I'm trying to get all the direct reports of a User through Active Directory, recursively. So given a user, i will end up with a list of all users who have this person as manager or who have a person as manager who has a person as manager ... who eventually has the input user as manager.
My current attempt is rather slow:
private static Collection<string> GetDirectReportsInternal(string userDN, out long elapsedTime)
{
    Collection<string> result = new Collection<string>();
    Collection<string> reports = new Collection<string>();
    Stopwatch sw = new Stopwatch();
    sw.Start();
    long allSubElapsed = 0;
    string principalname = string.Empty;
    using (DirectoryEntry directoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(string.Format("LDAP://{0}",userDN)))
    {
        using (DirectorySearcher ds = new DirectorySearcher(directoryEntry))
        {
            ds.SearchScope = SearchScope.Subtree;
            ds.PropertiesToLoad.Clear();
            ds.PropertiesToLoad.Add("directReports");
            ds.PropertiesToLoad.Add("userPrincipalName");
            ds.PageSize = 10;
            ds.ServerPageTimeLimit = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(2);
            SearchResult sr = ds.FindOne();
            if (sr != null)
            {
                principalname = (string)sr.Properties["userPrincipalName"][0];
                foreach (string s in sr.Properties["directReports"])
                {
                    reports.Add(s);
                }
            }
        }
    }
    if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(principalname))
    {
        result.Add(principalname);
    }
    foreach (string s in reports)
    {
        long subElapsed = 0;
        Collection<string> subResult = GetDirectReportsInternal(s, out subElapsed);
        allSubElapsed += subElapsed;
        foreach (string s2 in subResult)
        {
        result.Add(s2);
        }
    }
    sw.Stop();
    elapsedTime = sw.ElapsedMilliseconds + allSubElapsed;
    return result;
}
Essentially, this function takes a distinguished Name as input (CN=Michael Stum, OU=test, DC=sub, DC=domain, DC=com), and with that, the call to ds.FindOne() is slow.
I found that it is a lot faster to search for the userPrincipalName. My Problem: sr.Properties["directReports"] is just a list of strings, and that is the distinguishedName, which seems slow to search for.
I wonder, is there a fast way to convert between distinguishedName and userPrincipalName? Or is there a faster way to search for a user if I only have the distinguishedName to work with?
Edit: Thanks to the answer! Searching the Manager-Field improved the function from 90 Seconds to 4 Seconds. Here is the new and improved code, which is faster and more readable (note that there is most likely a bug in the elapsedTime functionality, but the actual core of the function works):
private static Collection<string> GetDirectReportsInternal(string ldapBase, string userDN, out long elapsedTime)
{
    Collection<string> result = new Collection<string>();
    Stopwatch sw = new Stopwatch();
    sw.Start();
    string principalname = string.Empty;
    using (DirectoryEntry directoryEntry = new DirectoryEntry(ldapBase))
    {
        using (DirectorySearcher ds = new DirectorySearcher(directoryEntry))
        {
            ds.SearchScope = SearchScope.Subtree;
            ds.PropertiesToLoad.Clear();
            ds.PropertiesToLoad.Add("userPrincipalName");
            ds.PropertiesToLoad.Add("distinguishedName");
            ds.PageSize = 10;
            ds.ServerPageTimeLimit = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(2);
            ds.Filter = string.Format("(&(objectCategory=user)(manager={0}))",userDN);
            using (SearchResultCollection src = ds.FindAll())
            {
                Collection<string> tmp = null;
                long subElapsed = 0;
                foreach (SearchResult sr in src)
                {
                    result.Add((string)sr.Properties["userPrincipalName"][0]);
                    tmp = GetDirectReportsInternal(ldapBase, (string)sr.Properties["distinguishedName"][0], out subElapsed);
                    foreach (string s in tmp)
                    {
                    result.Add(s);
                    }
                }
            }
          }
        }
    sw.Stop();
    elapsedTime = sw.ElapsedMilliseconds;
    return result;
}
 
     
    