OpenLDAP2.4管理员指南

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2009年4月13日 (一) 13:39How (讨论 | 贡献)的版本
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本文的英文原文来自OpenLDAP Software 2.4 Administrator's Guide

由于OpenLDAP2.4版的复制部分产生了重大变化,所以优先翻译这部分, OpenLDAP Software 2.4 Administrator's Guide : Replication

目录

复制

为了提供一个有弹性的企业部署,复制目录是一个基础需求.

OpenLDAP有多种配置选项来建立一个可复制的目录. 在前一个版本里面, 复制被限定在一个主服务器和若干个从服务器的条件下来讨论。一个主服务器从其他客户端接受目录更新, 而一个从服务器则仅仅从一个(单个的)主服务器接受更新. 这个复制结构被僵化地定义并且任何典型的数据库只能完成一个单一角色,主或者从.

现在OpenLDAP支持一个更广泛的复制拓扑, 关于提供者和消费者的以下这些条件已经不推荐了: 一个提供者复制目录更新到消费者; 消费者从提供者接收复制更新. 不像僵化定义的主/从关系,提供者/消费者角色更加的流动化:一个接收复制更新的消费者可能传递给其它服务器的另一个消费者,所以一个消费者也可以同时成为一个提供者。而且,消费者不需要成为一个实际上的LDAP服务器;它也可以仅仅是一个LDAP客户端。

以下章节将描述复制技术和讨论各种可用的复制选项.

复制技术

LDAP同步复制

LDAP同步复制引擎, 简称syncrepl, 是一个消费方的复制引擎,能让消费者服务器维护一个抽取片断的影子副本. 一个syncrepl引擎以slapd的一个线程的方式驻留在消费者那里. 它通过连接一个复制提供者来建立和维护一个消费者复制,It creates and maintains a consumer replica by connecting to the replication provider to perform the initial DIT content load followed either by periodic content polling or by timely updates upon content changes.

Syncrepl uses the LDAP Content Synchronization protocol (or LDAP Sync for short) as the replica synchronization protocol. LDAP Sync provides a stateful replication which supports both pull-based and push-based synchronization and does not mandate the use of a history store. In pull-based replication the consumer periodically polls the provider for updates. In push-based replication the consumer listens for updates that are sent by the provider in realtime. Since the protocol does not require a history store, the provider does not need to maintain any log of updates it has received. (Note that the syncrepl engine is extensible and additional replication protocols may be supported in the future.)

Syncrepl keeps track of the status of the replication content by maintaining and exchanging synchronization cookies. Because the syncrepl consumer and provider maintain their content status, the consumer can poll the provider content to perform incremental synchronization by asking for the entries required to make the consumer replica up-to-date with the provider content. Syncrepl also enables convenient management of replicas by maintaining replica status. The consumer replica can be constructed from a consumer-side or a provider-side backup at any synchronization status. Syncrepl can automatically resynchronize the consumer replica up-to-date with the current provider content.

Syncrepl supports both pull-based and push-based synchronization. In its basic refreshOnly synchronization mode, the provider uses pull-based synchronization where the consumer servers need not be tracked and no history information is maintained. The information required for the provider to process periodic polling requests is contained in the synchronization cookie of the request itself. To optimize the pull-based synchronization, syncrepl utilizes the present phase of the LDAP Sync protocol as well as its delete phase, instead of falling back on frequent full reloads. To further optimize the pull-based synchronization, the provider can maintain a per-scope session log as a history store. In its refreshAndPersist mode of synchronization, the provider uses a push-based synchronization. The provider keeps track of the consumer servers that have requested a persistent search and sends them necessary updates as the provider replication content gets modified.

With syncrepl, a consumer server can create a replica without changing the provider's configurations and without restarting the provider server, if the consumer server has appropriate access privileges for the DIT fragment to be replicated. The consumer server can stop the replication also without the need for provider-side changes and restart.

Syncrepl supports partial, sparse, and fractional replications. The shadow DIT fragment is defined by a general search criteria consisting of base, scope, filter, and attribute list. The replica content is also subject to the access privileges of the bind identity of the syncrepl replication connection.

LDAP内容同步协议

The LDAP Sync protocol allows a client to maintain a synchronized copy of a DIT fragment. The LDAP Sync operation is defined as a set of controls and other protocol elements which extend the LDAP search operation. This section introduces the LDAP Content Sync protocol only briefly. For more information, refer to RFC4533.

The LDAP Sync protocol supports both polling and listening for changes by defining two respective synchronization operations: refreshOnly and refreshAndPersist. Polling is implemented by the refreshOnly operation. The consumer polls the provider using an LDAP Search request with an LDAP Sync control attached. The consumer copy is synchronized to the provider copy at the time of polling using the information returned in the search. The provider finishes the search operation by returning SearchResultDone at the end of the search operation as in the normal search. Listening is implemented by the refreshAndPersist operation. As the name implies, it begins with a search, like refreshOnly. Instead of finishing the search after returning all entries currently matching the search criteria, the synchronization search remains persistent in the provider. Subsequent updates to the synchronization content in the provider cause additional entry updates to be sent to the consumer.

