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ad74729703
Equal DNs with multi-valued RDNs can compare inequal if one (or both) is constructed from a cryptography.x509.Name, because the AVAs in the multi-valued RDNs are not being sorted. Sort the AVAs when constructing from Name and add test cases for equality checks on multi-valued RDNs constructed from inputs with permuted AVA order. Part of: https://pagure.io/freeipa/issue/7963 Reviewed-By: Florence Blanc-Renaud <flo@redhat.com> Reviewed-By: Rob Crittenden <rcritten@redhat.com>
1466 lines
48 KiB
Python
1466 lines
48 KiB
Python
# Authors:
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# John Dennis <jdennis@redhat.com>
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#
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# Copyright (C) 2011 Red Hat
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# see file 'COPYING' for use and warranty information
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#
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# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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# (at your option) any later version.
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#
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# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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# GNU General Public License for more details.
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#
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# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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'''
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Goal
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----
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To allow a Python programmer the ability to operate on DN's
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(Distinguished Names) in a simple intuitive manner supporting all the
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Pythonic mechanisms for manipulating objects such that the simple
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majority case remains simple with simple code, yet the corner cases
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are fully supported. With the result both simple and complex cases are
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100% correct.
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This is achieved with a fair of amount of syntax sugar which is best
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described as "Do What I Mean" (i.e. DWIM). The class implementations
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take simple expressions and internally convert them to their more
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complex full definitions hiding much of the complexity from the
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programmer.
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Anatomy of a DN
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---------------
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Some definitions:
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AVA
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An AVA is an Attribute Value Assertion. In more simple terms it's
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an attribute value pair typically expressed as attr=value
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(e.g. cn=Bob). Both the attr and value in an AVA when expressed in
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a string representation are subject to encoding rules.
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RDN
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A RDN is a Relative Distinguished Name. A RDN is a non-empty set of
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AVA's. In the common case a RDN is single valued consisting of 1
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AVA (e.g. cn=Bob). But a RDN may be multi-valued consisting of
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more than one AVA. Because the RDN is a set of AVA's the AVA's are
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unordered when they appear in a multi-valued RDN. In the string
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representation of a RDN AVA's are separated by the plus sign (+).
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DN
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A DN is a ordered sequence of 1 or more RDN's. In the string
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representation of a DN each RDN is separated by a comma (,)
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Thus a DN is:
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Sequence of set of <encoded attr, encoded value> pairs
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The following are valid DN's
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# 1 RDN with 1 AVA (e.g. cn=Bob)
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RDN(AVA)
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# 2 RDN's each with 1 AVA (e.g. cn=Bob,dc=redhat.com)
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RDN(AVA),RDN(AVA)
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# 2 RDN's the first RDN is multi-valued with 2 AVA's
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# the second RDN is singled valued with 1 AVA
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# (e.g. cn=Bob+ou=people,dc=redhat.com
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RDN({AVA,AVA}),RDN(AVA)
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Common programming mistakes
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---------------------------
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DN's present a pernicious problem for programmers. They appear to have
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a very simple string format in the majority case, a sequence of
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attr=value pairs separated by commas. For example:
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dn='cn=Bob,ou=people,dc=redhat,dc=com'
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As such there is a tendency to believe you can form DN's by simple
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string manipulations such as:
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dn='%s=%s' % ('cn','Bob') + ',ou=people,dc=redhat,dc=com'
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Or to extract a attr & value by searching the string, for example:
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attr=dn[0 : dn.find('=')]
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value=dn[dn.find('=')+1 : dn.find(',')]
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Or compare a value returned by an LDAP query to a known value:
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if value == 'Bob'
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All of these simple coding assumptions are WRONG and will FAIL when a
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DN is not one of the simple DN's (simple DN's are probably the 95% of
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all DN's). This is what makes DN handling pernicious. What works in
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95% of the cases and is simple, fails for the 5% of DN's which are not
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simple.
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Examples of where the simple assumptions fail are:
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* A RDN may be multi-valued
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* A multi-valued RDN has no ordering on it's components
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* Attr's and values must be UTF-8 encoded
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* String representations of AVA's, RDN's and DN's must be completely UTF-8
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* An attr or value may have reserved characters which must be escaped.
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* Whitespace needs special handling
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To complicate matters a bit more the RFC for the string representation
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of DN's (RFC 4514) permits a variety of different syntax's each of
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which can evaluate to exactly the same DN but have different string
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representations. For example, the attr "r,w" which contains a reserved
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character (the comma) can be encoded as a string in these different
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ways:
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'r\,w' # backslash escape
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'r\2cw' # hexadecimal ascii escape
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'#722C77' # binary encoded
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It should be clear a DN string may NOT be a simple string, rather a DN
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string is ENCODED. For simple strings the encoding of the DN is
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identical to the simple string value (this common case leads to
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erroneous assumptions and bugs because it does not account for
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encodings).
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The openldap library we use at the client level uses the backslash
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escape form. The LDAP server we use uses the hexadecimal ascii escape
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form. Thus 'r,w' appears as 'r\,w' when sent from the client to the
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LDAP server as part of a DN. But when it's returned as a DN from the
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server in an LDAP search it's returned as 'r\2cw'. Any attempt to
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compare 'r\,w' to 'r\2cw' for equality will fail despite the fact they
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are indeed equal once decoded. Such a test fails because you're
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comparing two different encodings of the same value. In MIME you
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wouldn't expect the base64 encoding of a string to be equal to the
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same string encoded as quoted-printable would you?
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When you are comparing attrs or values which are part of a DN and
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other string you MUST:
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* Know if either of the strings have been encoded and make sure you're
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comparing only decoded components component-wise.
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* Extract the component from the DN and decode it. You CANNOT decode
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the entire DN as a string and operate on it. Why? Consider a value
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with a comma embedded in it. For example:
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cn=r\2cw,cn=privilege
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Is a DN with 2 RDN components: cn=r,w followed by "cn=privilege"
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But if you decode the entire DN string as a whole you would get:
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cn=r,w,cn=privilege
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Which is a malformed DN with 3 RDN's, the 2nd RDN is invalid.
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* Determine if a RDN is multi-valued, if so you must account
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for the fact each AVA component in the multi-valued RDN can appear
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in any order and still be equivalent. For example the following two
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RDN's are equal:
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cn=Bob+ou=people
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ou=people+cn=Bob
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In addition each AVA (cn=Bob & ou=people) needs to be
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INDEPENDENTLY decoded prior to comparing the unordered set of AVA's
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in the multi-valued RDN.
