SLAPADD(8C)SLAPADD(8C)NAMEslapadd - Add entries to a SLAPD database
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/slapadd [-v] [-c] [-g] [-u] [-q] [-w] [-d level] [-b suffix]
[-n dbnum] [-f slapd.conf] [-F confdir] [-l ldif-file]
DESCRIPTION
Slapadd is used to add entries specified in LDAP Directory Interchange
Format (LDIF) to a slapd(8) database. It opens the given database
determined by the database number or suffix and adds entries corre‐
sponding to the provided LDIF to the database. Databases configured as
subordinate of this one are also updated, unless -g is specified. The
LDIF input is read from standard input or the specified file.
As slapadd is designed to accept LDIF in database order, as produced by
slapcat(8), it does not verify that superior entries exist before
adding an entry, does not perform all user and system schema checks,
and does not maintain operational attributes (such as createTimeStamp
and modifiersName).
OPTIONS-v enable verbose mode.
-c enable continue (ignore errors) mode.
-g disable subordinate gluing. Only the specified database will be
processed, and not its glued subordinates (if any).
-u enable dry-run (don't write to backend) mode.
-q enable quick (fewer integrity checks) mode. Does fewer consis‐
tency checks on the input data, and no consistency checks when
writing the database. Improves the load time but if any errors
or interruptions occur the resulting database will be unusable.
-w write syncrepl context information. After all entries are
added, the contextCSN will be updated with the greatest CSN in
the database.
-d level
enable debugging messages as defined by the specified level.
-b suffix
Use the specified suffix to determine which database to add
entries to. The -b cannot be used in conjunction with the -n
option.
-n dbnum
Add entries to the dbnum-th database listed in the configuration
file. The -n cannot be used in conjunction with the -b option.
-f slapd.conf
specify an alternative slapd.conf(5) file.
-F confdir
specify a config directory. If both -f and -F are specified,
the config file will be read and converted to config directory
format and written to the specified directory. If neither
option is specified, an attempt to read the default config
directory will be made before trying to use the default config
file. If a valid config directory exists then the default config
file is ignored. If dryrun mode is also specified, no conversion
will occur.
-l ldif-file
Read LDIF from the specified file instead of standard input.
LIMITATIONS
Your slapd(8) should not be running when you do this to ensure consis‐
tency of the database.
slapadd may not provide naming or schema checks. It is advisable to
use ldapadd(1) when adding new entries into an existing directory.
EXAMPLES
To import the entries specified in file ldif into your slapd(8) data‐
base give the command:
/usr/sbin/slapadd -l ldif
SEE ALSOldap(3), ldif(5), slapcat(8), ldapadd(1), slapd(8)
"OpenLDAP Administrator's Guide" (http://www.OpenLDAP.org/doc/admin/)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
OpenLDAP is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP Project
(http://www.openldap.org/). OpenLDAP is derived from University of
Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release.
OpenLDAP 2.3.27 2006/08/19 SLAPADD(8C)