* Marc [26/04/2024 16:42] :
>
> Or is it possible to use an existing bind and 'switch' to a
> different user bind?
Yes, it is possible to make several binds on the same connection.
Note that it is important to wait for the response to a given bind
before sending the next one.
Emmanuel
--On Friday, April 26, 2024 5:42 PM + Marc
wrote:
I just searched a bit and did some requests on https files and it looks
like most are reporting results between 100 - 200. So I guess this is
sort of ok.
So probably it would be faster if I authenticate users via a 'manager'
bind and
>
> >
> > > I am doing some basic testing with ldap with this command.
> > >
> > > ldclt \
> > > -a 400 \
> > > -H ldap://x.x.x.x: \
> > > -e bindeach,bindonly,close \
> > > -D "uid=test,dc=me,dc=local" \
> > > -w yy \
> > > -n 1
> > >
> > > I was testing this on tw
>
> > I am doing some basic testing with ldap with this command.
> >
> > ldclt \
> > -a 400 \
> > -H ldap://x.x.x.x: \
> > -e bindeach,bindonly,close \
> > -D "uid=test,dc=me,dc=local" \
> > -w yy \
> > -n 1
> >
> > I was testing this on two container test environm
> I am doing some basic testing with ldap with this command.
>
> ldclt \
> -a 400 \
> -H ldap://x.x.x.x: \
> -e bindeach,bindonly,close \
> -D "uid=test,dc=me,dc=local" \
> -w yy \
> -n 1
>
> I was testing this on two container test environments. Both are running