I came accros this page and enjoyed the comments.
Since a LDAP string can sometimes be lengthy and have many attributes, I needed to be able to sort through all that is in.
In my case, I needed to get the subdomain part and other parameters.
Here is how I built my method.
<?php
/**
* Parse, and format a DN string to Array
*
* Read a LDAP DN, and return an array keys
* listing all similar attributes.
*
* Also takes care of the character escape and unescape
*
* Example:
* CN=username,OU=UNITNAME,OU=Region,OU=Country,DC=subdomain,DC=domain,DC=com
*
* Would normally return:
* Array (
* [count] => 9
* [0] => CN=username
* [1] => OU=UNITNAME
* [2] => OU=Region
* [5] => OU=Country
* [6] => DC=subdomain
* [7] => DC=domain
* [8] => DC=com
* )
*
* Returns instead a manageable array:
* array (
* [CN] => array( username )
* [OU] => array( UNITNAME, Region, Country )
* [DC] => array ( subdomain, domain, com )
* )
*
*
* @author gabriel at hrz dot uni-marburg dot de 05-Aug-2003 02:27 (part of the character replacement)
* @author Renoir Boulanger
*
* @param string $dn The DN
* @return array
*/
function parseLdapDn($dn)
{
$parsr=ldap_explode_dn($dn, 0);
//$parsr[] = 'EE=Sôme Krazï string';
//$parsr[] = 'AndBogusOne';
$out = array();
foreach($parsr as $key=>$value){
if(FALSE !== strstr($value, '=')){
list($prefix,$data) = explode("=",$value);
$data=preg_replace("/\\\\\\([0-9A-Fa-f]{2})/e", "''.chr(hexdec('\\\\1')).''", $data);
if(isset($current_prefix) && $prefix == $current_prefix){
$out[$prefix][] = $data;
} else {
$current_prefix = $prefix;
$out[$prefix][] = $data;
}
}
}
return $out;
}
?>