The refreshOnly operation and the refresh stage of the refreshAndPersist operation can be performed with a present phase or a delete phase.

In the present phase, the provider sends the consumer the entries updated within the search scope since the last synchronization. The provider sends all requested attributes, be they changed or not, of the updated entries. For each unchanged entry which remains in the scope, the provider sends a present message consisting only of the name of the entry and the synchronization control representing state present. The present message does not contain any attributes of the entry. After the consumer receives all update and present entries, it can reliably determine the new consumer copy by adding the entries added to the provider, by replacing the entries modified at the provider, and by deleting entries in the consumer copy which have not been updated nor specified as being present at the provider.

The transmission of the updated entries in the delete phase is the same as in the present phase. The provider sends all the requested attributes of the entries updated within the search scope since the last synchronization to the consumer. In the delete phase, however, the provider sends a delete message for each entry deleted from the search scope, instead of sending present messages. The delete message consists only of the name of the entry and the synchronization control representing state delete. The new consumer copy can be determined by adding, modifying, and removing entries according to the synchronization control attached to the SearchResultEntry message.

In the case that the LDAP Sync provider maintains a history store and can determine which entries are scoped out of the consumer copy since the last synchronization time, the provider can use the delete phase. If the provider does not maintain any history store, cannot determine the scoped-out entries from the history store, or the history store does not cover the outdated synchronization state of the consumer, the provider should use the present phase. The use of the present phase is much more efficient than a full content reload in terms of the synchronization traffic. To reduce the synchronization traffic further, the LDAP Sync protocol also provides several optimizations such as the transmission of the normalized entryUUIDs and the transmission of multiple entryUUIDs in a single syncIdSet message.

At the end of the refreshOnly synchronization, the provider sends a synchronization cookie to the consumer as a state indicator of the consumer copy after the synchronization is completed. The consumer will present the received cookie when it requests the next incremental synchronization to the provider.

When refreshAndPersist synchronization is used, the provider sends a synchronization cookie at the end of the refresh stage by sending a Sync Info message with refreshDone=TRUE. It also sends a synchronization cookie by attaching it to SearchResultEntry messages generated in the persist stage of the synchronization search. During the persist stage, the provider can also send a Sync Info message containing the synchronization cookie at any time the provider wants to update the consumer-side state indicator.

In the LDAP Sync protocol, entries are uniquely identified by the entryUUID attribute value. It can function as a reliable identifier of the entry. The DN of the entry, on the other hand, can be changed over time and hence cannot be considered as the reliable identifier. The entryUUID is attached to each SearchResultEntry or SearchResultReference as a part of the synchronization control.

Syncrepl细节

The syncrepl engine utilizes both the refreshOnly and the refreshAndPersist operations of the LDAP Sync protocol. If a syncrepl specification is included in a database definition, slapd(8) launches a syncrepl engine as a slapd(8) thread and schedules its execution. If the refreshOnly operation is specified, the syncrepl engine will be rescheduled at the interval time after a synchronization operation is completed. If the refreshAndPersist operation is specified, the engine will remain active and process the persistent synchronization messages from the provider.

The syncrepl engine utilizes both the present phase and the delete phase of the refresh synchronization. It is possible to configure a session log in the provider which stores the entryUUIDs of a finite number of entries deleted from a database. Multiple replicas share the same session log. The syncrepl engine uses the delete phase if the session log is present and the state of the consumer server is recent enough that no session log entries are truncated after the last synchronization of the client. The syncrepl engine uses the present phase if no session log is configured for the replication content or if the consumer replica is too outdated to be covered by the session log. The current design of the session log store is memory based, so the information contained in the session log is not persistent over multiple provider invocations. It is not currently supported to access the session log store by using LDAP operations. It is also not currently supported to impose access control to the session log.

As a further optimization, even in the case the synchronization search is not associated with any session log, no entries will be transmitted to the consumer server when there has been no update in the replication context.

The syncrepl engine, which is a consumer-side replication engine, can work with any backends. The LDAP Sync provider can be configured as an overlay on any backend, but works best with the back-bdb or back-hdb backend.

The LDAP Sync provider maintains a contextCSN for each database as the current synchronization state indicator of the provider content. It is the largest entryCSN in the provider context such that no transactions for an entry having smaller entryCSN value remains outstanding. The contextCSN could not just be set to the largest issued entryCSN because entryCSN is obtained before a transaction starts and transactions are not committed in the issue order.

