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Backup LDIF files from LDAP database dumps in a Git repository

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ldif-git-backup

Backup LDIF files from LDAP database dumps in a Git repository

Based on ldap-git-backup, modified and rewritten in python.

Requirements

Usage

usage: ldif-git-backup.py [-i | -x LDIF_CMD | -l LDIF_FILE] [-d BACKUP_DIR]
                          [-m COMMIT_MSG] [-e EXCL_ATTRS] [-a LDIF_ATTR] [-s]
                          [-n LDIF_NAME] [-c CONFIG] [-f CONFIG_FILE] [-G]
                          [-R] [-A] [-C] [-O] [-w | -1] [--mem] [-v] [-p] [-h]

Backup LDAP databases in LDIF format using Git. The LDIF (Lightweight
Directory Interchange Format) input can be read either from stdin, subprocess
or file. Care must be taken to use the correct parameters, which create the
LDIF input. By default ldif-git-backup will split the LDIF to entries and save
each entry in a file named after the entry's UUID. If these defaults are used,
the LDIF must contain operational attributes or at least the `entryUUID`
attribute. The LDIF input format is expected to be in slapcat format without
line wrapping or comments. This LDIF format can be generated using the
commands `slapcat -o ldif-wrap=no` or `ldapsearch -LLL -o ldif-wrap=no '*' +`.
If the LDIF input is in slapcat format but with line wrapping, the option `-w`
can be used. This will unwrap all lines and write the LDIF output unwrapped.
If the LDIF input is in LDIFv1 format (Version: 1) as per RFC 2849, the option
`-1` can be used. This will correctly handle LDIFv1 input (for example if it
contains comments or mutliple blank lines between entries). Any comments will
be stripped off the output LDIF, line wrapping is preserved. Using this mode
is a bit slower than the default mode.

optional arguments:
  -i, --ldif-stdin      Read LDIF from stdin (default)
  -x LDIF_CMD, --ldif-cmd LDIF_CMD
                        Read LDIF from subprocess
  -l LDIF_FILE, --ldif-file LDIF_FILE
                        Read LDIF from file
  -d BACKUP_DIR, --backup-dir BACKUP_DIR
                        The directory for the git backup repository (default:
                        `/var/backups/ldap`)
  -m COMMIT_MSG, --commit-msg COMMIT_MSG
                        The commit message (default: `ldif-git-backup`)
  -e EXCL_ATTRS, --excl-attrs EXCL_ATTRS
                        Exclude all attributes matching the regular expression
                        `^(EXCLUDE_ATTRS):`
  -a LDIF_ATTR, --ldif-attr LDIF_ATTR
                        The value of attribute LDIF_ATTR will be used as
                        filename. This attribute should be unique in the LDIF.
                        Otherwise an incremental number will be appended to
                        the filename. If the attribute is not present in the
                        entry or has no value, the entry will be written as
                        `unknown-<incremental_number>.ldif`. This parameter
                        has no effect if combined with `-s`. (default:
                        `entryUUID`)
  -s, --single-ldif     Use single LDIF mode, do not split entries to files
  -n LDIF_NAME, --ldif-name LDIF_NAME
                        Use LDIF_NAME as filename in single-ldif mode
                        (default: `db`)
  -c CONFIG, --config CONFIG
                        Use configuration with saection name CONFIG (default:
                        `ldif-git-backup`)
  -f CONFIG_FILE, --config-file CONFIG_FILE
                        Path to the configuration file (default: `./ldif-git-
                        backup.conf`, if no file is found at the default
                        location, the config will be read from `/etc/ldif-git-
                        backup.conf`)
  -G, --no-gc           Do not perform garbage collection
  -R, --no-rm           Do not perform git rm
  -A, --no-add          Do not perform git add
  -C, --no-commit       Do not perform git commit
  -O, --no-out          Do not write output LDIF file(s)
  -D, --no-dirty-check  Do not check if repo is dirty before commit. Always
                        commit.
  -w, --ldif-wrap       Set if LDIF input is wrapped, this will unwrap any
                        wrapped attributes. By default the input LDIF is
                        expected to be unwrapped for optimal performance
  -1, --ldif-v1         Parse input in LDIFv1 format (Version: 1) as per RFC
                        2849. Comments are ignored, line wrapping is
                        preserved. Using this mode is a bit slower than the
                        default mode.
  --mem                 Read input LDIF to memory first (experimental option)
  -v, --verbose         Enable verbose mode
  -p, --print-params    Print active parameters and exit
  -h, --help            Show this help message and exit