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If you are trying to form a new DN or RDN from a raw string you cannot
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simply do string concatenation or string formatting unless you ESCAPE
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the components independently prior to concatenation, for example:
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base = 'dc=redhat,dc=com'
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value = 'r,w'
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dn = 'cn=%s,%s' % (value, base)
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Will result in the malformed DN 'cn=r,w,dc=redhat,dc=com'
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Syntax Sugar
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------------
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The majority of DN's have a simple string form:
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attr=value,attr=value
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We want the programmer to be able to create DN's, compare them, and
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operate on their components as simply and concisely as possible so
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the classes are implemented to provide a lot of syntax sugar.
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The classes automatically handle UTF-8 <-> Unicode conversions. Every
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attr and value which is returned from a class will be Unicode. Every
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attr and value assigned into an object will be promoted to
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Unicode. All string representations in RFC 4514 format will be UTF-8
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and properly escaped. Thus at the "user" or "API" level every string
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is Unicode with the single exception that the str() method returns RFC
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compliant escaped UTF-8.
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RDN's are assumed to be single-valued. If you need a multi-valued RDN
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(an exception) you must explicitly create a multi-valued RDN.
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Thus DN's are assumed to be a sequence of attr, value pairs, which is
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equivalent to a sequence of RDN's. The attr and value in the pair MUST
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be strings.
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The DN and RDN constructors take a sequence, the constructor parses
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the sequence to find items it knows about.
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The DN constructor will accept in it's sequence:
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* tuple of 2 strings, converting it to an RDN
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* list of 2 strings, converting it to an RDN
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* a RDN object
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* a DN syntax string (e.g. 'cn=Bob,dc=redhat.com')
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Note DN syntax strings should be avoided if possible when passing to a
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constructor because they run afoul of the problems outlined above
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which the DN, RDN & AVA classes are meant to overcome. But sometimes a
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DN syntax string is all you have to work with. DN strings which come
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from a LDAP library or server will be properly formed and it's safe to
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use those. However DN strings provided via user input should be
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treated suspiciously as they may be improperly formed. You can test
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for this by passing the string to the DN constructor and see if it
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throws an exception.
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The sequence passed to the DN constructor takes each item in order,
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produces one or more RDN's from it and appends those RDN in order to
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its internal RDN sequence.
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For example:
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DN(('cn', 'Bob'), ('dc', 'redhat.com'))
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This is equivalent to the DN string:
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cn=Bob,dc=redhat.com
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And is exactly equal to:
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DN(RDN(AVA('cn','Bob')),RDN(AVA('dc','redhat.com')))
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The following are alternative syntax's which are all exactly
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equivalent to the above example.
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DN(['cn', 'Bob'], ['dc', 'redhat.com'])
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DN(RDN('cn', 'Bob'), RDN('dc', 'redhat.com'))
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You can provide a properly escaped string representation.
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DN('cn=Bob,dc=redhat.com')
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You can mix and match any of the forms in the constructor parameter
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list.
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DN(('cn', 'Bob'), 'dc=redhat.com')
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DN(('cn', 'Bob'), RDN('dc', 'redhat.com'))
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AVA's have an attr and value property, thus if you have an AVA
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# Get the attr and value
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ava.attr -> u'cn'
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ava.value -> u'Bob'
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# Set the attr and value
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ava.attr = 'cn'
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ava.value = 'Bob'
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Since RDN's are assumed to be single valued, exactly the same
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behavior applies to an RDN. If the RDN is multi-valued then the attr
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property returns the attr of the first AVA, likewise for the value.
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# Get the attr and value
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rdn.attr -> u'cn'
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rdn.value -> u'Bob'
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# Set the attr and value
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rdn.attr = 'cn'
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rdn.value = 'Bob'
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Also RDN's can be indexed by name or position (see the RDN class doc
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for details).
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rdn['cn'] -> u'Bob'
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rdn[0] -> AVA('cn', 'Bob')
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A DN is a sequence of RDN's, as such any of Python's container
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operators can be applied to a DN in a intuitive way.
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# How many RDN's in a DN?
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len(dn)
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# WARNING, this a count of RDN's not how characters there are in the
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# string representation the dn, instead that would be:
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len(str(dn))
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# Iterate over each RDN in a DN
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for rdn in dn:
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# Get the first RDN in a DN
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dn[0] -> RDN('cn', 'Bob')
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# Get the value of the first RDN in a DN
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dn[0].value -> u'Bob'
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# Get the value of the first RDN by indexing by attr name
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dn['cn'] -> u'Bob'
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# WARNING, when a string is used as an index key the FIRST RDN's value
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# in the sequence whose attr matches the key is returned. Thus if you
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# have a DN like this "cn=foo,cn=bar" then dn['cn'] will always return
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# 'foo' even though there is another attr with the name 'cn'. This is
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# almost always what the programmer wants. See the class doc for how
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# you can override this default behavior and get a list of every value
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# whose attr matches the key.
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# Set the first RDN in the DN (all are equivalent)
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dn[0] = ('cn', 'Bob')
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dn[0] = ['cn', 'Bob']
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dn[0] = RDN('cn', 'Bob')
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dn[0].attr = 'cn'
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dn[0].value = 'Bob'
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# Get the first two RDN's using slices
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dn[0:2]
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# Get the last two RDN's using slices
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dn[-2:]
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# Get a list of all RDN's using slices
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dn[:]
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# Set the 2nd and 3rd RDN using slices (all are equivalent)
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dn[1:3] = ('cn', 'Bob), ('dc', 'redhat.com')
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dn[1:3] = RDN('cn', 'Bob), RDN('dc', 'redhat.com')
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String representations and escapes:
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# To get an RFC compliant string representation of a DN, RDN or AVA
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# simply call str() on it or evaluate it in a string context.
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str(dn) -> 'cn=Bob,dc=redhat.com'
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# When working with attr's and values you do not have to worry about
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# escapes, simply use the raw unescaped string in a natural fashion.
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rdn = RDN('cn', 'r,w')
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# Thus:
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rdn.value == 'r,w' -> True
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# But:
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str(rdn) == 'cn=r,w' -> False
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# Because:
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str(rdn) -> 'cn=r\2cw' or 'cn='r\,w' # depending on the underlying LDAP library
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Equality and Comparing:
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# All DN's, RDN's and AVA's support equality testing in an intuitive
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# manner.
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dn1 = DN(('cn', 'Bob'))
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dn2 = DN(RDN('cn', 'Bob'))
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dn1 == dn2 -> True
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dn1[0] == dn2[0] -> True
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dn1[0].value = 'Bobby'
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dn1 == dn2 -> False
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DN objects implement startswith(), endswith() and the "in" membership
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operator. You may pass a DN or RDN object to these. Examples:
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if dn.endswith(base_dn):
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if dn.startswith(rdn1):
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if container_dn in dn:
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# See the class doc for how DN's, RDN's and AVA's compare
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# (e.g. cmp()). The general rule is for objects supporting multiple
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# values first their lengths are compared, then if the lengths match
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# the respective components of each are pair-wise compared until one
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# is discovered to be non-equal. The comparison is case insensitive.
