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241 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
241 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
# $Id$
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# Copyright 1999-2009 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved.
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# COPYING RESTRICTIONS APPLY, see COPYRIGHT.
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# This contribution is derived from OpenLDAP Software.
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# All of the modifications to OpenLDAP Software represented in this contribution
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# were developed by Andrew Findlay <andrew.findlay@skills-1st.co.uk>.
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# I have not assigned rights and/or interest in this work to any party.
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#
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# Copyright 2008 Andrew Findlay
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# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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# modification, are permitted only as authorized by the OpenLDAP Public License.
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H1: Limits
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H2: Introduction
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It is usually desirable to limit the server resources that can be
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consumed by each LDAP client. OpenLDAP provides two sets of limits:
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a size limit, which can restrict the {{number}} of entries that a
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client can retrieve in a single operation, and a time limit
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which restricts the length of time that an operation may continue.
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Both types of limit can be given different values depending on who
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initiated the operation.
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H2: Soft and Hard limits
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The server administrator can specify both {{soft limits}} and
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{{hard limits}}. Soft limits can be thought of as being the
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default limit value. Hard limits cannot be exceeded by ordinary
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LDAP users.
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LDAP clients can specify their own
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size and time limits when issuing search operations.
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This feature has been present since the earliest version of X.500.
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If the client specifies a limit then the lower of the requested value
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and the {{hard limit}} will become the limit for the operation.
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If the client does not specify a limit then the server applies the
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{{soft limit}}.
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Soft and Hard limits are often referred to together as {{administrative
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limits}}. Thus, if an LDAP client requests a search that would return
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more results than the limits allow it will get an {{adminLimitExceeded}}
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error. Note that the server will usually return some results even if
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the limit has been exceeded: this feature is useful to clients that
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just want to check for the existence of some entries without needing
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to see them all.
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The {{rootdn}} is not subject to any limits.
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H2: Global Limits
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Limits specified in the global part of the server configuration act
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as defaults which are used if no database has more specific limits set.
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In a {{slapd.conf}}(5) configuration the keywords are {{EX:sizelimit}} and
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{{EX:timelimit}}. When using the {{slapd config}} backend, the corresponding
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attributes are {{EX:olcSizeLimit}} and {{EX:olcTimeLimit}}. The syntax of
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these values are the same in both cases.
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The simple form sets both soft and hard limits to the same value:
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> sizelimit {<integer>|unlimited}
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> timelimit {<integer>|unlimited}
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The default sizelimit is 500 entries and the default timelimit is
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3600 seconds.
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An extended form allows soft and hard limits to be set separately:
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> sizelimit size[.{soft|hard|unchecked}]=<integer> [...]
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> timelimit time[.{soft|hard}]=<integer> [...]
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Thus, to set a soft sizelimit of 10 entries and a hard limit of 75 entries:
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E: sizelimit size.soft=10 size.hard=75
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The {{unchecked}} keyword sets a limit on how many entries the server
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will examine once it has created an initial set of candidate results by
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using indices. This can be very important in a large directory, as a
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search that cannot be satisfied from an index might cause the server to
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examine millions of entries, therefore always make sure the correct indexes
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are configured.
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H2: Per-Database Limits
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Each database can have its own set of limits that override the global
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ones. The syntax is more flexible, and it allows different limits to
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be applied to different entities. Note that an {{entity}} is different from
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an {{entry}}: the term {{entity}} is used here to indicate the ID of the
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person or process that has initiated the LDAP operation.
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In a {{slapd.conf}}(5) configuration the keyword is {{EX:limits}}.
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When using the {{slapd config}} backend, the corresponding
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attribute is {{EX:olcLimits}}. The syntax of
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the values is the same in both cases.
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> limits <who> <limit> [<limit> [...]]
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The {{limits}} clause can be specified multiple times to apply different
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limits to different initiators. The server examines each clause in turn
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until it finds one that matches the ID that requested the operation.
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If no match is found, the global limits will be used.
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H3: Specify who the limits apply to
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The {{EX:<who>}} part of the {{limits}} clause can take any of these values:
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!block table; align=Center; coltags="EX,N"; \
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title="Table ZZZ.ZZZ: Entity Specifiers"
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Specifier|Entities
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*|All, including anonymous and authenticated users
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anonymous|Anonymous (non-authenticated) users
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users|Authenticated users
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self|User associated with target entry
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dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex>|Users matching a regular expression
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dn.<scope-style>=<DN>|Users within scope of a DN
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group[/oc[/at]]=<pattern>|Members of a group
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!endblock
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The rules for specifying {{EX:<who>}} are the same as those used in
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access-control rules.