The provider stores the contextCSN of a context in the contextCSN attribute of the context suffix entry. The attribute is not written to the database after every update operation though; instead it is maintained primarily in memory. At database start time the provider reads the last saved contextCSN into memory and uses the in-memory copy exclusively thereafter. By default, changes to the contextCSN as a result of database updates will not be written to the database until the server is cleanly shut down. A checkpoint facility exists to cause the contextCSN to be written out more frequently if desired.

Note that at startup time, if the provider is unable to read a contextCSN from the suffix entry, it will scan the entire database to determine the value, and this scan may take quite a long time on a large database. When a contextCSN value is read, the database will still be scanned for any entryCSN values greater than it, to make sure the contextCSN value truly reflects the greatest committed entryCSN in the database. On databases which support inequality indexing, setting an eq index on the entryCSN attribute and configuring contextCSN checkpoints will greatly speed up this scanning step.

If no contextCSN can be determined by reading and scanning the database, a new value will be generated. Also, if scanning the database yielded a greater entryCSN than was previously recorded in the suffix entry's contextCSN attribute, a checkpoint will be immediately written with the new value.

The consumer also stores its replica state, which is the provider's contextCSN received as a synchronization cookie, in the contextCSN attribute of the suffix entry. The replica state maintained by a consumer server is used as the synchronization state indicator when it performs subsequent incremental synchronization with the provider server. It is also used as a provider-side synchronization state indicator when it functions as a secondary provider server in a cascading replication configuration. Since the consumer and provider state information are maintained in the same location within their respective databases, any consumer can be promoted to a provider (and vice versa) without any special actions.

Because a general search filter can be used in the syncrepl specification, some entries in the context may be omitted from the synchronization content. The syncrepl engine creates a glue entry to fill in the holes in the replica context if any part of the replica content is subordinate to the holes. The glue entries will not be returned in the search result unless ManageDsaIT control is provided.

Also as a consequence of the search filter used in the syncrepl specification, it is possible for a modification to remove an entry from the replication scope even though the entry has not been deleted on the provider. Logically the entry must be deleted on the consumer but in refreshOnly mode the provider cannot detect and propagate this change without the use of the session log.

For configuration, please see the Syncrepl section.

部署替代

While the LDAP Sync specification only defines a narrow scope for replication, the OpenLDAP implementation is extremely flexible and supports a variety of operating modes to handle other scenarios not explicitly addressed in the spec.

Delta-syncrepl复制

   * Disadvantages of LDAP Sync replication:

LDAP Sync replication is an object-based replication mechanism. When any attribute value in a replicated object is changed on the provider, each consumer fetches and processes the complete changed object, including both the changed and unchanged attribute values during replication. One advantage of this approach is that when multiple changes occur to a single object, the precise sequence of those changes need not be preserved; only the final state of the entry is significant. But this approach may have drawbacks when the usage pattern involves single changes to multiple objects.

For example, suppose you have a database consisting of 100,000 objects of 1 KB each. Further, suppose you routinely run a batch job to change the value of a single two-byte attribute value that appears in each of the 100,000 objects on the master. Not counting LDAP and TCP/IP protocol overhead, each time you run this job each consumer will transfer and process 1 GB of data to process 200KB of changes!

99.98% of the data that is transmitted and processed in a case like this will be redundant, since it represents values that did not change. This is a waste of valuable transmission and processing bandwidth and can cause an unacceptable replication backlog to develop. While this situation is extreme, it serves to demonstrate a very real problem that is encountered in some LDAP deployments.

   * Where Delta-syncrepl comes in:

Delta-syncrepl, a changelog-based variant of syncrepl, is designed to address situations like the one described above. Delta-syncrepl works by maintaining a changelog of a selectable depth on the provider. The replication consumer checks the changelog for the changes it needs and, as long as the changelog contains the needed changes, the consumer fetches the changes from the changelog and applies them to its database. If, however, a replica is too far out of sync (or completely empty), conventional syncrepl is used to bring it up to date and replication then switches back to the delta-syncrepl mode.

For configuration, please see the Delta-syncrepl section.

N-Way Multi-Master复制

Multi-Master replication is a replication technique using Syncrepl to replicate data to multiple provider ("Master") Directory servers.