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Concatenation, In-Place Addition, Insertion:
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# DN's and RDN's can be concatenated.
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# Return a new DN by appending the RDN's of dn2 to dn1
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dn3 = dn1 + dn2
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# Append a RDN to DN's RDN sequence (all are equivalent)
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dn += ('cn', 'Bob')
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dn += RDN('cn', 'Bob')
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# Append a DN to an existing DN
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dn1 += dn2
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# Prepend a RDN to an existing DN
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dn1.insert(0, RDN('cn', 'Bob'))
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Finally see the unittest for a more complete set of ways you can
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manipulate these objects.
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Immutability
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------------
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All the class types are immutable.
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As with other immutable types (such as str and int), you must not rely on
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the object identity operator ("is") for comparisons.
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It is possible to "copy" an object by passing an object of the same type
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to the constructor. The result may share underlying structure.
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'''
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from __future__ import print_function
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import sys
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import functools
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import cryptography.x509
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import six
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try:
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from ldap import DECODING_ERROR
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except ImportError:
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from ipapython.dn_ctypes import str2dn, dn2str, DECODING_ERROR
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else:
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from ldap.dn import str2dn, dn2str
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if six.PY3:
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unicode = str
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__all__ = 'AVA', 'RDN', 'DN'
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def _adjust_indices(start, end, length):
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'helper to fixup start/end slice values'
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if end > length:
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end = length
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elif end < 0:
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end += length
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if end < 0:
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end = 0
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if start < 0:
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start += length
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if start < 0:
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start = 0
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return start, end
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def _normalize_ava_input(val):
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if six.PY3 and isinstance(val, bytes):
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raise TypeError('expected str, got bytes: %r' % val)
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elif not isinstance(val, str):
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val = val_encode(str(val))
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elif six.PY2 and isinstance(val, unicode):
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val = val.encode('utf-8')
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return val
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def str2rdn(value):
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try:
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rdns = str2dn(value.encode('utf-8'))
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except DECODING_ERROR:
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raise ValueError("malformed AVA string = \"%s\"" % value)
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if len(rdns) != 1:
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raise ValueError("multiple RDN's specified by \"%s\"" % (value))
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return rdns[0]
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def get_ava(*args):
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"""
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Get AVA from args in open ldap format(raw). Optimized for construction
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from openldap format.
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Allowed formats of argument list:
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1) three args - open ldap format (attr and value have to be utf-8 encoded):
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a) ['attr', 'value', 0]
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2) two args:
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a) ['attr', 'value']
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3) one arg:
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a) [('attr', 'value')]
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b) [['attr', 'value']]
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c) [AVA(..)]
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d) ['attr=value']
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"""
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ava = None
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l = len(args)
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if l == 3: # raw values - constructed FROM RDN
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ava = args
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elif l == 2: # user defined values
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ava = [_normalize_ava_input(args[0]), _normalize_ava_input(args[1]), 0]
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elif l == 1: # slow mode, tuple, string,
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arg = args[0]
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if isinstance(arg, AVA):
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ava = arg.to_openldap()
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elif isinstance(arg, (tuple, list)):
|
|
if len(arg) != 2:
|
|
raise ValueError("tuple or list must be 2-valued, not \"%s\"" % (arg))
|
|
ava = [_normalize_ava_input(arg[0]), _normalize_ava_input(arg[1]), 0]
|
|
elif isinstance(arg, str):
|
|
rdn = str2rdn(arg)
|
|
if len(rdn) > 1:
|
|
raise TypeError("multiple AVA's specified by \"%s\"" % (arg))
|
|
ava = list(rdn[0])
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError("with 1 argument, argument must be str, unicode, tuple or list, got %s instead" %
|
|
arg.__class__.__name__)
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError("invalid number of arguments. 1-3 allowed")
|
|
return ava
|
|
|
|
|
|
def sort_avas(rdn):
|
|
if len(rdn) <= 1:
|
|
return
|
|
rdn.sort(key=ava_key)
|
|
|
|
|
|
def ava_key(ava):
|
|
return ava[0].lower(), ava[1].lower()
|
|
|
|
|
|
def cmp_rdns(a, b):
|
|
key_a = rdn_key(a)
|
|
key_b = rdn_key(b)
|
|
if key_a == key_b:
|
|
return 0
|
|
elif key_a < key_b:
|
|
return -1
|
|
else:
|
|
return 1
|
|
|
|
|
|
def rdn_key(rdn):
|
|
return (len(rdn),) + tuple(ava_key(k) for k in rdn)
|
|
|
|
|
|
if six.PY2:
|
|
# Python 2: Input/output is unicode; we store UTF-8 bytes
|
|
def val_encode(s):
|
|
return s.encode('utf-8')
|
|
|
|
def val_decode(s):
|
|
return s.decode('utf-8')
|
|
else:
|
|
# Python 3: Everything is unicode (str)
|
|
def val_encode(s):
|
|
if isinstance(s, bytes):
|
|
raise TypeError('expected str, got bytes: %s' % s)
|
|
return s
|
|
|
|
def val_decode(s):
|
|
return s
|
|
|
|
|
|
@functools.total_ordering
|
|
class AVA:
|
|
'''
|
|
AVA(arg0, ...)
|
|
|
|
An AVA is an LDAP Attribute Value Assertion. It is convenient to think of
|
|
AVA's as a <attr,value> pair. AVA's are members of RDN's (Relative
|
|
Distinguished Name).
|
|
|
|
The AVA constructor is passed a sequence of args and a set of
|
|
keyword parameters used for configuration.
|
|
|
|
The arg sequence may be:
|
|
|
|
1) With 2 arguments, the first argument will be the attr, the 2nd
|
|
the value. Each argument must be scalar convertable to unicode.
|
|
|
|
2) With a sigle list or tuple argument containing exactly 2 items.
|
|
Each item must be scalar convertable to unicode.
|
|
|
|
3) With a single string (or unicode) argument, in this case the string will
|
|
be interpretted using the DN syntax described in RFC 4514 to yield a AVA
|
|
<attr,value> pair. The parsing recognizes the DN syntax escaping rules.
|
|
|
|
For example:
|
|
|
|
ava = AVA('cn', 'Bob') # case 1: two strings
|
|
ava = AVA(('cn', 'Bob')) # case 2: 2-valued tuple
|
|
ava = AVA(['cn', 'Bob']) # case 2: 2-valued list
|
|
ava = AVA('cn=Bob') # case 3: DN syntax
|
|
|
|
AVA object have two properties for accessing their data:
|
|
|
|
attr: the attribute name, cn in our exmaple
|
|
value: the attribute's value, Bob in our example
|
|
|
|
When attr and value are returned they will always be unicode. When
|
|
attr or value are set they will be promoted to unicode.
