Directory Services 7.3.5

Binary resources

Examples in this documentation depend on features activated in the ds-evaluation setup profile.

Map a binary resource

  1. Edit the attributes section for a resource in the configuration file /path/to/opendj/config/rest2ldap/endpoints/api/example-v1.json.

    The following JSON excerpt maps the user photo property to the jpegPhoto LDAP attribute:

    "photo" : { "type" : "simple", "ldapAttribute" : "jpegPhoto", "isBinary" : true },
  2. Force the Rest2ldap endpoint to reread the updated configuration file:

    $ dsconfig \
     set-http-endpoint-prop \
     --hostname localhost \
     --port 4444 \
     --bindDN uid=admin \
     --bindPassword password \
     --endpoint-name "/api" \
     --set enabled:false \
     --usePkcs12TrustStore /path/to/opendj/config/keystore \
     --trustStorePassword:file /path/to/opendj/config/keystore.pin \
     --no-prompt
    
    $ dsconfig \
     set-http-endpoint-prop \
     --hostname localhost \
     --port 4444 \
     --bindDN uid=admin \
     --bindPassword password \
     --endpoint-name "/api" \
     --set enabled:true \
     --usePkcs12TrustStore /path/to/opendj/config/keystore \
     --trustStorePassword:file /path/to/opendj/config/keystore.pin \
     --no-prompt

Update a binary resource

  1. Ensure that the application has a resource to upload.

    For example, copy a JPEG photo picture.jpg to the current directory.

  2. Upload the binary resource as a base64-encoded JSON string.

    The following example patches Babs Jensen’s resource to add a profile photo:

    $ base64 encode --rawDataFile picture.jpg
    
    /9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEAYABgAAD/4QAWRXhpZgAASUkqAAgAAAAAAAAAAAD/2wBDAAEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQH/2wBDAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQH/wAARCAABAAEDASIAAhEBAxEB/8QAFQABAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAr/xAAUEAEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA/8QAFAEBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAP/EABQRAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD/2gAMAwEAAhEDEQA/AL+AAf/Z
    
    $ curl \
     --request PATCH \
     --cacert ca-cert.pem \
     --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
     --data "[{\"operation\": \"add\", \"field\": \"/photo\", \"value\": \"/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEAYABgAAD/4QAWRXhpZgAASUkqAAgAAAAAAAAAAAD/2wBDAAEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQH/2wBDAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQEBAQH/wAARCAABAAEDASIAAhEBAxEB/8QAFQABAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAr/xAAUEAEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA/8QAFAEBAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAP/EABQRAQAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAD/2gAMAwEAAhEDEQA/AL+AAf/Z\"}]" \
     --silent \
     "https://kvaughan:bribery@localhost:8443/api/users/bjensen?_prettyPrint=true"
    
    {
      "_id" : "bjensen",
      "_rev" : "<revision>",
      "_schema" : "frapi:opendj:rest2ldap:posixUser:1.0",
      "_meta" : {
        "lastModified" : "<datestamp>"
      },
      "userName" : "babs@example.com",
      "displayName" : [ "Barbara Jensen", "Babs Jensen" ],
      "name" : {
        "givenName" : "Barbara",
        "familyName" : "Jensen"
      },
      "description" : "Original description",
      "manager" : {
        "_id" : "trigden",
        "_rev" : "<revision>"
      },
      "groups" : [ {
        "_id" : "Carpoolers",
        "_rev" : "<revision>"
      } ],
      "photo" : "<base64-encoded-photo>",
      "contactInformation" : {
        "telephoneNumber" : "+1 408 555 9999",
        "emailAddress" : "babs@example.com"
      },
      "uidNumber" : 1076,
      "gidNumber" : 1000,
      "homeDirectory" : "/home/bjensen"
    }

Read a binary resource

  1. Read the binary resource as a base64-encoded JSON string.

    The following example reads Babs Jensen’s profile photo:

    $ curl \
     --cacert ca-cert.pem \
     --silent \
     "https://kvaughan:bribery@localhost:8443/api/users/bjensen?_fields=photo"
    
    {"_id":"bjensen","_rev":"<revision>","photo":"<base64-photo>"}
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