comparisons of all the 2.x OpenLDAP releases are available
|
|
at {{URL:http://www.openldap.org/pub/hyc/scale2007.pdf}}
|
|
|
|
That compared 2.0.27, 2.1.30, 2.2.30, 2.3.33, and HEAD). Toward the latter end
|
|
of the "Cached Search Performance" chart it gets hard to see the difference
|
|
because the run times are so small, but the new code is about 25% faster than 2.3,
|
|
which was about 20% faster than 2.2, which was about 100% faster than 2.1, which
|
|
was about 100% faster than 2.0, in that particular search scenario. That test
|
|
basically searched a 1.3GB DB of 380836 entries (all in the slapd entry cache)
|
|
in under 1 second. i.e., on a 2.4GHz CPU with DDR400 ECC/Registered RAM we can
|
|
search over 500 thousand entries per second. The search was on an unindexed
|
|
attribute using a filter that would not match any entry, forcing slapd to examine
|
|
every entry in the DB, testing the filter for a match.
|
|
|
|
Essentially the slapd entry cache in back-bdb/back-hdb is so efficient the search
|
|
processing time is almost invisible; the runtime is limited only by the memory
|
|
bandwidth of the machine. (The search data rate corresponds to about 3.5GB/sec;
|
|
the memory bandwidth on the machine is only about 4GB/sec due to ECC and register latency.)
|
|
|
|
H3: New overlays
|
|
|
|
* slapo-constraint (Attribute value constraints)
|
|
* slapo-dds (Dynamic Directory Services, RFC 2589)
|
|
* slapo-memberof (reverse group membership maintenance)
|
|
|
|
H3: New features in existing Overlays
|
|
|
|
* slapo-pcache
|
|
- Inspection/Maintenance
|
|
-- the cache database can be directly accessed via
|
|
LDAP by adding a specific control to each LDAP request; a specific
|
|
extended operation allows to consistently remove cached entries and entire
|
|
cached queries
|
|
- Hot Restart
|
|
-- cached queries are saved on disk at shutdown, and reloaded if
|
|
not expired yet at subsequent restart
|
|
|
|
* slapo-rwm can safely interoperate with other overlays
|
|
* Dyngroup/Dynlist merge, plus security enhancements
|
|
- added dgIdentity support (draft-haripriya-dynamicgroup)
|
|
|
|
H3: New features in slapd
|
|
|
|
* monitoring of back-{b,h}db: cache fill-in, non-indexed searches,
|
|
* session tracking control (draft-wahl-ldap-session)
|
|
* subtree delete in back-sql (draft-armijo-ldap-treedelete)
|
|
|
|
H3: New features in libldap
|
|
|
|
* ldap_sync client API (LDAP Content Sync Operation, RFC 4533)
|
|
|
|
H3: New clients, tools and tool enhancements
|
|
|
|
* ldapexop for arbitrary extended operations
|
|
* Complete support of controls in request/response for all clients
|
|
* LDAP Client tools now honor SRV records
|
|
|
|
H3: New build options
|
|
|
|
* Support for building against GnuTLS
|
|
|
|
|
|
H2: Obsolete Features Removed From 2.4
|
|
|
|
These features were strongly deprecated in 2.3 and removed in 2.4.
|
|
|
|
H3: Slurpd
|
|
|
|
Please read the {{SECT:Replication}} section as to why this is no longer in
|
|
OpenLDAP
|
|
|
|
H3: back-ldbm
|
|
|
|
back-ldbm was both slow and unreliable. Its byzantine indexing code was
|
|
prone to spontaneous corruption, as were the underlying database libraries
|
|
that were commonly used (e.g. GDBM or NDBM). back-bdb and back-hdb are
|
|
superior in every aspect, with simplified indexing to avoid index corruption,
|
|
fine-grained locking for greater concurrency, hierarchical caching for
|
|
greater performance, streamlined on-disk format for greater efficiency
|
|
and portability, and full transaction support for greater reliability.
|