Hi,
so there's my code snippet :
$element = $entry->FIRSTKEY();
while($element)
{
$entry->remove($element);
$element = $entry->NEXTKEY();
}
$conn_ldap->delete( $entry->getDN() );
if($conn_ldap->getErrorString() eq "Success")
{
&utils::log($IDClient . $loggingTab[$logCode] . " OK ") if $DEBUG>0;
}
else
{
&utils::log($IDClient . $loggingTab[$logCode] .
$conn_ldap->getErrorString() . " FAIL");
}
but i get the "non leaf" error if a search return more than one "dn", on the
last one.
I check the "remove" errorString in the loop, ans its always success. the
snippet treat all the elements
i could see by a standard "ldapsearch" shell command. So why its not
considered as a leaf?
Aur�lien
Kevin L. Burns <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a �crit dans le message :
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> More specifically, it isn't the attributes you have to discover and
> delete, it is the node's children.
>
> Jonathan McClure wrote:
> > You can't delete the non leaf entries automatically. You have to delete
the
> > subentries recursively. Similar to trying to delete an empty DOS dir.
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Aur�lien Labrosse [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Wednesday, September 05, 2001 12:49 PM
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: $conn->delete($entry->getDN());
> >
> >
> > Hi,
> > when i try to delete an entry, i always get in errorString :
> > "operation non allowed on non leaf"
> > What should i do before? discover all attributes and delete them one by
one?
> > thx...
> >
> > Aur�lien
> >
> >
> >
> >
>