Hi Simo,

On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 8:35 PM, Simo Sorce <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Wed, 2012-02-08 at 19:59 +0100, Marco Pizzoli wrote:
> > Hi Sumit,
> >
> > On Wed, Feb 8, 2012 at 3:19 PM, Sumit Bose <[email protected]> wrote:
> >         On Wed, Feb 08, 2012 at 03:09:08PM +0100, Marco Pizzoli wrote:
> >         > Hi guys,
> >         > as far as I read I have recognized that ldb files are a sort
> >         of ldap
> >         > databases.
> >         > Can I access this data with a user tool? ldapsearch -H
> >         ldapi:/// or
> >         > similar...
> >         >
> >         > My question is motivated only by curiosity. I'm interested
> >         in learning
> >         > "hands on" the data structure.
> >
> >
> >         The tool you are looking for is called ldbsearch and can be
> >         found in
> >         ldb-tools package.
> >
> >         HTH
> >
> > Yes, it helped me a lot!
> > Now I'm able to browser my cache db. Are you aware of a graphical tool
> > (similar to PhpLdapAdmin or LdapAccountManager) which supports tdb
> > databases?
>
> No, at most you can use ldbedit, but be very careful.
>

As far as I can see, ldbedit is a raw datafile editor. Indeed I find that I
can manipulate the index definitions.
In what way can this help me in having a logic/tree visualization of the
tree?

Another couple of questions on this topic:
- ldb files are concurrency safe? What if I ldbmodify a file.ldb while it
is already open by (let's say) another ldbmodify?
- *just for experimenting*: is there a native way to possibly import the
ldif produced from ldbsearch in a real LDAP server? Does native standard
ldap schemas permit me to import/ldapadd objectClasses used by sssd ldb?

Thanks again
Marco
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