In order to order by multiple fields you can order your array many times:
For example:
ldap_sort($link, $result, 'givenname');
ldap_sort($link, $result, 'sn');
(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7)
ldap_sort — Sort LDAP result entries on the client side
This function has been DEPRECATED as of PHP 7.0.0 and REMOVED as of PHP 8.0.0. Relying on this function is highly discouraged.
$link
, resource $result
, string $sortfilter
) : boolSort the result of a LDAP search, returned by ldap_search().
As this function sorts the returned values on the client side it is possible that
you might not get the expected results in case you reach the sizelimit
either of the server or
defined within ldap_search().
link
An LDAP resource, returned by ldap_connect().
result
An search result identifier, returned by ldap_search().
sortfilter
The attribute to use as a key in the sort.
没有返回值。
版本 | 说明 |
---|---|
8.0.0 | This function has been removed. |
Sorting the result of a search.
Example #1 LDAP sort
<?php
// $ds is a valid link identifier (see ldap_connect)
$dn = 'ou=example,dc=org';
$filter = '(|(sn=Doe*)(givenname=John*))';
$justthese = array('ou', 'sn', 'givenname', 'mail');
$sr = ldap_search($ds, $dn, $filter, $justthese);
// Sort
ldap_sort($ds, $sr, 'sn');
// Retrieving the data
$info = ldap_get_entries($ds, $sr);
In order to order by multiple fields you can order your array many times:
For example:
ldap_sort($link, $result, 'givenname');
ldap_sort($link, $result, 'sn');
I wondered how to sort after a dn, for just show a tree view. I tried to set $sortfilter = 'dn', but that didn't work. Than I tried with a blank string ''. That worked, the entries are sorted by dn.
If you are wanting to sort by multiple attributes, for instance ordering by last name and then first name, try this function. This is similar to "ORDER BY lastname, firstname" in SQL.
This function uses an insertion sort algorithm, which is somewhat faster then the old-fashoned bubble sort. The second argument is an array containing the attributes you want to sort by. (this functon won't do descending or ascending.. feel free to add it!)
<?php
/**
* @param array $entries
* @param array $attribs
* @desc Sort LDAP result entries by multiple attributes.
*/
function ldap_multi_sort(&$entries, $attribs){
for ($i=1; $i<$entries['count']; $i++){
$index = $entries[$i];
$j=$i;
do {
//create comparison variables from attributes:
$a = $b = null;
foreach($attribs as $attrib){
$a .= $entries[$j-1][$attrib][0];
$b .= $index[$attrib][0];
}
// do the comparison
if ($a > $b){
$is_greater = true;
$entries[$j] = $entries[$j-1];
$j = $j-1;
}else{
$is_greater = false;
}
} while ($j>0 && $is_greater);
$entries[$j] = $index;
}
return $entries;
}
?>
This note may be self-evident, but the functionality of ldap_sort threw off this sometime user of relational databases.
The following code will NOT do what you expect:
<?php
// omitted calls to connect and and bind to LDAP server...
// attributes we want to retrieve from LDAP server
$ldap_attributes = array ( 'cn', 'o', 'mail' ) ;
// retrieve attributes from matching entries
$search_results = ldap_search ( $ldap_conn, 'dc=example,dc=org', '(objectclass=*)', 0, 500, 30 ) ;
// sort entries by last name ('sn')
ldap_sort ( $ldap_conn, $search_results, 'sn' ) ;
?>
The entries will NOT be sorted by last name. Why not? Because LDAP doesn't function like a RDBMS; you cannot sort a result set on an arbitrary field, regardless of whether you "selected" it. You must always include the attribute by which you want to sort your entries among the requested attributes (add 'sn' to $ldap_attributes, in this case).
Hope this is helpful to some other folks who scratched their heads when they tried to sort entries and it didn't work out...
Here's a simple LDAP sort function I wrote:
<?php
function sort_ldap_entries($e, $fld, $order)
{
for ($i = 0; $i < $e['count']; $i++) {
for ($j = $i; $j < $e['count']; $j++) {
$d = strcasecmp($e[$i][$fld][0], $e[$j][$fld][0]);
switch ($order) {
case 'A':
if ($d > 0)
swap($e, $i, $j);
break;
case 'D':
if ($d < 0)
swap($e, $i, $j);
break;
}
}
}
return ($e);
}
function swap(&$ary, $i, $j)
{
$temp = $ary[$i];
$ary[$i] = $ary[$j];
$ary[$j] = $temp;
}
?>
so that it can be invoked like:
<?php
$entries = sort_ldap_entries($entries, 'mail', 'A'); // sort entries by ascending order of mail
?>
where,
`$entries' is the array returned by ldap_get_entries() function.
This might be useful to those who still run older versions of PHP (<= 4.2.0) on their web servers :-)
Something real simple i wrote to sort directory searches by a persons last name.
<?php
for($i=0;$i<$result["count"];$i++)
{
$lastname = $result[$i]["sn"][0];
$lnames["$i"]=$lastname;
}//for i
@asort($lnames);
?>
This function applies strcmp() to each attribute (given by sortfilter) in order to sort the entries returned by the server. To order search results ascending by last name, try passing "sn" as the sortfilter argument. This function does not play nice with multi-valued attributes.