Hi group,
I figured out how to sort in descending order using ldapsearch.
By default, it will always sort in ascending order. If I need to sort in
descending then I need to add a "-" prefix before my attribute name. (e.g.
-S -createtimestamp).
In addition, I can only get the descending search work only if I specify the
sorting to be done by the server by passing the "-x" flag.
I still have the question about what is the best way to delete a hierarchy
tree using command line utility provided by Fedora-DS package.
My current plan is to do a ldapsearch with subtree scope and sort the
createtimestamp attribute in descending order. Then take the output and run
it with ldapdelete.
Thanks!
David
On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 2:01 PM, Chun Tat David Chu <
beyonddc.storage(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi group,
I've a question about deleting the hierarchy tree using the Fedora DS
provided command line utilities (e.g. ldapdelete, ldapsearch, ldapmodify and
etc).
Originally, I'm using the "ldapdelete" command from the openldapclient
package with the "-r" flag to do recursive delete on the hierarchy tree, but
I want to know if there's anyway I can achieve the same effect by using
command line utilities from the Fedora DS package.
My original thought is to use ldapsearch, set it to return only the "dn"
attribute and sorted by "createtimestamp" attribute. Then use the returned
result and run the ldapdelete command. Assuming a child entry must have a
later "createtimestamp" then parent entry. However, the result returned
back from ldapsearch is in ascending order of the "createtimestamp"
attribute.
Is there a way to tell the ldapsearch command to sort returned result in
descending order? or
Is there a more efficient way to delete a hierarchy tree through command
line?
Thanks!
David