Example usage

Basic usage

The standard mode will read an LDIF from the given input method and save each entry in a file with the name <entryUUID>.ldif. If these defaults are used, the LDIF must contain operational attributes or at least the entryUUID attribute. The entryUUID attribute should be present in all entries in most modern LDAP servers like slapd (OpenLDAP). If no such attribute is present in the entry, it will be silently skipped. The default method is to read the LDIF from stdin, while it is also possible to read from a subprocess or from a file. For maximum performance, the LDIF input method stdin should be preferred over subprocess.

Important: The LDIF input is expected to be without linebreaks by default for optimal performance.

Read LDIF from standard input:

/usr/sbin/slapcat -n 1 -o ldif-wrap=no | ./ldif-git-backup.py

Read LDIF from subprocess:

./ldif-git-backup.py -x '/usr/sbin/slapcat -n 1 -o ldif-wrap=no'

Read LDIF from file:

./ldif-git-backup.py -l db_dump.ldif

Advanced usage

Read LDIF from stdin and write files named after custom attribute (<uid>.ldif). The attribute has to be unique in the LDIF, otherwise entries might overwrite eachother:

/usr/sbin/slapcat -n 1 -o ldif-wrap=no -s ou=people,dc=phys,dc=ethz,dc=ch | ./ldif-git-backup.py -d /var/backups/ldap/users -a uid

Backup the slapd configuration and store it in a single LDIF named db.ldif:

/usr/sbin/slapcat -n 0 -o ldif-wrap=no | ./ldif-git-backup.py -s

Do the same using LDIF filename config.ldif:

/usr/sbin/slapcat -n 0 -o ldif-wrap=no | ./ldif-git-backup.py -s -n config

Do the same using ldapsearch:

/usr/bin/ldapsearch -QLLL -Y EXTERNAL -H ldapi:// -o ldif-wrap=no -b cn=config '*' + | ./ldif-git-backup.py -s -n config

Filtering out attributes using regex

For best performance use method stdin and grep:

/usr/sbin/slapcat -n 1 -o ldif-wrap=no | grep -vE '(entry|context)CSN|.*?Timestamp' | ./ldif-git-backup.py

Or without grep:

./ldif-git-backup.py -x '/usr/sbin/slapcat -n 1 -o ldif-wrap=no' -e '(entry|context)CSN|.*?Timestamp'

Working with wrapped LDIF input

If the LDIF input is wrapped as when not using the slapcat or ldapsearch parameter -o ldif-wrap=no use the option -w. This will unwrap all attributes. Otherwise any attribute filtering will not work as expected and the backup will be useless.

/usr/sbin/slapcat -n 1 | ./ldif-git-backup.py -w -e '(entry|context)CSN|.*?Timestamp'

Using the configuration file

By default the configuration file ./ldif-git-backup.conf is read and parsed if present. To specify a configuration from another location use:

./ldif-git-backup.py -f path/to/config.conf

The special configuration section named DEFAULT can be used to set the default options for all other named configuration sections if they do not explicitly specify a configuration option. The special configuration section named ldif-git-backup can be used to specify the default paramters for ldif-git-backup.py if not specified as command-line arguments. Any command-line arguments take precedence over configuration options. Any other configuration section names can be used to specify sets of configurations to be used with the option -c <section_name>.

The example configuration ldif-git-backup.conf contains some example named configuration sections and explanations. ldif-git-backup uses the configparser python module with extended interpolation enabled. See python docs for more details on how to use this syntax. To use the example named configurations, use the following parameters.

To backup the slapd configuration using slapcat subprocess:

./ldif-git-backup.py -c config_slapcat

To backup the slapd configuration using ldapsearch subprocess:

./ldif-git-backup.py -c config_ldapsearch

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Backup LDIF files from LDAP database dumps in a Git repository

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