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Processing the DirContext
This section covers how to process the DirContext
, including pre- and post-processing.
Custom DirContext
Pre- and Post-processing
In some situations, you might like to perform operations on the DirContext
before and after the search operation. The interface that is used for this is called DirContextProcessor
. The following listing shows the DirContextProcessor
interface:
public interface DirContextProcessor {
public void preProcess(DirContext ctx) throws NamingException;
public void postProcess(DirContext ctx) throws NamingException;
}
The LdapTemplate
class has a search method that takes a DirContextProcessor
, as follows:
public void search(SearchExecutor se, NameClassPairCallbackHandler handler,
DirContextProcessor processor) throws DataAccessException;
Before the search operation, the preProcess
method is called on the given DirContextProcessor
instance. After the search has run and the resulting NamingEnumeration
has been processed, the postProcess
method is called. This lets you perform operations on the DirContext
to be used in the search and to check the DirContext
when the search has been performed. This can be very useful (for example, when handling request and response controls).
You can also use the following convenience methods when you do not need a custom SearchExecutor
:
public void search(Name base, String filter,
SearchControls controls, NameClassPairCallbackHandler handler, DirContextProcessor processor)
public void search(String base, String filter,
SearchControls controls, NameClassPairCallbackHandler handler, DirContextProcessor processor)
public void search(Name base, String filter,
SearchControls controls, AttributesMapper mapper, DirContextProcessor processor)
public void search(String base, String filter,
SearchControls controls, AttributesMapper mapper, DirContextProcessor processor)
public void search(Name base, String filter,
SearchControls controls, ContextMapper mapper, DirContextProcessor processor)
public void search(String base, String filter,
SearchControls controls, ContextMapper mapper, DirContextProcessor processor)
Implementing a Request Control DirContextProcessor
The LDAPv3 protocol uses “Controls” to send and receive additional data to affect the behavior of predefined operations. To simplify the implementation of a request control DirContextProcessor
, Spring LDAP provides the AbstractRequestControlDirContextProcessor
base class. This class handles the retrieval of the current request controls from the LdapContext
, calls a template method for creating a request control, and adds it to the LdapContext
. All you have to do in the subclass is to implement the template method called createRequestControl
and the postProcess
method for performing whatever you need to do after the search. The following listing shows the relevant signatures:
public abstract class AbstractRequestControlDirContextProcessor implements
DirContextProcessor {
public void preProcess(DirContext ctx) throws NamingException {
...
}
public abstract Control createRequestControl();
}
A typical DirContextProcessor
is similar to the following example:
DirContextProcessor
implementationpublic class MyCoolRequestControl extends AbstractRequestControlDirContextProcessor {
private static final boolean CRITICAL_CONTROL = true;
private MyCoolCookie cookie;
...
public MyCoolCookie getCookie() {
return cookie;
}
public Control createRequestControl() {
return new SomeCoolControl(cookie.getCookie(), CRITICAL_CONTROL);
}
public void postProcess(DirContext ctx) throws NamingException {
LdapContext ldapContext = (LdapContext) ctx;
Control[] responseControls = ldapContext.getResponseControls();
for (int i = 0; i < responseControls.length; i++) {
if (responseControls[i] instanceof SomeCoolResponseControl) {
SomeCoolResponseControl control = (SomeCoolResponseControl) responseControls[i];
this.cookie = new MyCoolCookie(control.getCookie());
}
}
}
}
Make sure you use LdapContextSource when you use controls. The Control interface is specific for LDAPv3 and requires that LdapContext is used instead of DirContext . If an AbstractRequestControlDirContextProcessor subclass is called with an argument that is not an LdapContext , it throws an IllegalArgumentException .
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Paged Search Results
Some searches may return large numbers of results. When there is no easy way to filter out a smaller amount, it is convenient to have the server return only a certain number of results each time it is called. This is known as “paged search results”. Each “page” of the result could then be displayed, with links to the next and previous page. Without this functionality, the client must either manually limit the search result into pages or retrieve the whole result and then chop it into pages of suitable size. The former would be rather complicated, and the latter would consume unnecessary amounts of memory.
Some LDAP servers support PagedResultsControl
, which requests that the results of a search operation are returned by the LDAP server in pages of a specified size. The user controls the rate at which the pages are returned, by controlling the rate at which the searches are called. However, you must keep track of a cookie between the calls. The server uses this cookie to keep track of where it left off the previous time it was called with a paged results request.
Spring LDAP provides support for paged results by using the concept for pre- and post-processing of an LdapContext
, as discussed in the previous sections. It does so by using the PagedResultsDirContextProcessor
class. The PagedResultsDirContextProcessor
class creates a PagedResultsControl
with the requested page size and adds it to the LdapContext
. After the search, it gets the PagedResultsResponseControl
and retrieves the paged results cookie, which is needed to keep the context between consecutive paged results requests.
The following example shows how the to use the paged search results functionality:
PagedResultsDirContextProcessor
public List<String> getAllPersonNames() {
final SearchControls searchControls = new SearchControls();
searchControls.setSearchScope(SearchControls.SUBTREE_SCOPE);
final PagedResultsDirContextProcessor processor =
new PagedResultsDirContextProcessor(PAGE_SIZE);
return SingleContextSource.doWithSingleContext(
contextSource, new LdapOperationsCallback<List<String>>() {
@Override
public List<String> doWithLdapOperations(LdapOperations operations) {
List<String> result = new LinkedList<String>();
do {
List<String> oneResult = operations.search(
"ou=People",
"(&(objectclass=person))",
searchControls,
CN_ATTRIBUTES_MAPPER,
processor);
result.addAll(oneResult);
} while(processor.hasMore());
return result;
}
});
}
For a paged results cookie to continue being valid, you must use the same underlying connection for each paged results call. You can do so by using the SingleContextSource , as demonstrated in the preceding example.
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