302
votes

When I run the following command:

sudo pip install python-ldap

I get this error:

In file included from Modules/LDAPObject.c:9:

Modules/errors.h:8: fatal error: lber.h: No such file or directory

Any ideas how to fix this?

21
This is how I fixed it for me. I'm on an Amazon EC2-Instance and I went into my usr/bin/ directory and noticed I had pip, pip-2.7, pip-3.6, and pip-python so I did sudo pip-3.6 install ldap3 and it worked for me.Kyle Bridenstine
@KyleBridenstine python-ldap is not the same thing as ldap3.David Mulder

21 Answers

519
votes

The python-ldap is based on OpenLDAP, so you need to have the development files (headers) in order to compile the Python module. If you're on Ubuntu, the package is called libldap2-dev.

Debian/Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get install libsasl2-dev python-dev libldap2-dev libssl-dev

RedHat/CentOS:

sudo yum install python-devel openldap-devel
151
votes

To install python-ldap successfully with pip, following development libraries are needed (package names taken from ubuntu environment):

sudo apt-get install -y python-dev libldap2-dev libsasl2-dev libssl-dev
71
votes

On CentOS/RHEL 6, you need to install:

sudo yum install python-devel
sudo yum install openldap-devel

and yum will also install cyrus-sasl-devel as a dependency. Then you can run:

pip-2.7 install python-ldap
34
votes

In Ubuntu it looks like this :

 $ sudo apt-get install python-dev libldap2-dev libsasl2-dev libssl-dev
 $ sudo pip install python-ldap
18
votes

"Don't blindly remove/install software"

In a Ubuntu/Debian based distro, you could use apt-file to find the name of the exact package that includes the missing header file.

# do this once
sudo apt-get install apt-file
sudo apt-file update

$ apt-file search lber.h
libldap2-dev: /usr/include/lber.h

As you could see from the output of apt-file search lber.h, you'd just need to install the package libldap2-dev.

sudo apt-get install libldap2-dev
16
votes

Windows: I completely agree with the accepted answer, but digging through the comments took a while to get to the meat of what I needed. I ran across this specific problem with Reviewboard on Windows using the Bitnami. To give an answer for windows then, I used this link mentioned in the comments:

Then, executed the following commands

easy_install pip
pip install python_ldap-2.4.20-cp27-none_win32.whl

(because I had python 2.7 and a 32bit install at that)

easy_install python-ldap
13
votes

For those having the same issue of missing Iber.h on Alpine Linux, in a docker image that you are trying to adapt to Alpine for instance.

The package you are looking for is: openldap-dev

So run

apk add openldap-dev

Available from version 3.3 up to Edge

Available for both armhf and x86_64 Architectures.

4
votes

On openSUSE you need to install the packages openldap2-devel, cyrus-sasl-devel, python-devel and libopenssl-devel.

zypper install openldap2-devel cyrus-sasl-devel python-devel libopenssl-devel

4
votes

On Fedora 22, you need to do this instead:

sudo dnf install python-devel
sudo dnf install openldap-devel
3
votes

python3 does not support python-ldap. Rather to install ldap3.

2
votes

On OSX, you need the xcode CLI tools. Just open a terminal and run:

xcode-select --install
2
votes

For most systems, the build requirements are now mentioned in python-ldap's documentation, in the "Installing" section.

If anything is missing for your system (or your system is missing entirely), please let maintainer know! (As of 2018, I am the maintainer, so a comment here should be enough. Or you can send a pull request or mail.)

2
votes

For alpine docker

apk add openldap-dev

if the python version is 3 and above try

pip install python3-ldap
2
votes

To correct the error due to dependencies to install the python-ldap : Windows 7/10

download the whl file

http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#python-ldap.

python 3.6 suit with

python_ldap-3.2.0-cp36-cp36m-win_amd64.whl

Deploy the file in :

c:\python36\Scripts\

install it with

python -m pip install python_ldap-3.2.0-cp36-cp36m-win_amd64.whl
2
votes
sudo apt-get install build-essential python3-dev python2.7-dev libldap2-dev libsasl2-dev slapd ldap-utils python-tox lcov valgrind
1
votes

In FreeBSD 11:

pkg install openldap-client # for lber.h
pkg install cyrus-sasl # if you need sasl.h
pip install python-ldap
1
votes

As a general solution to install Python packages with binary dependencies [1] on Debian/Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get build-dep python-ldap
# installs system dependencies (but not the package itself)
pew workon my_virtualenv # enter your virtualenv
pip install python-ldap

You'll have to check the name of your Python package on Ubuntu versus PyPI. In this case they're the same.

Obviously doesn't work if the Python package is not in the Ubuntu repos.

[1] I learnt this trick when trying to pip install matplotlib on Ubuntu.

0
votes

If you're working with windows machines, you can find 'python-ldap' wheel in this Link and then you can install it

0
votes

for those who are using alphine linux, apk add openldap-dev

0
votes

I had problems with the installation on Windows, so one of the solutions is to install the ldap package manually.

A few steps:

  • Go to the page pyldap or/and python-ldap and download the latest version *whl.
  • Open a console then cd to where you've downloaded your file like some-package.whl and use:
pip install some-package.whl

The current version for pyldap is 2.4.45. On a concrete example the installation would be:

pip install .\pyldap-2.4.45-cp37-cp37m-win_amd64.whl

# or
pip install .\python_ldap‑3.3.1‑cp39‑cp39‑win_amd64.whl

Output:

Installing collected packages: pyldap
Successfully installed pyldap-2.4.45

EDIT

You can install the proper version for Python-3.X though using following command:

# if pip3 is the default pip alias for python-3
pip3 install python3-ldap

# otherwise 
pip install python3-ldap

Also here is the link of PiPy package for further information: python3-ldap 0.9.8.4

OR

ldap3 is a strictly RFC 4510 conforming LDAP V3 pure Python client library. The same codebase runs in Python 2, Python 3, PyPy and PyPy3: https://github.com/cannatag/ldap3

pip install ldap3
from ldap3 import Server, Connection, SAFE_SYNC

server = Server('my_server')
conn = Connection(server, 'my_user', 'my_password', client_strategy=SAFE_SYNC, auto_bind=True)

status, result, response, _ = conn.search('o=test', '(objectclass=*)') 
# usually you don't need the original request (4th element of the returned tuple)
0
votes

try:

ARCHFLAGS="-arch x86_64" pip3 install python-ldap