Run this method to try and test configuration settings for LdapAuthBeans,
or to troubleshoot.
It purposefully does not test the Java Function or the JDBC layer at all.
This program will attempt to retrieve and display the schema/roles list
for the specified user and with the specified password from the LDAP
server according to the specified properties.
Passwords typed on the command line are inherently not secure, so only
use this program when the computer it is run on is secured and where
your command line may not be observed, directly or indirectly, by others.
Set the properties in a properties file to match your LDAP security and
Directory Information Tree structure and use this program to check
everything between the LdapAuthBean and your LDAP server.
You then know the exact settings to use for an LdapAuthBean that you can
plug into AuthBeanMultiplexer.
Run with no arguments to see required syntax.
The property file may contain any of the following properties, which
exactly match the corresponding setter methods in this class.
- trustStore. This is the only property without a corresponding
setter method. Setting this property has the same effect as
setting Java system property
'javax.net.ssl.trustStore'.
- startTls. Takes a boolean value according to
method java.util.Boolean.parseBoolean.
- roleSchemaValuePattern. Correponds to method
setRoleSchemaValuePatternString
- accessValuePattern. Correponds to method
setAccessValuePatternString
- ldapPort
- securityMechanism
- ldapHost
- principalTemplate
- initialContextFactory
- saslRealm
- parentDn
- rdnAttribute
- rolesSchemaAttribute
- accessAttribute
Tokens like ${this} will not be expanded to system property values,
and your bean will get the values exactly as you type them in.
The file sample/ldap-exerciser.properties in the HyperSQL distribution
may be used as a template or example.
- Throws:
IOException