|
|
|
|
AVA objects support indexing by name, e.g.
|
|
|
|
ava['cn']
|
|
|
|
returns the value (Bob in our example). If the index does key does not match
|
|
the attr then a KeyError will be raised.
|
|
|
|
AVA objects support equality testing and comparsion (e.g. cmp()). When they
|
|
are compared the attr is compared first, if the 2 attr's are equal then the
|
|
values are compared. The comparison is case insensitive (because attr's map
|
|
to numeric OID's and their values derive from from the 'name' atribute type
|
|
(OID 2.5.4.41) whose EQUALITY MATCH RULE is caseIgnoreMatch.
|
|
|
|
The str method of an AVA returns the string representation in RFC 4514 DN
|
|
syntax with proper escaping.
|
|
'''
|
|
def __init__(self, *args):
|
|
self._ava = get_ava(*args)
|
|
|
|
def _get_attr(self):
|
|
return val_decode(self._ava[0])
|
|
|
|
def _set_attr(self, new_attr):
|
|
try:
|
|
self._ava[0] = _normalize_ava_input(new_attr)
|
|
except Exception as e:
|
|
raise ValueError('unable to convert attr "%s": %s' % (new_attr, e))
|
|
|
|
attr = property(_get_attr)
|
|
|
|
def _get_value(self):
|
|
return val_decode(self._ava[1])
|
|
|
|
def _set_value(self, new_value):
|
|
try:
|
|
self._ava[1] = _normalize_ava_input(new_value)
|
|
except Exception as e:
|
|
raise ValueError('unable to convert value "%s": %s' % (new_value, e))
|
|
|
|
value = property(_get_value)
|
|
|
|
def to_openldap(self):
|
|
return list(self._ava)
|
|
|
|
def __str__(self):
|
|
return dn2str([[self.to_openldap()]])
|
|
|
|
def __repr__(self):
|
|
return "%s.%s('%s')" % (self.__module__, self.__class__.__name__, self.__str__())
|
|
|
|
def __getitem__(self, key):
|
|
|
|
if key == 0:
|
|
return self.attr
|
|
elif key == 1:
|
|
return self.value
|
|
elif key == self.attr:
|
|
return self.value
|
|
else:
|
|
raise KeyError("\"%s\" not found in %s" % (key, self.__str__()))
|
|
|
|
def __hash__(self):
|
|
# Hash is computed from AVA's string representation.
|
|
#
|
|
# Because attrs & values are comparison case-insensitive the
|
|
# hash value between two objects which compare as equal but
|
|
# differ in case must yield the same hash value.
|
|
|
|
return hash(str(self).lower())
|
|
|
|
def __eq__(self, other):
|
|
'''
|
|
The attr comparison is case insensitive because attr is
|
|
really an LDAP attribute type which means it's specified with
|
|
an OID (dotted number) and not a string. Since OID's are
|
|
numeric the human readable name which maps to the OID is not
|
|
significant in case.
|
|
|
|
The value comparison is also case insensitive because the all
|
|
attribute types used in a DN are derived from the 'name'
|
|
atribute type (OID 2.5.4.41) whose EQUALITY MATCH RULE is
|
|
caseIgnoreMatch.
|
|
'''
|
|
# Try coercing string to AVA, if successful compare to coerced object
|
|
if isinstance(other, str):
|
|
try:
|
|
other_ava = AVA(other)
|
|
return self.__eq__(other_ava)
|
|
except Exception:
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
# If it's not an AVA it can't be equal
|
|
if not isinstance(other, AVA):
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
# Perform comparison between objects of same type
|
|
return ava_key(self._ava) == ava_key(other._ava)
|
|
|
|
def __ne__(self, other):
|
|
return not self.__eq__(other)
|
|
|
|
def __lt__(self, other):
|
|
'comparison is case insensitive, see __eq__ doc for explanation'
|
|
|
|
if not isinstance(other, AVA):
|
|
raise TypeError("expected AVA but got %s" % (other.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
return ava_key(self._ava) < ava_key(other._ava)
|
|
|
|
|
|
@functools.total_ordering
|
|
class RDN:
|
|
'''
|
|
RDN(arg0, ...)
|
|
|
|
An RDN is a LDAP Relative Distinguished Name. RDN's are members of DN's
|
|
(Distinguished Name). An RDN contains 1 or more AVA's. If the RDN contains
|
|
more than one AVA it is said to be a multi-valued RDN. When an RDN is
|
|
multi-valued the AVA's are unorderd comprising a set. However this
|
|
implementation orders the AVA's according to the AVA comparison function to
|
|
make equality and comparison testing easier. Think of this a canonical
|
|
normalization (however LDAP does not impose any ordering on multiple AVA's
|
|
within an RDN). Single valued RDN's are the norm and thus the RDN
|
|
constructor has simple syntax for them.
|
|
|
|
The RDN constructor is passed a sequence of args and a set of
|
|
keyword parameters used for configuration.
|
|
|
|
The constructor iterates though the sequence and adds AVA's to the RDN.
|
|
|
|
The arg sequence may be:
|
|
|
|
* A 2-valued tuple or list denotes the <attr,value> pair of an AVA. The
|
|
first member is the attr and the second member is the value, both members
|
|
must be strings (or unicode). The tuple or list is passed to the AVA
|
|
constructor and the resulting AVA is added to the RDN. Multiple tuples or
|
|
lists may appear in the argument list, each adds one additional AVA to the
|
|
RDN.
|
|
|
|
* A single string (or unicode) argument, in this case the string will
|
|
be interpretted using the DN syntax described in RFC 4514 to yield one or
|
|
more AVA <attr,value> pairs. The parsing recognizes the DN syntax escaping
|
|
rules.
|
|
|
|
* A AVA object, the AVA will be copied into the new RDN respecting
|
|
the constructors keyword configuration parameters.
|
|
|
|
* A RDN object, the AVA's in the RDN are copied into the new RDN
|
|
respecting the constructors keyword configuration parameters.
|
|
|
|
Single AVA Examples:
|
|
|
|
RDN(('cn', 'Bob')) # tuple yields 1 AVA
|
|
RDN('cn=Bob') # DN syntax with 1 AVA
|
|
RDN(AVA('cn', 'Bob')) # AVA object adds 1 AVA
|
|
|
|
Multiple AVA Examples:
|
|
|
|
RDN(('cn', 'Bob'),('ou', 'people')) # 2 tuples yields 2 AVA's
|
|
RDN('cn=Bob+ou=people') # DN syntax with 2 AVA's
|
|
RDN(AVA('cn', 'Bob'),AVA('ou', 'people')) # 2 AVA objects adds 2 AVA's
|
|
RDN(('cn', 'Bob'), 'ou=people') # 2 args, 1st tuple forms 1 AVA,
|
|
# 2nd DN syntax string adds 1 AVA,
|
|
# 2 AVA's in total
|
|
|
|
Note: The RHS of a slice assignment is interpreted exactly in the
|
|
same manner as the constructor argument list (see above examples).
