1Net::LDAP::FilterMatch(U3s)er Contributed Perl DocumentatNieotn::LDAP::FilterMatch(3)
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6 Net::LDAP::FilterMatch - LDAP entry matching
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9 use Net::LDAP::Entry;
10 use Net::LDAP::Filter;
11 use Net::LDAP::FilterMatch;
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13 my $entry = new Net::LDAP::Entry;
14 $entry->dn("cn=dummy entry");
15 $entry->add (
16 'cn' => 'dummy entry',
17 'street' => [ '1 some road','nowhere' ] );
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19 my @filters = (qw/(cn=dummy*)
20 (ou=*)
21 (&(cn=dummy*)(street=*road))
22 (&(cn=dummy*)(!(street=nowhere)))/);
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25 for (@filters) {
26 my $filter = Net::LDAP::Filter->new($_);
27 print $_,' : ', $filter->match($entry) ? 'match' : 'no match' ,"\n";
28 }
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31 This extension of the class Net::LDAP::Filter provides entry matching
32 functionality on the Perl side.
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34 Given an entry it will tell whether the entry matches the filter
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37 It can be used on its own or as part of a Net::LDAP::Server based LDAP
38 server.
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41 match ( ENTRY [ ,SCHEMA ] )
42 Return whether ENTRY matches the filter object. If a schema object
43 is provided, the selection of matching algorithms will be derived
44 from schema.
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46 In case of error undef is returned.
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48 For approximate matching like (cn~=Schmidt) there are several modules
49 that can be used. By default the following modules will be tried in
50 this order:
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52 String::Approx
53 Text::Metaphone
54 Text::Soundex
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56 If none of these modules is found it will fall back on a simple regexp
57 algorithm.
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59 If you want to specifically use one implementation only, simply do
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61 use Net::LDAP::FilterMatch qw(Text::Soundex);
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64 Net::LDAP::Filter
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67 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
68 under the same terms as Perl itself.
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71 Hans Klunder <hans.klunder@bigfoot.com> Peter Marschall <peter@adpm.de>
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75perl v5.30.1 2020-01-30 Net::LDAP::FilterMatch(3)