On 03/08/2014 11:39 PM, Werner M wrote:
On 08/03/2014, at 18:01, Pierangelo Masarati pierangelo.masarati@polimi.it wrote:
On 03/08/2014 09:27 PM, Werner - Google wrote:
Hi,
I've the sample code bellow, and when i intentionally put the wrong credentials, i get from "ldap_err2string( rc ) the error message: "Invalid credentials".
But monitoring network traffic with wireshark, i can see that on the bindResponse packet that returns from the server, i also get a more detailed message. In my/this test case,
"errorMessage: 80090308: LdapErr: DSID-0C0903AA, comment: AcceptSecurityContext error, data 525, v1772"
attached is also an image of the wireshark showing what i mean.
ldap_err2string() (deprecated, BTW, like most of the functions you're using in your example code) maps an error code onto a static string. What you're looking for is the contents of the diagnosticMessage in a LDAP result. You can get it with ldap_parse_result(), but you need a LDAPMessage first.
See the client tools for an example of usage of non-deprecated functions that return the contents of the diagnosticMessage.
p.
Hi Pierangelo, I have looking a lot at the client tools, but all of them use the asynchronous functions/metodoly (ldap_bind/ldap_search_ext()..), and the code i'm trying to fix , has it's entire logic written based on the synchronous versions of bind/search.
And i could not find a way of using ldap_parse_result in this situation. I'm probably overlooking and/or not understanding how this works correctly. If you could point me in the correct direction if it's doable with the synchronous versions, i would appreciate it much.
If the LDAP handle is being used exclusively for one operation at a time (as it is presumably, since it uses synchronous operations) you can get that message using ldap_get_option() with LDAP_OPT_DIAGNOSTIC_MESSAGE after the operation completed, as already indicated by Howard.
We already pointed you in the right direction: look at the client tools, they usually do everything is worth doing in what is thought to be the right way. If you want a quick'n'dirty answer, use the synchronous calls. If you want more information, it's a lot of work to collect it using calls like ldap_get_option(), which is basically a workaround. Asynchronous calls are way much powerful. Yes, you'll probably have to redesign and then rewrite your code.
p.
Thanks -wm
Question is, is there a way i could retrieve this more detailed message?
Thanks in advance for any help Regards.
sample code:
if ( (ld = (LDAP *)ldap_init( pHostName, iPortNum )) == NULL ) { perror( "ldap_init failed. Reason?:" ); exit ( 1 ); }
if ( (rc=ldap_set_option( ld, LDAP_OPT_PROTOCOL_VERSION, &version)) != LDAP_SUCCESS ){ fprintf( stderr, "ldap_set_option(LDAP_OPT_PROTOCOL_VERSION): %s\n", ldap_err2string( rc ) ); exit( 1 ); }
if ( (rc=ldap_set_option(ld, LDAP_OPT_REFERRALS, LDAP_OPT_OFF)) != LDAP_SUCCESS){ fprintf( stderr, "ldap_set_option(LDAP_OPT_REFERRALS): %s\n", ldap_err2string( rc )); exit( 1 ); }
rc = ldap_simple_bind_s( ld, "auth_dn", "auth_pw" );
if ( rc != LDAP_SUCCESS ) { fprintf( stderr, "ldap_simple_bind_s() Failed: %s [%d]\n", ldap_err2string(rc), rc); ldap_unbind_s(ld); /* try unbind the failed connection anyway */ exit ( 1 ); }
-- Pierangelo Masarati Associate Professor Dipartimento di Scienze e Tecnologie Aerospaziali Politecnico di Milano