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SLAPD-BDB(5) |
FreeBSD File Formats Manual |
SLAPD-BDB(5) |
slapd-bdb, slapd-hdb - Berkeley DB backends to slapd
/usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.conf
The bdb backend to slapd(8) uses the Oracle Berkeley DB (BDB)
package to store data. It makes extensive use of indexing and caching to speed
data access.
Note that BDB is deprecated and support will be dropped in future
OpenLDAP releases. Installations should use the mdb backend
instead.
hdb is a variant of the bdb backend that uses a
hierarchical database layout which supports subtree renames. It is both more
space-efficient and more execution-efficient than the bdb backend. It
is otherwise identical to the bdb behavior, and all the same
configuration options apply.
It is noted that these options are intended to complement Berkeley
DB configuration options set in the environment's DB_CONFIG file. See
Berkeley DB documentation for details on DB_CONFIG configuration
options. Where there is overlap, settings in DB_CONFIG take
precedence.
These slapd.conf options apply to the bdb and hdb backend
database. That is, they must follow a "database bdb" or
"database hdb" line and come before any subsequent
"backend" or "database" lines. Other database options are
described in the slapd.conf(5) manual page.
- cachesize <integer>
- Specify the size in entries of the in-memory entry cache maintained by the
bdb or hdb backend database instance. The default is 1000
entries.
- cachefree <integer>
- Specify the number of entries to free from the entry cache when the cache
reaches the cachesize limit. The default is 1 entry.
- checkpoint <kbyte> <min>
- Specify the frequency for checkpointing the database transaction log. A
checkpoint operation flushes the database buffers to disk and writes a
checkpoint record in the log. The checkpoint will occur if either
<kbyte> data has been written or <min> minutes
have passed since the last checkpoint. Both arguments default to zero, in
which case they are ignored. When the <min> argument is
non-zero, an internal task will run every <min> minutes to
perform the checkpoint. See the Berkeley DB reference guide for more
details.
- checksum
- Enable checksum validation of DB pages whenever they are read from disk.
This setting can only be configured before any database files are
created.
- cryptfile <file>
- Specify the pathname of a file containing an encryption key to use for
encrypting the database. Encryption is performed using Berkeley DB's
implementation of AES. Note that encryption can only be configured before
any database files are created, and changing the key can only be done
after destroying the current database and recreating it. Encryption is not
enabled by default, and some distributions of Berkeley DB do not support
encryption.
- cryptkey <key>
- Specify an encryption key to use for encrypting the database. This option
may be used when a separate cryptfile is not desired. Only one of
cryptkey or cryptfile may be configured.
- dbconfig <Berkeley-DB-setting>
- Specify a configuration directive to be placed in the DB_CONFIG
file of the database directory. The dbconfig directive is just a
convenience to allow all necessary configuration to be set in the
slapd.conf file. The options set using this directive will only be
written to the DB_CONFIG file if no such file existed at server
startup time, otherwise they are completely ignored. This allows one to
set initial values without overwriting/destroying a DB_CONFIG file
that was already customized through other means. This directive may be
specified multiple times, as needed. For example:
dbconfig set_cachesize 0 1048576 0
dbconfig set_lg_bsize 2097152
- dbnosync
- Specify that on-disk database contents should not be immediately
synchronized with in memory changes. Enabling this option may improve
performance at the expense of data security. See the Berkeley DB reference
guide for more details.
- dbpagesize <dbfile> <size>
- Specify the page size to use for a particular database file, in units of
1024 bytes. The default for the id2entry file is 16, the default
for all other files depends on the size of the underlying filesystem's
block size (typically 4 or 8). The maximum that BerkeleyDB supports is 64.
This setting usually should not need to be changed, but if BerkeleyDB's
"db_stat -d" shows a large amount of overflow pages in use in a
file, setting a larger size may increase performance at the expense of
data integrity. This setting only takes effect when a database is being
newly created. See the Berkeley DB reference guide for more details.
- directory <directory>
- Specify the directory where the BDB files containing this database and
associated indexes live. A separate directory must be specified for each
database. The default is /var/db/openldap-data.
