ldap3 is a strictly RFC 4510 conforming LDAP V3 pure Python client library. The same codebase runs in Python 2, Python 3, PyPy and PyPy3.
- This is a bleeding edge version. This version includes:
- cannatag#1139: fix requirements.txt
- cannatag#1150: adding microsoft fastbind extended operation
- cannatag#1151: fix CBT computing when cert digest algo is not MD5, SHA1 or SHA256
- cannatag#1153: [DOC] Fix grammar and sentence structure
- cannatag#1155: [DOC] Fix Unexpected indentation error within the doc
- cannatag#1156: Correctly handle GSSAPI SASL negotiated max buffer size as per RFC4752
- cannatag#1158: Fix up LDIF_LINE_LENGTH
- cannatag#1161: Tls: add custom_ssl_context parameter
LDAP operations look clumsy and hard-to-use because they reflect the old-age idea that time-consuming operations should be performed client-side to not hog the server with heavy elaborations. To alleviate this ldap3 includes a fully functional Abstraction Layer that lets you interact with the LDAP server in a modern and pythonic way. With the Abstraction Layer you don't need to directly issue any LDAP operation at all.
- In multithreaded programs you must use one of SAFE_SYNC (synchronous connection strategy), SAFE_RESTARTABLE (restartable syncronous connection strategy) or ASYNC (asynchronous connection strategy).
Each LDAP operation with SAFE_SYNC or SAFE_RESTARTABLE strategies returns a tuple of four elements: status, result, response and request.
- status: states if the operation was successful
- result: the LDAP result of the operation
- response: the response of a LDAP Search Operation
LDAP operations look clumsy and hard-to-use because they reflect the old-age idea that time-consuming operations should be performed client-side to not hog the server with heavy elaborations. To alleviate this ldap3 includes a fully functional Abstraction Layer that lets you interact with the LDAP server in a modern and pythonic way. With the Abstraction Layer you don't need to directly issue any LDAP operation at all.
- In multithreaded programs you must use one of SAFE_SYNC (synchronous connection strategy), SAFE_RESTARTABLE (restartable syncronous connection strategy) or ASYNC (asynchronous connection strategy).
Each LDAP operation with SAFE_SYNC or SAFE_RESTARTABLE strategies returns a tuple of four elements: status, result, response and request.
- status: states if the operation was successful
- result: the LDAP result of the operation
- response: the response of a LDAP Search Operation
- request: the original request of the operation
The SafeSync strategy can be used with the Abstract Layer, but the Abstract Layer currently is NOT thread safe. For example, to use SAFE_SYNC:
from ldap3 import Server, Connection, SAFE_SYNC server = Server('my_server') conn = Connection(server, 'my_user', 'my_password', client_strategy=SAFE_SYNC, auto_bind=True) status, result, response, _ = conn.search('o=test', '(objectclass=*)') # usually you don't need the original request (4th element of the returned tuple)
With ASYNC you must request the response with the get_response() method.
The home page of the ldap3 project is https://github.com/cannatag/ldap3
Documentation is available at http://ldap3.readthedocs.io
The ldap3 project is open source software released under the LGPL v3 license. Copyright 2013 - 2020 Giovanni Cannata
ldap3 is PEP8 compliant, except for line length.
Package download is available at https://pypi.python.org/pypi/ldap3.
Install with pip install ldap3
You can download the latest source at https://github.com/cannatag/ldap3
Continuous integration for testing is at https://travis-ci.org/cannatag/ldap3
You can submit support tickets on https://github.com/cannatag/ldap3/issues/new You can submit pull request on the dev branch at https://github.com/cannatag/ldap3/tree/dev
- Ilya Etingof, the author of the pyasn1 package for his excellent work and support.
- Mark Lutz for his Learning Python and Programming Python excellent books series and John Goerzen and Brandon Rhodes for their book Foundations of Python Network Programming. These books are wonderful tools for learning Python and this project owes a lot to them.
- JetBrains for donating to this project the Open Source license of PyCharm Professional.
- GitHub for providing the free source repository space and the tools I use to develop this project.
- The FreeIPA team for letting me use their demo LDAP server in the ldap3 tutorial.
For information and suggestions you can contact me at [email protected]. You can also open a support ticket on https://github.com/cannatag/ldap3/issues/new
If you want to keep this project up and running you can send me an Amazon gift card. I will use it to improve my skills in Information and Communication technologies.
Updated changelog at https://ldap3.readthedocs.io/changelog.html