Well, I raised this subject stating that -1 does not do what I need.
On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, Aaron Richton richton@nbcs.rutgers.edu wrote:
On Tue, 18 Nov 2014, Igor Shmukler wrote:
Well, the question is what log level will print out ASNs?
I don't know what you're looking to "print out." OpenLDAP doesn't include an ASN.1 debugging / network analysis / etc. suite; it's not like you're going to see BNF in your syslogs. You will get hex dumps and more than a few hints.
So start big, try -d -1, see if it's what you're looking for or not...
On Tuesday, November 18, 2014, Aaron Richton richton@nbcs.rutgers.edu
wrote: On Tue, 18 Nov 2014, Igor Shmukler wrote:
Dieter, I understand that if strace(1) is available, it can be used.
I want to learn how to lift the relevant debug information from the OpenLDAP server. Specially, I would love to see decoded requests and responses. It can be quite helpful in realizing whether the client author messed up the request, or the unexpected response is due to its' decoding error.
Compile with --enable-debug (if this default was overridden) and
set an appropriate olcLogLevel to get the messages. This is often accomplished in practice using the -d command line argument, rather than a permanent config change. If your server is under live load, trying this from the client (e.g. ldapsearch(1)) may be a wise approach.
See Table 6.1 in the OpenLDAP 2.4 Administrator's Guide for the
available levels (please note that some levels are only relevant in slapd(8) context).
Sincerely, Igor Shmukler On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 2:01 PM, Dieter Kl?nter <
dieter@dkluenter.de> wrote: Am Tue, 18 Nov 2014 12:39:42 +0200 schrieb Igor Shmukler igor.shmukler@gmail.com:
Hello, I wrote a client to make RFC 2696 (paged results)
requests. My client gets results fine, yet size and cookie values are always 0, "" - this should not be the case. I tried with ldapsearch(1) and it does paging fine. Hence, it makes sense to assume that the server is OK and opaque/cookie must not be empty. At the same time, format of my ASN object is fine. I need to understand where exactly, I messed up.
[...] depending on your programming language, you may run
your client with strace or similar tools.
-Dieter -- Dieter Kl?nter | Systemberatung http://sys4.de GPG Key ID: E9ED159B 53?37'09,95"N 10?08'02,42"E