Performance

LDAPBackend is carefully designed not to require a connection to the LDAP service for every request. Of course, this depends heavily on how it is configured. If LDAP traffic or latency is a concern for your deployment, this section has a few tips on minimizing it, in decreasing order of impact.

  1. Cache groups. If AUTH_LDAP_FIND_GROUP_PERMS is True, the default behavior is to reload a user’s group memberships on every request. This is the safest behavior, as any membership change takes effect immediately, but it is expensive. If possible, set AUTH_LDAP_CACHE_TIMEOUT to remove most of this traffic.

  2. Don’t access user.ldap_user.*. Except for ldap_user.dn, these properties are only cached on a per-request basis. If you can propagate LDAP attributes to a User, they will only be updated at login. user.ldap_user.attrs triggers an LDAP connection for every request in which it’s accessed.

  3. Use simpler group types. Some grouping mechanisms are more expensive than others. This will often be outside your control, but it’s important to note that the extra functionality of more complex group types like NestedGroupOfNamesType is not free and will generally require a greater number and complexity of LDAP queries.

  4. Use direct binding. Binding with AUTH_LDAP_USER_DN_TEMPLATE is a little bit more efficient than relying on AUTH_LDAP_USER_SEARCH. Specifically, it saves two LDAP operations (one bind and one search) per login.