- dirtyread
- Allow reads of modified but not yet committed data. Usually transactions
are isolated to prevent other operations from accessing uncommitted data.
This option may improve performance, but may also return inconsistent
results if the data comes from a transaction that is later aborted. In
this case, the modified data is discarded and a subsequent search will
return a different result.
- dncachesize <integer>
- Specify the maximum number of DNs in the in-memory DN cache. Ideally this
cache should be large enough to contain the DNs of every entry in the
database. If set to a smaller value than the cachesize it will be
silently increased to equal the cachesize. The default value is 0
which means unlimited, i.e. the DN cache will grow without bound.
It should be noted that the DN cache is allowed to
temporarily grow beyond the configured size. It does this if many
entries are locked when it tries to do a purge, because that means
they're legitimately in use. Also, the DN cache never purges
entries that have cached children, so depending on the shape of the DIT,
it could have lots of cached DNs over the defined limit.
- idlcachesize <integer>
- Specify the size of the in-memory index cache, in index slots. The default
is zero. A larger value will speed up frequent searches of indexed
entries. An hdb database needs a large idlcachesize for good
search performance, typically three times the cachesize (entry
cache size) or larger.
- index {<attrlist>|default}
[pres,eq,approx,sub,<special>]
- Specify the indexes to maintain for the given attribute (or list of
attributes). Some attributes only support a subset of indexes. If only an
<attr> is given, the indices specified for default are
maintained. Note that setting a default does not imply that all attributes
will be indexed. Also, for best performance, an eq index should
always be configured for the objectClass attribute.
A number of special index parameters may be specified. The
index type sub can be decomposed into subinitial,
subany, and subfinal indices. The special type
nolang may be specified to disallow use of this index by language
subtypes. The special type nosubtypes may be specified to
disallow use of this index by named subtypes. Note: changing
index settings in slapd.conf(5) requires rebuilding
indices, see slapindex(8); changing index settings
dynamically by LDAPModifying "cn=config" automatically causes
rebuilding of the indices online in a background task.
- linearindex
- Tell slapindex to index one attribute at a time. By default, all
indexed attributes in an entry are processed at the same time. With this
option, each indexed attribute is processed individually, using multiple
passes through the entire database. This option improves slapindex
performance when the database size exceeds the dbcache size. When
the dbcache is large enough, this option is not needed and will
decrease performance. Also by default, slapadd performs full
indexing and so a separate slapindex run is not needed. With this
option, slapadd does no indexing and slapindex must be
used.
- lockdetect {oldest|youngest|fewest|random|default}
- Specify which transaction to abort when a deadlock is detected. The
default is random.
- mode <integer>
- Specify the file protection mode that newly created database index files
should have. The default is 0600.
- searchstack <depth>
- Specify the depth of the stack used for search filter evaluation. Search
filters are evaluated on a stack to accommodate nested AND / OR clauses.
An individual stack is assigned to each server thread. The depth of the
stack determines how complex a filter can be evaluated without requiring
any additional memory allocation. Filters that are nested deeper than the
search stack depth will cause a separate stack to be allocated for that
particular search operation. These allocations can have a major negative
impact on server performance, but specifying too much stack will also
consume a great deal of memory. Each search stack uses 512K bytes per
level. The default stack depth is 16, thus 8MB per thread is used.
- shm_key <integer>
- Specify a key for a shared memory BDB environment. By default the BDB
environment uses memory mapped files. If a non-zero value is specified, it
will be used as the key to identify a shared memory region that will house
the environment.
The bdb and hdb backends honor access control semantics as
indicated in slapd.access(5).
- /usr/local/etc/openldap/slapd.conf
- default slapd configuration file
- DB_CONFIG
- Berkeley DB configuration file
slapd.conf(5), slapd-config(5), slapd-mdb(5),
slapd(8), slapadd(8), slapcat(8), slapindex(8),
Berkeley DB documentation.
OpenLDAP Software is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP Project
<http://www.openldap.org/>. OpenLDAP Software is derived from the
University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release. Originally begun by Kurt Zeilenga.
Caching mechanisms originally designed by Jong-Hyuk Choi. Completion and
subsequent work, as well as back-hdb, by Howard Chu.
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