对于Multi-Master replication有效的参数
   * If any provider fails, other providers will continue to accept updates
   * Avoids a single point of failure
   * Providers can be located in several physical sites i.e. distributed across the network/globe.
   * Good for Automatic failover/High Availability
对于Multi-Master replication无效的参数

(These are often claimed to be advantages of Multi-Master replication but those claims are false):

   * It has NOTHING to do with load balancing
   * Providers must propagate writes to all the other servers, which means the network traffic and write load spreads across all of the servers the same as for single-master.
   * Server utilization and performance are at best identical for Multi-Master and Single-Master replication; at worst Single-Master is superior because indexing can be tuned differently to optimize for the different usage patterns between the provider and the consumers.
和Multi-Master replication抵触的参数
   * Breaks the data consistency guarantees of the directory model
   * http://www.openldap.org/faq/data/cache/1240.html
   * If connectivity with a provider is lost because of a network partition, then "automatic failover" can just compound the problem
   * Typically, a particular machine cannot distinguish between losing contact with a peer because that peer crashed, or because the network link has failed
   * If a network is partitioned and multiple clients start writing to each of the "masters" then reconciliation will be a pain; it may be best to simply deny writes to the clients that are partitioned from the single provider

For configuration, please see the N-Way Multi-Master section below

MirrorMode复制

MirrorMode is a hybrid configuration that provides all of the consistency guarantees of single-master replication, while also providing the high availability of multi-master. In MirrorMode two providers are set up to replicate from each other (as a multi-master configuration), but an external frontend is employed to direct all writes to only one of the two servers. The second provider will only be used for writes if the first provider crashes, at which point the frontend will switch to directing all writes to the second provider. When a crashed provider is repaired and restarted it will automatically catch up to any changes on the running provider and resync.

MirrorMode的参数
   * Provides a high-availability (HA) solution for directory writes (replicas handle reads)
   * As long as one provider is operational, writes can safely be accepted
   * Provider nodes replicate from each other, so they are always up to date and can be ready to take over (hot standby)
   * Syncrepl also allows the provider nodes to re-synchronize after any downtime
和MirrorMode抵触的参数
   * MirrorMode is not what is termed as a Multi-Master solution. This is because writes have to go to just one of the mirror nodes at a time
   * MirrorMode can be termed as Active-Active Hot-Standby, therefore an external server (slapd in proxy mode) or device (hardware load balancer) is needed to manage which provider is currently active
   * Backups are managed slightly differently
         o If backing up the Berkeley database itself and periodically backing up the transaction log files, then the same member of the mirror pair needs to be used to collect logfiles until the next database backup is taken
         o To ensure that both databases are consistent, each database might have to be put in read-only mode while performing a slapcat.
   * Delta-Syncrepl is not yet supported

For configuration, please see the MirrorMode section below

Syncrepl Proxy Mode

While the LDAP Sync protocol supports both pull- and push-based replication, the push mode (refreshAndPersist) must still be initiated from the consumer before the provider can begin pushing changes. In some network configurations, particularly where firewalls restrict the direction in which connections can be made, a provider-initiated push mode may be needed.

This mode can be configured with the aid of the LDAP Backend (Backends and slapd-ldap(8)). Instead of running the syncrepl engine on the actual consumer, a slapd-ldap proxy is set up near (or collocated with) the provider that points to the consumer, and the syncrepl engine runs on the proxy.

For configuration, please see the Syncrepl Proxy section.

=替代Slurpd

The old slurpd mechanism only operated in provider-initiated push mode. Slurpd replication was deprecated in favor of Syncrepl replication and has been completely removed from OpenLDAP 2.4.

The slurpd daemon was the original replication mechanism inherited from UMich's LDAP and operated in push mode: the master pushed changes to the slaves. It was replaced for many reasons, in brief:

   * It was not reliable
         o It was extremely sensitive to the ordering of records in the replog
         o It could easily go out of sync, at which point manual intervention was required to resync the slave database with the master directory
         o It wasn't very tolerant of unavailable servers. If a slave went down for a long time, the replog could grow to a size that was too large for slurpd to process
   * It only worked in push mode
   * It required stopping and restarting the master to add new slaves
   * It only supported single master replication

Syncrepl has none of those weaknesses:

   * Syncrepl is self-synchronizing; you can start with a consumer database in any state from totally empty to fully synced and it will automatically do the right thing to achieve and maintain synchronization
         o It is completely insensitive to the order in which changes occur
         o It guarantees convergence between the consumer and the provider content without manual intervention
         o It can resynchronize regardless of how long a consumer stays out of contact with the provider
   * Syncrepl can operate in either direction
   * Consumers can be added at any time without touching anything on the provider
   * Multi-master replication is supported

配置不同的复制类型

Syncrepl

Syncrepl配置

Because syncrepl is a consumer-side replication engine, the syncrepl specification is defined in slapd.conf(5) of the consumer server, not in the provider server's configuration file. The initial loading of the replica content can be performed either by starting the syncrepl engine with no synchronization cookie or by populating the consumer replica by loading an LDIF file dumped as a backup at the provider.

When loading from a backup, it is not required to perform the initial loading from the up-to-date backup of the provider content. The syncrepl engine will automatically synchronize the initial consumer replica to the current provider content. As a result, it is not required to stop the provider server in order to avoid the replica inconsistency caused by the updates to the provider content during the content backup and loading process.

When replicating a large scale directory, especially in a bandwidth constrained environment, it is advised to load the consumer replica from a backup instead of performing a full initial load using syncrepl.

