(PHP 4, PHP 5, PHP 7)
ldap_connect — Connect to an LDAP server
$host
= NULL
[, int $port
= 389
]] )
Creates an LDAP link identifier and checks whether the given
host
and port
are plausible.
Note: This function does not open a connection. It checks whether the given parameters are plausible and can be used to open a connection as soon as one is needed.
host
This field supports using a hostname or, with OpenLDAP 2.x.x and later, a full LDAP URI of the form ldap://hostname:port or ldaps://hostname:port for SSL encryption.
You can also provide multiple LDAP-URIs separated by a space as one string
Note that hostname:port is not a supported LDAP URI as the schema is missing.
port
The port to connect to. Not used when using LDAP URIs.
Returns a positive LDAP link identifier when the provided hostname/port combination or LDAP URI
seems plausible. It's a syntactic check of the provided parameters but the server(s) will not
be contacted! If the syntactic check fails it returns FALSE
.
When OpenLDAP 2.x.x is used, ldap_connect() will always
return a resource as it does not actually connect but just
initializes the connecting parameters. The actual connect happens with
the next calls to ldap_* funcs, usually with
ldap_bind().
If no arguments are specified then the link identifier of the already opened link will be returned.
Example #1 Example of connecting to LDAP server.
<?php
// LDAP variables
$ldaphost = "ldap.example.com"; // your ldap servers
$ldapport = 389; // your ldap server's port number
// Connecting to LDAP
$ldapconn = ldap_connect($ldaphost, $ldapport)
or die("Could not connect to $ldaphost");
?>
Example #2 Example of connecting securely to LDAP server.
<?php
// make sure your host is the correct one
// that you issued your secure certificate to
$ldaphost = "ldaps://ldap.example.com/";
// Connecting to LDAP
$ldapconn = ldap_connect($ldaphost)
or die("Could not connect to {$ldaphost}");
?>