|
|
|
|
RDN objects support iteration over their AVA members. You can iterate all
|
|
AVA members via any Python iteration syntax. RDN objects support full Python
|
|
indexing using bracket [] notation. Examples:
|
|
|
|
len(rdn) # return the number of AVA's
|
|
rdn[0] # indexing the first AVA
|
|
rdn['cn'] # index by AVA attr, returns AVA value
|
|
for ava in rdn: # iterate over each AVA
|
|
rdn[:] # a slice, in this case a copy of each AVA
|
|
|
|
WARNING: When indexing by attr (e.g. rdn['cn']) there is a possibility more
|
|
than one AVA has the same attr name as the index key. The default behavior
|
|
is to return the value of the first AVA whose attr matches the index
|
|
key.
|
|
|
|
RDN objects support the AVA attr and value properties as another programmer
|
|
convenience because the vast majority of RDN's are single valued. The attr
|
|
and value properties return the attr and value properties of the first AVA
|
|
in the RDN, for example:
|
|
|
|
rdn = RDN(('cn', 'Bob')) # rdn has 1 AVA whose attr == 'cn' and value == 'Bob'
|
|
len(rdn) -> 1
|
|
rdn.attr -> u'cn' # exactly equivalent to rdn[0].attr
|
|
rdn.value -> u'Bob' # exactly equivalent to rdn[0].value
|
|
|
|
When attr and value are returned they will always be unicode. When
|
|
attr or value are set they will be promoted to unicode.
|
|
|
|
If an RDN is multi-valued the attr and value properties still return only
|
|
the first AVA's properties, programmer beware! Recall the AVA's in the RDN
|
|
are sorted according the to AVA collating semantics.
|
|
|
|
RDN objects support equality testing and comparison. See AVA for the
|
|
definition of the comparison method.
|
|
|
|
RDN objects support concatenation and addition with other RDN's or AVA's
|
|
|
|
rdn1 + rdn2 # yields a new RDN object with the contents of each RDN.
|
|
rdn1 + ava1 # yields a new RDN object with the contents of rdn1 and ava1
|
|
|
|
RDN objects can add AVA's objects via in-place addition.
|
|
|
|
rdn1 += rdn2 # rdn1 now contains the sum of rdn1 and rdn2
|
|
rdn1 += ava1 # rdn1 has ava1 added to it.
|
|
|
|
The str method of an RDN returns the string representation in RFC 4514 DN
|
|
syntax with proper escaping.
|
|
'''
|
|
|
|
AVA_type = AVA
|
|
|
|
def __init__(self, *args, **kwds):
|
|
self._avas = self._avas_from_sequence(args, kwds.get('raw', False))
|
|
|
|
def _avas_from_sequence(self, args, raw=False):
|
|
avas = []
|
|
sort = 0
|
|
ava_count = len(args)
|
|
|
|
if raw: # fast raw mode
|
|
avas = args
|
|
elif ava_count == 1 and isinstance(args[0], str):
|
|
avas = str2rdn(args[0])
|
|
sort = 1
|
|
elif ava_count == 1 and isinstance(args[0], RDN):
|
|
avas = args[0].to_openldap()
|
|
elif ava_count > 0:
|
|
sort = 1
|
|
for arg in args:
|
|
avas.append(get_ava(arg))
|
|
if sort:
|
|
sort_avas(avas)
|
|
return avas
|
|
|
|
def to_openldap(self):
|
|
return [list(a) for a in self._avas]
|
|
|
|
def __str__(self):
|
|
return dn2str([self.to_openldap()])
|
|
|
|
def __repr__(self):
|
|
return "%s.%s('%s')" % (self.__module__, self.__class__.__name__, self.__str__())
|
|
|
|
def _get_ava(self, ava):
|
|
return self.AVA_type(*ava)
|
|
|
|
def _next(self):
|
|
for ava in self._avas:
|
|
yield self._get_ava(ava)
|
|
|
|
def __iter__(self):
|
|
return self._next()
|
|
|
|
def __len__(self):
|
|
return len(self._avas)
|
|
|
|
def __getitem__(self, key):
|
|
if isinstance(key, int):
|
|
return self._get_ava(self._avas[key])
|
|
if isinstance(key, slice):
|
|
return [self._get_ava(ava) for ava in self._avas[key]]
|
|
elif isinstance(key, str):
|
|
for ava in self._avas:
|
|
if key == val_decode(ava[0]):
|
|
return val_decode(ava[1])
|
|
raise KeyError("\"%s\" not found in %s" % (key, self.__str__()))
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError("unsupported type for RDN indexing, must be int, basestring or slice; not %s" % \
|
|
(key.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
def _get_attr(self):
|
|
if len(self._avas) == 0:
|
|
raise IndexError("No AVA's in this RDN")
|
|
return val_decode(self._avas[0][0])
|
|
|
|
def _set_attr(self, new_attr):
|
|
if len(self._avas) == 0:
|
|
raise IndexError("No AVA's in this RDN")
|
|
|
|
self._avas[0][0] = val_encode(str(new_attr))
|
|
|
|
attr = property(_get_attr)
|
|
|
|
def _get_value(self):
|
|
if len(self._avas) == 0:
|
|
raise IndexError("No AVA's in this RDN")
|
|
return val_decode(self._avas[0][1])
|
|
|
|
def _set_value(self, new_value):
|
|
if len(self._avas) == 0:
|
|
raise IndexError("No AVA's in this RDN")
|
|
self._avas[0][1] = val_encode(str(new_value))
|
|
|
|
value = property(_get_value)
|
|
|
|
def __hash__(self):
|
|
# Hash is computed from RDN's string representation.
|
|
#
|
|
# Because attrs & values are comparison case-insensitive the
|
|
# hash value between two objects which compare as equal but
|
|
# differ in case must yield the same hash value.
|
|
|
|
return hash(str(self).lower())
|
|
|
|
def __eq__(self, other):
|
|
# Try coercing string to RDN, if successful compare to coerced object
|
|
if isinstance(other, str):
|
|
try:
|
|
other_rdn = RDN(other)
|
|
return self.__eq__(other_rdn)
|
|
except Exception:
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
# If it's not an RDN it can't be equal
|
|
if not isinstance(other, RDN):
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
# Perform comparison between objects of same type
|
|
return rdn_key(self._avas) == rdn_key(other._avas)
|
|
|
|
def __ne__(self, other):
|
|
return not self.__eq__(other)
|
|
|
|
def __lt__(self, other):
|
|
if not isinstance(other, RDN):
|
|
raise TypeError("expected RDN but got %s" % (other.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
return rdn_key(self._avas) < rdn_key(other._avas)
|
|
|
|
def __add__(self, other):
|
|
result = self.__class__(self)
|
|
if isinstance(other, RDN):
|
|
for ava in other._avas:
|
|
result._avas.append((ava[0], ava[1], ava[2]))
|
|
elif isinstance(other, AVA):
|
|
result._avas.append(other.to_openldap())
|
|
elif isinstance(other, str):
|
|
rdn = self.__class__(other)
|
|
for ava in rdn._avas:
|
|
result._avas.append((ava[0], ava[1], ava[2]))
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError("expected RDN, AVA or basestring but got %s" % (other.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
sort_avas(result._avas)
|
|
return result
|
|
|
|
|
|
@functools.total_ordering
|
|
class DN:
|
|
'''
|
|
DN(arg0, ...)