设置提供者的slapd

The provider is implemented as an overlay, so the overlay itself must first be configured in slapd.conf(5) before it can be used. The provider has only two configuration directives, for setting checkpoints on the contextCSN and for configuring the session log. Because the LDAP Sync search is subject to access control, proper access control privileges should be set up for the replicated content.

The contextCSN checkpoint is configured by the

       syncprov-checkpoint <ops> <minutes>

directive. Checkpoints are only tested after successful write operations. If <ops> operations or more than <minutes> time has passed since the last checkpoint, a new checkpoint is performed.

The session log is configured by the

       syncprov-sessionlog <size>

directive, where <size> is the maximum number of session log entries the session log can record. When a session log is configured, it is automatically used for all LDAP Sync searches within the database.

Note that using the session log requires searching on the entryUUID attribute. Setting an eq index on this attribute will greatly benefit the performance of the session log on the provider.

A more complete example of the slapd.conf(5) content is thus:

       database bdb
       suffix dc=Example,dc=com
       rootdn dc=Example,dc=com
       directory /var/ldap/db
       index objectclass,entryCSN,entryUUID eq
       overlay syncprov
       syncprov-checkpoint 100 10
       syncprov-sessionlog 100
设置消费者的slapd

The syncrepl replication is specified in the database section of slapd.conf(5) for the replica context. The syncrepl engine is backend independent and the directive can be defined with any database type.

       database hdb
       suffix dc=Example,dc=com
       rootdn dc=Example,dc=com
       directory /var/ldap/db
       index objectclass,entryCSN,entryUUID eq
       syncrepl rid=123
               provider=ldap://provider.example.com:389
               type=refreshOnly
               interval=01:00:00:00
               searchbase="dc=example,dc=com"
               filter="(objectClass=organizationalPerson)"
               scope=sub
               attrs="cn,sn,ou,telephoneNumber,title,l"
               schemachecking=off
               bindmethod=simple
               binddn="cn=syncuser,dc=example,dc=com"
               credentials=secret

In this example, the consumer will connect to the provider slapd(8) at port 389 of ldap://provider.example.com to perform a polling (refreshOnly) mode of synchronization once a day. It will bind as cn=syncuser,dc=example,dc=com using simple authentication with password "secret". Note that the access control privilege of cn=syncuser,dc=example,dc=com should be set appropriately in the provider to retrieve the desired replication content. Also the search limits must be high enough on the provider to allow the syncuser to retrieve a complete copy of the requested content. The consumer uses the rootdn to write to its database so it always has full permissions to write all content.

The synchronization search in the above example will search for the entries whose objectClass is organizationalPerson in the entire subtree rooted at dc=example,dc=com. The requested attributes are cn, sn, ou, telephoneNumber, title, and l. The schema checking is turned off, so that the consumer slapd(8) will not enforce entry schema checking when it processes updates from the provider slapd(8).

For more detailed information on the syncrepl directive, see the syncrepl section of The slapd Configuration File chapter of this admin guide.

启动提供者和消费者的slapd

The provider slapd(8) is not required to be restarted. contextCSN is automatically generated as needed: it might be originally contained in the LDIF file, generated by slapadd (8), generated upon changes in the context, or generated when the first LDAP Sync search arrives at the provider. If an LDIF file is being loaded which did not previously contain the contextCSN, the -w option should be used with slapadd (8) to cause it to be generated. This will allow the server to startup a little quicker the first time it runs.

When starting a consumer slapd(8), it is possible to provide a synchronization cookie as the -c cookie command line option in order to start the synchronization from a specific state. The cookie is a comma separated list of name=value pairs. Currently supported syncrepl cookie fields are csn=<csn> and rid=<rid>. <csn> represents the current synchronization state of the consumer replica. <rid> identifies a consumer replica locally within the consumer server. It is used to relate the cookie to the syncrepl definition in slapd.conf(5) which has the matching replica identifier. The <rid> must have no more than 3 decimal digits. The command line cookie overrides the synchronization cookie stored in the consumer replica database.

Delta-syncrepl

Delta-syncrepl提供者配置

Setting up delta-syncrepl requires configuration changes on both the master and replica servers:

