.TH LDAP_FRIENDLY 3 "22 September 1998" "OpenLDAP LDVERSION" .SH NAME ldap_friendly_name, ldap_free_friendlymap \- LDAP unfriendly to friendly name mapping routine .SH SYNOPSIS .nf .ft B #include #include .LP .ft B typedef struct ldap_friendly { char *lf_unfriendly; char *lf_friendly; } LDAPFriendlyMap; .LP .ft B char *ldap_friendly_name(filename, name, map) .ft char *filename; char *name; LDAPFriendlyMap **map; .LP .ft B void ldap_free_friendlymap(map) .ft LDAPFriendlyMap **map; .SH DESCRIPTION This routine is used to map one set of strings to another. Typically, this is done for country names, to map from the two-letter country codes to longer more readable names. The mechanism is general enough to be used with other things, though. .LP \fIfilename\fP is the name of a file containing the unfriendly to friendly mapping, \fIname\fP is the unfriendly name to map to a friendly name, and \fImap\fP is a result-parameter that should be set to NULL on the first call. It is then used to hold the mapping in core so that the file need not be read on subsequent calls. .LP For example: .LP .nf .ft tt LDAPFriendlyMap *map = NULL; printf( "unfriendly %s => friendly %s\\n", name, ldap_friendly_name( "DATADIR/ldapfriendly", name, &map ) ); .ft .fi .LP The mapping file should contain lines like this: unfriendlyname\\tfriendlyname. Lines that begin with a '#' character are comments and are ignored. .LP The .B ldap_free_friendlymap() call is used to free structures allocated by .B ldap_friendly_name() when no more calls to .B ldap_friendly_name() are to be made. .SH ERRORS NULL is returned by .B ldap_friendly_name() if there is an error opening \fIfilename\fP, or if the file has a bad format, or if the \fImap\fP parameter is NULL. .SH FILES DATADIR/ldapfriendly.conf .SH SEE ALSO .BR ldap (3) .SH ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .B OpenLDAP is developed and maintained by The OpenLDAP Project (http://www.openldap.org/). .B OpenLDAP is derived from University of Michigan LDAP 3.3 Release.