Best way to disconnect from ldap?
John Gordon
gordon at panix.com
Thu Apr 5 14:38:35 EDT 2012
In <jkda88$mrk$1 at reader1.panix.com> John Gordon <gordon at panix.com> writes:
> I'm writing an application that interacts with ldap, and I'm looking
> for advice on how to handle the connection. Specifically, how to
> close the ldap connection when the application is done.
> I wrote a class to wrap an LDAP connection, similar to this:
> import ldap
> import ConfigParser
> class MyLDAPWrapper(object):
> def __init__(self):
> config = ConfigParser.SafeConfigParser()
> config.read('sample.conf')
>
> uri = config.get('LDAP', 'uri')
> user = config.get('LDAP', 'user')
> password = config.get('LDAP', 'password')
> self.ldapClient = ldap.initialize(uri)
> self.ldapClient.simple_bind_s(user, password)
> My question is this: what is the best way to ensure the ldap connection
> gets closed when it should? I could write an explicit close() method,
> but that seems a bit messy; there would end up being lots of calls to
> close() scattered around in my code (primarily inside exception handlers.)
> Or I could write a __del__ method:
> def __del__(self):
> self.ldapClient.unbind_s()
Thanks everyone for your input. I learned a lot!
However, I just ran across this bit of documentation on python-ldap.org:
class ldap.LDAPObject
Instances of LDAPObject are returned by initialize() and open()
(deprecated). The connection is automatically unbound and closed
when the LDAP object is deleted.
So, given that, do I need to do anything at all?
--
John Gordon A is for Amy, who fell down the stairs
gordon at panix.com B is for Basil, assaulted by bears
-- Edward Gorey, "The Gashlycrumb Tinies"
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