    # Give the replica DN unlimited read access.  This ACL needs to be
    # merged with other ACL statements, and/or moved within the scope
    # of a database.  The "by * break" portion causes evaluation of
    # subsequent rules.  See slapd.access(5) for details.
    access to *
       by dn.base="cn=replicator,dc=symas,dc=com" read
       by * break
    # Set the module path location
    modulepath /opt/symas/lib/openldap
    # Load the hdb backend
    moduleload back_hdb.la
    # Load the accesslog overlay
    moduleload accesslog.la
    #Load the syncprov overlay
    moduleload syncprov.la
    # Accesslog database definitions
    database hdb
    suffix cn=accesslog
    directory /db/accesslog
    rootdn cn=accesslog
    index default eq
    index entryCSN,objectClass,reqEnd,reqResult,reqStart
    overlay syncprov
    syncprov-nopresent TRUE
    syncprov-reloadhint TRUE
    # Let the replica DN have limitless searches
    limits dn.exact="cn=replicator,dc=symas,dc=com" time.soft=unlimited time.hard=unlimited size.soft=unlimited size.hard=unlimited
    # Primary database definitions
    database hdb
    suffix "dc=symas,dc=com"
    rootdn "cn=manager,dc=symas,dc=com"
    ## Whatever other configuration options are desired
    # syncprov specific indexing
    index entryCSN eq
    index entryUUID eq
    # syncrepl Provider for primary db
    overlay syncprov
    syncprov-checkpoint 1000 60
    # accesslog overlay definitions for primary db
    overlay accesslog
    logdb cn=accesslog
    logops writes
    logsuccess TRUE
    # scan the accesslog DB every day, and purge entries older than 7 days
    logpurge 07+00:00 01+00:00
    # Let the replica DN have limitless searches
    limits dn.exact="cn=replicator,dc=symas,dc=com" time.soft=unlimited time.hard=unlimited size.soft=unlimited size.hard=unlimited

For more information, always consult the relevant man pages (slapo-accesslog(5) and slapd.conf(5))

Delta-syncrepl消费者配置
    # Replica database configuration
    database hdb
    suffix "dc=symas,dc=com"
    rootdn "cn=manager,dc=symas,dc=com"
    ## Whatever other configuration bits for the replica, like indexing
    ## that you want
    # syncrepl specific indices
    index entryUUID eq
    # syncrepl directives
    syncrepl  rid=0
              provider=ldap://ldapmaster.symas.com:389
              bindmethod=simple
              binddn="cn=replicator,dc=symas,dc=com"
              credentials=secret
              searchbase="dc=symas,dc=com"
              logbase="cn=accesslog"
              logfilter="(&(objectClass=auditWriteObject)(reqResult=0))"
              schemachecking=on
              type=refreshAndPersist
              retry="60 +"
              syncdata=accesslog
    # Refer updates to the master
    updateref               ldap://ldapmaster.symas.com

The above configuration assumes that you have a replicator identity defined in your database that can be used to bind to the provider. In addition, all of the databases (primary, replica, and the accesslog storage database) should also have properly tuned DB_CONFIG files that meet your needs.

N-Way Multi-Master

For the following example we will be using 3 Master nodes. Keeping in line with test050-syncrepl-multimaster of the OpenLDAP test suite, we will be configuring slapd(8) via cn=config

This sets up the config database:

    dn: cn=config
    objectClass: olcGlobal
    cn: config
    olcServerID: 1
    dn: olcDatabase={0}config,cn=config
    objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
    olcDatabase: {0}config
    olcRootPW: secret

second and third servers will have a different olcServerID obviously:

    dn: cn=config
    objectClass: olcGlobal
    cn: config
    olcServerID: 2
    dn: olcDatabase={0}config,cn=config
    objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
    olcDatabase: {0}config
    olcRootPW: secret

This sets up syncrepl as a provider (since these are all masters):

    dn: cn=module,cn=config
    objectClass: olcModuleList
    cn: module
    olcModulePath: /usr/local/libexec/openldap
    olcModuleLoad: syncprov.la

Now we setup the first Master Node (replace $URI1, $URI2 and $URI3 etc. with your actual ldap urls):

    dn: cn=config
    changetype: modify
    replace: olcServerID
    olcServerID: 1 $URI1
    olcServerID: 2 $URI2
    olcServerID: 3 $URI3
    dn: olcOverlay=syncprov,olcDatabase={0}config,cn=config
    changetype: add
    objectClass: olcOverlayConfig
    objectClass: olcSyncProvConfig
    olcOverlay: syncprov
    dn: olcDatabase={0}config,cn=config
    changetype: modify
    add: olcSyncRepl
    olcSyncRepl: rid=001 provider=$URI1 binddn="cn=config" bindmethod=simple
      credentials=secret searchbase="cn=config" type=refreshAndPersist
      retry="5 5 300 5" timeout=1
    olcSyncRepl: rid=002 provider=$URI2 binddn="cn=config" bindmethod=simple
      credentials=secret searchbase="cn=config" type=refreshAndPersist
      retry="5 5 300 5" timeout=1
    olcSyncRepl: rid=003 provider=$URI3 binddn="cn=config" bindmethod=simple
      credentials=secret searchbase="cn=config" type=refreshAndPersist
      retry="5 5 300 5" timeout=1
    -
    add: olcMirrorMode
    olcMirrorMode: TRUE

Now start up the Master and a consumer/s, also add the above LDIF to the first consumer, second consumer etc. It will then replicate cn=config. You now have N-Way Multimaster on the config database.