|
|
|
|
A DN is a LDAP Distinguished Name. A DN is an ordered sequence of RDN's.
|
|
|
|
The DN constructor is passed a sequence of args and a set of
|
|
keyword parameters used for configuration. normalize means the
|
|
attr and value will be converted to lower case.
|
|
|
|
The constructor iterates through the sequence and adds the RDN's
|
|
it finds in order to the DN object. Each item in the sequence may
|
|
be:
|
|
|
|
* A 2-valued tuple or list. The first member is the attr and the
|
|
second member is the value of an RDN, both members must be
|
|
strings (or unicode). The tuple or list is passed to the RDN
|
|
constructor and the resulting RDN is appended to the
|
|
DN. Multiple tuples or lists may appear in the argument list,
|
|
each adds one additional RDN to the DN.
|
|
|
|
* A single string (or unicode) argument, in this case the string
|
|
will be interpretted using the DN syntax described in RFC 4514
|
|
to yield one or more RDN's which will be appended in order to
|
|
the DN. The parsing recognizes the DN syntax escaping rules.
|
|
|
|
* A single ``cryptography.x509.name.Name`` object.
|
|
|
|
* A RDN object, the RDN will copied respecting the constructors
|
|
keyword configuration parameters and appended in order.
|
|
|
|
* A DN object, the RDN's in the DN are copied respecting the
|
|
constructors keyword configuration parameters and appended in
|
|
order.
|
|
|
|
Single DN Examples:
|
|
|
|
DN(('cn', 'Bob')) # tuple yields 1 RDN
|
|
DN(['cn', 'Bob']) # list yields 1 RDN
|
|
DN('cn=Bob') # DN syntax with 1 RDN
|
|
DN(RDN('cn', 'Bob')) # RDN object adds 1 RDN
|
|
|
|
Multiple RDN Examples:
|
|
|
|
DN(('cn', 'Bob'),('ou', 'people')) # 2 tuples yields 2 RDN's
|
|
# 2 RDN's total
|
|
DN('cn=Bob,ou=people') # DN syntax with 2 RDN's
|
|
# 2 RDN's total
|
|
DN(RDN('cn', 'Bob'),RDN('ou', 'people')) # 2 RDN objects
|
|
# 2 RDN's total
|
|
DN(('cn', 'Bob'), "ou=people') # 1st tuple adds 1 RDN
|
|
# 2nd DN syntax string adds 1 RDN
|
|
# 2 RDN's total
|
|
base_dn = DN('dc=redhat,dc=com')
|
|
container_dn = DN('cn=sudorules,cn=sudo')
|
|
DN(('cn', 'Bob'), container_dn, base_dn)
|
|
# 1st arg adds 1 RDN, cn=Bob
|
|
# 2nd arg adds 2 RDN's, cn=sudorules,cn=sudo
|
|
# 3rd arg adds 2 RDN's, dc=redhat,dc=com
|
|
# 5 RDN's total
|
|
|
|
|
|
Note: The RHS of a slice assignment is interpreted exactly in the
|
|
same manner as the constructor argument list (see above examples).
|
|
|
|
DN objects support iteration over their RDN members. You can iterate all
|
|
RDN members via any Python iteration syntax. DN objects support full Python
|
|
indexing using bracket [] notation. Examples:
|
|
|
|
len(rdn) # return the number of RDN's
|
|
rdn[0] # indexing the first RDN
|
|
rdn['cn'] # index by RDN attr, returns RDN value
|
|
for ava in rdn: # iterate over each RDN
|
|
rdn[:] # a slice, in this case a copy of each RDN
|
|
|
|
WARNING: When indexing by attr (e.g. dn['cn']) there is a
|
|
possibility more than one RDN has the same attr name as the index
|
|
key. The default behavior is to return the value of the first RDN
|
|
whose attr matches the index key. If it's important the attr
|
|
belong to a specific RDN (e.g. the first) then this is the
|
|
suggested construct:
|
|
|
|
try:
|
|
cn = dn[0]['cn']
|
|
except (IndexError, KeyError):
|
|
raise ValueError("dn '%s' missing expected cn as first attribute" % dn)
|
|
|
|
The IndexError catches a DN which does not have the expected
|
|
number of RDN's and the KeyError catches the case where the
|
|
indexed RDN does not have the expected attr.
|
|
|
|
DN object support slices.
|
|
|
|
# Get the first two RDN's using slices
|
|
dn[0:2]
|
|
|
|
# Get the last two RDN's using slices
|
|
dn[-2:]
|
|
|
|
# Get a list of all RDN's using slices
|
|
dn[:]
|
|
|
|
# Set the 2nd and 3rd RDN using slices (all are equivalent)
|
|
dn[1:3] = ('cn', 'Bob'), ('dc', 'redhat.com')
|
|
dn[1:3] = [['cn', 'Bob'], ['dc', 'redhat.com']]
|
|
dn[1:3] = RDN('cn', 'Bob'), RDN('dc', 'redhat.com')
|
|
|
|
DN objects support the insert operation.
|
|
|
|
dn.insert(i,x) is exactly equivalent to dn[i:i] = [x], thus the following
|
|
are all equivalent:
|
|
|
|
dn.insert(i, ('cn','Bob'))
|
|
dn.insert(i, ['cn','Bob'])
|
|
dn.insert(i, RDN(('cn','Bob')))
|
|
dn[i:i] = [('cn','Bob')]
|
|
|
|
DN objects support equality testing and comparison. See RDN for the
|
|
definition of the comparison method.
|
|
|
|
DN objects implement startswith(), endswith() and the "in" membership
|
|
operator. You may pass a DN or RDN object to these. Examples:
|
|
|
|
# Test if dn ends with the contents of base_dn
|
|
if dn.endswith(base_dn):
|
|
# Test if dn starts with a rdn
|
|
if dn.startswith(rdn1):
|
|
# Test if a container is present in a dn
|
|
if container_dn in dn:
|
|
|
|
DN objects support concatenation and addition with other DN's or RDN's
|
|
or strings (interpreted as RFC 4514 DN syntax).