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H3: Specify time limits
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The syntax for time limits is
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E: time[.{soft|hard}]=<integer>
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where integer is the number of seconds slapd will spend
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answering a search request.
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If neither {{soft}} nor {{hard}} is specified, the value is used for both,
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e.g.:
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E: limits anonymous time=27
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The value {{unlimited}} may be used to remove the hard time limit entirely,
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e.g.:
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E: limits dn.exact="cn=anyuser,dc=example,dc=org" time.hard=unlimited
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H3: Specifying size limits
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The syntax for size limit is
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E: size[.{soft|hard|unchecked}]=<integer>
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where {{EX:<integer>}} is the maximum number of entries slapd will return
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when answering a search request.
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Soft, hard, and "unchecked" limits are available, with the same meanings
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described for the global limits configuration above.
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H3: Size limits and Paged Results
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If the LDAP client adds the {{pagedResultsControl}} to the search operation,
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the hard size limit is used by default, because the request for a specific
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page size is considered an explicit request for a limitation on the number
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of entries to be returned. However, the size limit applies to the total
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count of entries returned within the search, and not to a single page.
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Additional size limits may be enforced for paged searches.
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The {{EX:size.pr}} limit controls the maximum page size:
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> size.pr={<integer>|noEstimate|unlimited}
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{{EX:<integer>}} is the maximum page size if no explicit size is set.
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{{EX:noEstimate}} has no effect in the current implementation as the
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server does not return an estimate of the result size anyway.
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{{EX:unlimited}} indicates that no limit is applied to the maximum
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page size.
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The {{EX:size.prtotal}} limit controls the total number of entries
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that can be returned by a paged search. By default the limit is the
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same as the normal {{EX:size.hard}} limit.
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> size.prtotal={<integer>|unlimited|disabled}
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{{EX:unlimited}} removes the limit on the number of entries that can be
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returned by a paged search.
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{{EX:disabled}} can be used to selectively disable paged result searches.
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H2: Example Limit Configurations
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H3: Simple Global Limits
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This simple global configuration fragment applies size and time limits
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to all searches by all users except {{rootdn}}. It limits searches to
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50 results and sets an overall time limit of 10 seconds.
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E: sizelimit 50
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E: timelimit 10
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H3: Global Hard and Soft Limits
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It is sometimes useful to limit the size of result sets but to allow
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clients to request a higher limit where needed. This can be achieved
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by setting separate hard and soft limits.
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E: sizelimit size.soft=5 size.hard=100
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To prevent clients from doing very inefficient non-indexed searches,
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add the {{unchecked}} limit:
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E: sizelimit size.soft=5 size.hard=100 size.unchecked=100
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H3: Giving specific users larger limits
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Having set appropriate default limits in the global configuration,
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you may want to give certain users the ability to retrieve larger
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result sets. Here is a way to do that in the per-database configuration:
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E: limits dn.exact="cn=anyuser,dc=example,dc=org" size=100000
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E: limits dn.exact="cn=personnel,dc=example,dc=org" size=100000
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E: limits dn.exact="cn=dirsync,dc=example,dc=org" size=100000
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It is generally best to avoid mentioning specific users in the server
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configuration. A better way is to give the higher limits to a group:
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E: limits group/groupOfNames/member="cn=bigwigs,dc=example,dc=org" size=100000
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H3: Limiting who can do paged searches
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It may be required that certain applications need very large result sets that
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they retrieve using paged searches, but that you do not want ordinary
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LDAP users to use the pagedResults control. The {{pr}} and {{prtotal}}
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limits can help:
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E: limits group/groupOfNames/member="cn=dirsync,dc=example,dc=org" size.prtotal=unlimited
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E: limits users size.soft=5 size.hard=100 size.prtotal=disabled
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E: limits anonymous size.soft=2 size.hard=5 size.prtotal=disabled
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H2: Further Information
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For further information please see {{slapd.conf}}(5), {{ldapsearch}}(1) and {{slapd.access}}(5)
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