We still have to replicate the actual data, not just the config, so add to the master (all active and configured consumers/masters will pull down this config, as they are all syncing). Also, replace all ${} variables with whatever is applicable to your setup:

    dn: olcDatabase={1}$BACKEND,cn=config
    objectClass: olcDatabaseConfig
    objectClass: olc${BACKEND}Config
    olcDatabase: {1}$BACKEND
    olcSuffix: $BASEDN
    olcDbDirectory: ./db
    olcRootDN: $MANAGERDN
    olcRootPW: $PASSWD
    olcLimits: dn.exact="$MANAGERDN" time.soft=unlimited time.hard=unlimited size.soft=unlimited size.hard=unlimited
    olcSyncRepl: rid=004 provider=$URI1 binddn="$MANAGERDN" bindmethod=simple
      credentials=$PASSWD searchbase="$BASEDN" type=refreshOnly
      interval=00:00:00:10 retry="5 5 300 5" timeout=1
    olcSyncRepl: rid=005 provider=$URI2 binddn="$MANAGERDN" bindmethod=simple
      credentials=$PASSWD searchbase="$BASEDN" type=refreshOnly
      interval=00:00:00:10 retry="5 5 300 5" timeout=1
    olcSyncRepl: rid=006 provider=$URI3 binddn="$MANAGERDN" bindmethod=simple
      credentials=$PASSWD searchbase="$BASEDN" type=refreshOnly
      interval=00:00:00:10 retry="5 5 300 5" timeout=1
    olcMirrorMode: TRUE
    dn: olcOverlay=syncprov,olcDatabase={1}${BACKEND},cn=config
    changetype: add
    objectClass: olcOverlayConfig
    objectClass: olcSyncProvConfig
    olcOverlay: syncprov

Note: All of your servers' clocks must be tightly synchronized using e.g. NTP http://www.ntp.org/, atomic clock, or some other reliable time reference.

Note: As stated in slapd-config(5), URLs specified in olcSyncRepl directives are the URLs of the servers from which to replicate. These must exactly match the URLs slapd listens on (-h in Command-Line Options). Otherwise slapd may attempt to replicate from itself, causing a loop.

MirrorMode

MirrorMode configuration is actually very easy. If you have ever setup a normal slapd syncrepl provider, then the only change is the following two directives:

      mirrormode  on
      serverID    1

Note: You need to make sure that the serverID of each mirror node is different and add it as a global configuration option.

Mirror Node配置

The first step is to configure the syncrepl provider the same as in the Set up the provider slapd section.

Note: Delta-syncrepl is not yet supported with MirrorMode.

Here's a specific cut down example using LDAP Sync Replication in refreshAndPersist mode:

MirrorMode node 1:

      # Global section
      serverID    1
      # database section
      # syncrepl directive
      syncrepl      rid=001
                    provider=ldap://ldap-sid2.example.com
                    bindmethod=simple
                    binddn="cn=mirrormode,dc=example,dc=com"
                    credentials=mirrormode
                    searchbase="dc=example,dc=com"
                    schemachecking=on
                    type=refreshAndPersist
                    retry="60 +"
      mirrormode on

MirrorMode node 2:

      # Global section
      serverID    2
      # database section
      # syncrepl directive
      syncrepl      rid=001
                    provider=ldap://ldap-sid1.example.com
                    bindmethod=simple
                    binddn="cn=mirrormode,dc=example,dc=com"
                    credentials=mirrormode
                    searchbase="dc=example,dc=com"
                    schemachecking=on
                    type=refreshAndPersist
                    retry="60 +"
      mirrormode on

It's simple really; each MirrorMode node is setup exactly the same, except that the serverID is unique, and each consumer is pointed to the other server.

容错配置

There are generally 2 choices for this; 1. Hardware proxies/load-balancing or dedicated proxy software, 2. using a Back-LDAP proxy as a syncrepl provider

A typical enterprise example might be:

Figure X.Y: MirrorMode in a Dual Data Center Configuration

标准消费者配置

This is exactly the same as the Set up the consumer slapd section. It can either setup in normal syncrepl replication mode, or in delta-syncrepl replication mode.

MirrorMode总结

You will now have a directory architecture that provides all of the consistency guarantees of single-master replication, while also providing the high availability of multi-master replication.