|
|
|
|
# yields a new DN object with the RDN's of dn2 appended to the RDN's of dn1
|
|
dn1 + dn2
|
|
|
|
# yields a new DN object with the rdn1 appended to the RDN's of dn1
|
|
dn1 + rdn1
|
|
|
|
DN objects can add RDN's objects via in-place addition.
|
|
|
|
dn1 += dn2 # dn2 RDN's are appended to the dn1's RDN's
|
|
dn1 += rdn1 # dn1 has rdn appended to its RDN's
|
|
dn1 += "dc=redhat.com" # string is converted to DN, then appended
|
|
|
|
The str method of an DN returns the string representation in RFC 4514 DN
|
|
syntax with proper escaping.
|
|
'''
|
|
|
|
AVA_type = AVA
|
|
RDN_type = RDN
|
|
|
|
def __init__(self, *args, **kwds):
|
|
self.rdns = self._rdns_from_sequence(args)
|
|
|
|
def _copy_rdns(self, rdns=None):
|
|
if not rdns:
|
|
rdns = self.rdns
|
|
return [[list(a) for a in rdn] for rdn in rdns]
|
|
|
|
def _rdns_from_value(self, value):
|
|
if isinstance(value, str):
|
|
try:
|
|
if isinstance(value, str):
|
|
value = val_encode(value)
|
|
rdns = str2dn(value)
|
|
except DECODING_ERROR:
|
|
raise ValueError("malformed RDN string = \"%s\"" % value)
|
|
for rdn in rdns:
|
|
sort_avas(rdn)
|
|
elif isinstance(value, DN):
|
|
rdns = value._copy_rdns()
|
|
elif isinstance(value, (tuple, list, AVA)):
|
|
ava = get_ava(value)
|
|
rdns = [[ava]]
|
|
elif isinstance(value, RDN):
|
|
rdns = [value.to_openldap()]
|
|
elif isinstance(value, cryptography.x509.name.Name):
|
|
rdns = list(reversed([
|
|
[get_ava(
|
|
ATTR_NAME_BY_OID.get(ava.oid, ava.oid.dotted_string),
|
|
ava.value) for ava in rdn]
|
|
for rdn in value.rdns
|
|
]))
|
|
for rdn in rdns:
|
|
sort_avas(rdn)
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError(
|
|
"must be str, unicode, tuple, Name, RDN or DN, got %s instead"
|
|
% type(value))
|
|
return rdns
|
|
|
|
def _rdns_from_sequence(self, seq):
|
|
rdns = []
|
|
|
|
for item in seq:
|
|
rdn = self._rdns_from_value(item)
|
|
rdns.extend(rdn)
|
|
return rdns
|
|
|
|
def __deepcopy__(self, memo):
|
|
return self
|
|
|
|
def _get_rdn(self, rdn):
|
|
return self.RDN_type(*rdn, **{'raw': True})
|
|
|
|
def ldap_text(self):
|
|
return dn2str(self.rdns)
|
|
|
|
def x500_text(self):
|
|
return dn2str(reversed(self.rdns))
|
|
|
|
def __str__(self):
|
|
return self.ldap_text()
|
|
|
|
def __repr__(self):
|
|
return "%s.%s('%s')" % (self.__module__, self.__class__.__name__, self.__str__())
|
|
|
|
def _next(self):
|
|
for rdn in self.rdns:
|
|
yield self._get_rdn(rdn)
|
|
|
|
def __iter__(self):
|
|
return self._next()
|
|
|
|
def __len__(self):
|
|
return len(self.rdns)
|
|
|
|
def __getitem__(self, key):
|
|
if isinstance(key, int):
|
|
return self._get_rdn(self.rdns[key])
|
|
if isinstance(key, slice):
|
|
cls = self.__class__
|
|
new_dn = cls.__new__(cls)
|
|
new_dn.rdns = self.rdns[key]
|
|
return new_dn
|
|
elif isinstance(key, str):
|
|
for rdn in self.rdns:
|
|
for ava in rdn:
|
|
if key == val_decode(ava[0]):
|
|
return val_decode(ava[1])
|
|
raise KeyError("\"%s\" not found in %s" % (key, self.__str__()))
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError("unsupported type for DN indexing, must be int, basestring or slice; not %s" % \
|
|
(key.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
def __hash__(self):
|
|
# Hash is computed from DN's string representation.
|
|
#
|
|
# Because attrs & values are comparison case-insensitive the
|
|
# hash value between two objects which compare as equal but
|
|
# differ in case must yield the same hash value.
|
|
|
|
str_dn = ';,'.join([
|
|
'++'.join([
|
|
'=='.join((atype, avalue or ''))
|
|
for atype, avalue, _dummy in rdn
|
|
]) for rdn in self.rdns
|
|
])
|
|
return hash(str_dn.lower())
|
|
|
|
def __eq__(self, other):
|
|
# Try coercing to DN, if successful compare to coerced object
|
|
if isinstance(other, (str, RDN, AVA)):
|
|
try:
|
|
other_dn = DN(other)
|
|
return self.__eq__(other_dn)
|
|
except Exception:
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
# If it's not an DN it can't be equal
|
|
if not isinstance(other, DN):
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
if len(self) != len(other):
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
# Perform comparison between objects of same type
|
|
return self._cmp_sequence(other, 0, len(self)) == 0
|
|
|
|
def __ne__(self, other):
|
|
return not self.__eq__(other)
|
|
|
|
def __lt__(self, other):
|
|
if not isinstance(other, DN):
|
|
raise TypeError("expected DN but got %s" % (other.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
if len(self) != len(other):
|
|
return len(self) < len(other)
|
|
|
|
return self._cmp_sequence(other, 0, len(self)) < 0
|
|
|
|
def _cmp_sequence(self, pattern, self_start, pat_len):
|
|
self_idx = self_start
|
|
pat_idx = 0
|
|
while pat_idx < pat_len:
|
|
r = cmp_rdns(self.rdns[self_idx], pattern.rdns[pat_idx])
|
|
if r != 0:
|
|
return r
|
|
self_idx += 1
|
|
pat_idx += 1
|
|
return 0
|
|
|
|
def __add__(self, other):
|
|
return self.__class__(self, other)
|
|
|
|
# The implementation of startswith, endswith, tailmatch, adjust_indices
|
|
# was based on the Python's stringobject.c implementation
|
|
|
|
def startswith(self, prefix, start=0, end=sys.maxsize):
|
|
'''
|
|
Return True if the dn starts with the specified prefix (either a DN or
|
|
RDN object), False otherwise. With optional start, test dn beginning at
|
|
that position. With optional end, stop comparing dn at that position.