Syncrepl代理

Figure X.Y: Replacing slurpd

The following example is for a self-contained push-based replication solution:

       #######################################################################
       # Standard OpenLDAP Master/Provider
       #######################################################################
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/core.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/cosine.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/nis.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.acl
       modulepath  /usr/local/libexec/openldap
       moduleload  back_hdb.la
       moduleload  syncprov.la
       moduleload  back_monitor.la
       moduleload  back_ldap.la
       pidfile     /usr/local/var/slapd.pid
       argsfile    /usr/local/var/slapd.args
       loglevel    sync stats
       database    hdb
       suffix      "dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
       directory   /usr/local/var/openldap-data
       checkpoint      1024 5
       cachesize       10000
       idlcachesize    10000
       index       objectClass eq
       # rest of indexes
       index       default     sub
       rootdn          "cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
       rootpw          testing
       # syncprov specific indexing
       index entryCSN eq
       index entryUUID eq
       # syncrepl Provider for primary db
       overlay syncprov
       syncprov-checkpoint 1000 60
       # Let the replica DN have limitless searches
       limits dn.exact="cn=replicator,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com" time.soft=unlimited time.hard=unlimited size.soft=unlimited size.hard=unlimited
       database    monitor
       database    config
       rootpw          testing
       ##############################################################################
       # Consumer Proxy that pulls in data via Syncrepl and pushes out via slapd-ldap
       ##############################################################################
       database        ldap
       # ignore conflicts with other databases, as we need to push out to same suffix
       hidden              on
       suffix          "dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
       rootdn          "cn=slapd-ldap"
       uri             ldap://localhost:9012/
       lastmod         on
       # We don't need any access to this DSA
       restrict        all
       acl-bind        bindmethod=simple
                       binddn="cn=replicator,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
                       credentials=testing
       syncrepl        rid=001
                       provider=ldap://localhost:9011/
                       binddn="cn=replicator,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
                       bindmethod=simple
                       credentials=testing
                       searchbase="dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
                       type=refreshAndPersist
                       retry="5 5 300 5"
       overlay         syncprov

A replica configuration for this type of setup could be:

       #######################################################################
       # Standard OpenLDAP Slave without Syncrepl
       #######################################################################
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/core.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/cosine.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/nis.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.acl
       modulepath  /usr/local/libexec/openldap
       moduleload  back_hdb.la
       moduleload  syncprov.la
       moduleload  back_monitor.la
       moduleload  back_ldap.la
       pidfile     /usr/local/var/slapd.pid
       argsfile    /usr/local/var/slapd.args
       loglevel    sync stats
       database    hdb
       suffix      "dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
       directory   /usr/local/var/openldap-slave/data
       checkpoint      1024 5
       cachesize       10000
       idlcachesize    10000
       index       objectClass eq
       # rest of indexes
       index       default     sub
       rootdn          "cn=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
       rootpw          testing
       # Let the replica DN have limitless searches
       limits dn.exact="cn=replicator,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com" time.soft=unlimited time.hard=unlimited size.soft=unlimited size.hard=unlimited
       updatedn "cn=replicator,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
       # Refer updates to the master
       updateref   ldap://localhost:9011
       database    monitor
       database    config
       rootpw          testing

You can see we use the updatedn directive here and example ACLs (usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.acl) for this could be:

       # Give the replica DN unlimited read access.  This ACL may need to be
       # merged with other ACL statements.
       access to *
            by dn.base="cn=replicator,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com" write
            by * break
       access to dn.base=""
               by * read
       access to dn.base="cn=Subschema"
               by * read
       access to dn.subtree="cn=Monitor"
           by dn.exact="uid=admin,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com" write
           by users read
           by * none
       access to *
               by self write
               by * read

In order to support more replicas, just add more database ldap sections and increment the syncrepl rid number accordingly.

Note: You must populate the Master and Slave directories with the same data, unlike when using normal Syncrepl

If you do not have access to modify the master directory configuration you can configure a standalone ldap proxy, which might look like:

Figure X.Y: Replacing slurpd with a standalone version

The following configuration is an example of a standalone LDAP Proxy:

       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/core.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/cosine.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/nis.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema
       include     /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.acl
       modulepath  /usr/local/libexec/openldap
       moduleload  syncprov.la
       moduleload  back_ldap.la
       ##############################################################################
       # Consumer Proxy that pulls in data via Syncrepl and pushes out via slapd-ldap
       ##############################################################################
       database        ldap
       # ignore conflicts with other databases, as we need to push out to same suffix
       hidden              on
       suffix          "dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
       rootdn          "cn=slapd-ldap"
       uri             ldap://localhost:9012/
       lastmod         on
       # We don't need any access to this DSA
       restrict        all
       acl-bind        bindmethod=simple
                       binddn="cn=replicator,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
                       credentials=testing
       syncrepl        rid=001
                       provider=ldap://localhost:9011/
                       binddn="cn=replicator,dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
                       bindmethod=simple
                       credentials=testing
                       searchbase="dc=suretecsystems,dc=com"
                       type=refreshAndPersist
                       retry="5 5 300 5"
       overlay         syncprov

As you can see, you can let your imagination go wild using Syncrepl and slapd-ldap(8) tailoring your replication to fit your specific network topology.

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