|
|
prefix can also be a tuple of dn's or rdn's to try.
|
|
'''
|
|
if isinstance(prefix, tuple):
|
|
for pat in prefix:
|
|
if self._tailmatch(pat, start, end, -1):
|
|
return True
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
return self._tailmatch(prefix, start, end, -1)
|
|
|
|
def endswith(self, suffix, start=0, end=sys.maxsize):
|
|
'''
|
|
Return True if dn ends with the specified suffix (either a DN or RDN
|
|
object), False otherwise. With optional start, test dn beginning at
|
|
that position. With optional end, stop comparing dn at that position.
|
|
suffix can also be a tuple of dn's or rdn's to try.
|
|
'''
|
|
if isinstance(suffix, tuple):
|
|
for pat in suffix:
|
|
if self._tailmatch(pat, start, end, +1):
|
|
return True
|
|
return False
|
|
|
|
return self._tailmatch(suffix, start, end, +1)
|
|
|
|
def _tailmatch(self, pattern, start, end, direction):
|
|
'''
|
|
Matches the end (direction >= 0) or start (direction < 0) of self
|
|
against pattern (either a DN or RDN), using the start and end
|
|
arguments. Returns 0 if not found and 1 if found.
|
|
'''
|
|
|
|
if isinstance(pattern, RDN):
|
|
pattern = DN(pattern)
|
|
if isinstance(pattern, DN):
|
|
pat_len = len(pattern)
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError("expected DN or RDN but got %s" % (pattern.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
self_len = len(self)
|
|
|
|
start, end = _adjust_indices(start, end, self_len)
|
|
|
|
if direction < 0: # starswith
|
|
if start+pat_len > self_len:
|
|
return 0
|
|
else: # endswith
|
|
if end-start < pat_len or start > self_len:
|
|
return 0
|
|
|
|
if end-pat_len >= start:
|
|
start = end - pat_len
|
|
|
|
if end-start >= pat_len:
|
|
return not self._cmp_sequence(pattern, start, pat_len)
|
|
return 0
|
|
|
|
def __contains__(self, other):
|
|
"""Return the outcome of the test other in self.
|
|
|
|
Note the reversed operands.
|
|
"""
|
|
|
|
if isinstance(other, RDN):
|
|
other = DN(other)
|
|
if isinstance(other, DN):
|
|
other_len = len(other)
|
|
end = len(self) - other_len
|
|
i = 0
|
|
while i <= end:
|
|
result = self._cmp_sequence(other, i, other_len)
|
|
if result == 0:
|
|
return True
|
|
i += 1
|
|
return False
|
|
raise TypeError(
|
|
"expected DN or RDN but got %s" % other.__class__.__name__
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
def find(self, pattern, start=None, end=None):
|
|
'''
|
|
Return the lowest index in the DN where pattern DN is found,
|
|
such that pattern is contained in the range [start, end]. Optional
|
|
arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation. Return
|
|
-1 if pattern is not found.
|
|
'''
|
|
|
|
if isinstance(pattern, DN):
|
|
pat_len = len(pattern)
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError("expected DN but got %s" % (pattern.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
self_len = len(self)
|
|
|
|
if start is None:
|
|
start = 0
|
|
if end is None:
|
|
end = self_len
|
|
|
|
start, end = _adjust_indices(start, end, self_len)
|
|
|
|
i = start
|
|
stop = max(start, end - pat_len)
|
|
|
|
while i <= stop:
|
|
result = self._cmp_sequence(pattern, i, pat_len)
|
|
if result == 0:
|
|
return i
|
|
i += 1
|
|
return -1
|
|
|
|
|
|
def index(self, pattern, start=None, end=None):
|
|
'''
|
|
Like find() but raise ValueError when the pattern is not found.
|
|
'''
|
|
|
|
i = self.find(pattern, start, end)
|
|
if i == -1:
|
|
raise ValueError("pattern not found")
|
|
return i
|
|
|
|
def rfind(self, pattern, start=None, end=None):
|
|
'''
|
|
Return the highest index in the DN where pattern DN is found,
|
|
such that pattern is contained in the range [start, end]. Optional
|
|
arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation. Return
|
|
-1 if pattern is not found.
|
|
'''
|
|
|
|
if isinstance(pattern, DN):
|
|
pat_len = len(pattern)
|
|
else:
|
|
raise TypeError("expected DN but got %s" % (pattern.__class__.__name__))
|
|
|
|
self_len = len(self)
|
|
|
|
if start is None:
|
|
start = 0
|
|
if end is None:
|
|
end = self_len
|
|
|
|
start, end = _adjust_indices(start, end, self_len)
|
|
|
|
i = max(start, min(end, self_len - pat_len))
|
|
stop = start
|
|
|
|
while i >= stop:
|
|
result = self._cmp_sequence(pattern, i, pat_len)
|
|
if result == 0:
|
|
return i
|
|
i -= 1
|
|
return -1
|
|
|
|
def rindex(self, pattern, start=None, end=None):
|
|
'''
|
|
Like rfind() but raise ValueError when the pattern is not found.
|
|
'''
|
|
|
|
i = self.rfind(pattern, start, end)
|
|
if i == -1:
|
|
raise ValueError("pattern not found")
|
|
return i
|
|
|
|
|
|
ATTR_NAME_BY_OID = {
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.COMMON_NAME: 'CN',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.COUNTRY_NAME: 'C',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.LOCALITY_NAME: 'L',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.STATE_OR_PROVINCE_NAME: 'ST',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.ORGANIZATION_NAME: 'O',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.ORGANIZATIONAL_UNIT_NAME: 'OU',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.SERIAL_NUMBER: 'serialNumber',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.SURNAME: 'SN',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.GIVEN_NAME: 'givenName',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.TITLE: 'title',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.GENERATION_QUALIFIER: 'generationQualifier',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.DN_QUALIFIER: 'dnQualifier',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.PSEUDONYM: 'pseudonym',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.DOMAIN_COMPONENT: 'DC',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.EMAIL_ADDRESS: 'E',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.JURISDICTION_COUNTRY_NAME:
|
|
'incorporationCountry',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.JURISDICTION_LOCALITY_NAME:
|
|
'incorporationLocality',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.JURISDICTION_STATE_OR_PROVINCE_NAME:
|
|
'incorporationState',
|
|
cryptography.x509.oid.NameOID.BUSINESS_CATEGORY: 'businessCategory',
|
|
cryptography.x509.ObjectIdentifier('2.5.4.9'): 'STREET',
|
|
cryptography.x509.ObjectIdentifier('2.5.4.17'): 'postalCode',
|
|
cryptography.x509.ObjectIdentifier('0.9.2342.19200300.100.1.1'): 'UID',
|
|
}
|