Nslcd: Difference between revisions

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= Introduction =
= Advantages and disadvantages of nslcd =


The <code>nslcd</code> service enables you to configure your local system to load users and groups from an LDAP directory, such as Active Directory (AD).
''Because people may find that some of the disadvantages are advantages or vice versa in their environment, we won't classify here.''


To enable the <code>nslcd</code> service to load user and group information, you have to set the Unix attributes for users and groups in AD. For details, see [[Maintaining_Unix_Attributes_in_AD_using_ADUC|Maintaining Unix Attributes in AD using ADUC]].
* Fast and easy to configure.


{{Imbox
* Requires central storage of posix data (UID/GID, home directory, shell, etc.) in AD. See [[Administer_Unix_Attributes_in_AD_using_ADUC|Administer Unix Attributes in Active Directory]].
| type = note
| text = Samba does not provide support for the <code>nslcd</code> service, other than what is on this page.
}}


* UIDs/GIDs are the same on every server, because of the central storage inside the directory.


* Doesn't require the machine to be joined to the domain. Only a LDAP and Kerberos (if used) connection is used.


* Requires nslcd, Cyrus SASL GSSAPI and pam_ldap installed on your system.


* Resolving of nested groups is supported in nslcd 0.9.0 and later (<tt>nss_nested_groups yes</tt>).


= Configuring the nslcd Service =


== Authenticating nslcd to AD Using a User Name and Password ==


To enable the <code>nslcd</code> service to authenticate to Active Directory (AD) using a user name and password:


* Create a new user in AD. For example: <code>nslcd-ad</code>
: Set the following options in the account's settings:
:* Password never expires
:* User cannot change password


* Add the following parameter to the <code>[global]</code> section of your <code>smb.conf</code> file:
= Installation =


acl:search = no
Most distributions ship nss-pam-ldapd, which contains nslcd, in their default installation. If you intend to use Kerberos, you are additionally required to install Cyrus SASL with GSSAPI support. Depending on the version of nlscd you use, not all required Kerberos features may be supported. See the manpage of nslcd.conf for the supported options.


* Restart Samba.
If you want to authenticate local *nix services on your server against AD, you additionally require <tt>pam_ldap</tt>.


* Edit the <code>/etc/nslcd.conf</code> file and set the following settings:
= Configuring nslcd =


# Local user account and group, nslcd uses.
== Method 1: Connecting to AD via Bind DN and password ==

The following basic example of an <tt>nslcd.conf</tt> let the daemon retrieve it's information by binding via an AD account. Connections with this setup are encrypted and use LDAP over SSL.

* Create a new user account in your AD, nslcd will use to bind via LDAP and retrieve it's information. Make sure, that you configure this account with the „Password never expires“ option! It's recommented also to set „User cannot change password“. Remember the DN (distinguished name) of the new account. The following example uses the DN „cn=ldap-connect,cn=Users,dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com“.

* Currently not all required posix information could be retrieved via LDAP ([https://bugzilla.samba.org/show_bug.cgi?id=9788 Bug report #9788]), because of incorrect directory ACLs. As a workaround, simply add the following to your <tt>smb.conf</tt> on the DC, nslcd is connecting to and restart Samba:

[global]
...
acl:search = no

* Use the following content in your <tt>/etc/nslcd.conf</tt>:

# User/group with which the daemon should run (must be a local account!)
uid nslcd
uid nslcd
gid ldap
gid ldap
# LDAP/AD server settings
# Active Directory server settings (SSL encryption)
uri ldap://127.0.0.1:389
uri ldaps://127.0.0.1:636/
base dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
# SSL Settings
ssl on
ssl on
tls_reqcert allow
tls_reqcert allow
base dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
pagesize 1000
referrals off
nss_nested_groups yes
# LDAP bind account (AD account created in earlier)
# Some settings for AD
binddn cn=nslcd-ad,cn=Users,dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
pagesize 1000
bindpw ...
referrals off
# Filters
# Filters (only required if your accounts doesn't have objectClass=posixAccount
# and your groups haven't objectClass=posixGroup. This objectClasses won't be added
# by ADUC. So they won't be there automatically!)
filter passwd (objectClass=user)
filter passwd (objectClass=user)
filter group (objectClass=group)
filter group (objectClass=group)
# Attribute mappings
# Attribut mappings (depending on your nslcd version, some might not be
# necessary or can cause errors and can/must be removed)
map passwd uid sAMAccountName
map passwd uid sAMAccountName
map passwd homeDirectory unixHomeDirectory
map passwd homeDirectory unixHomeDirectory
map passwd gecos displayName
map passwd gecos displayName
map passwd gidNumber primaryGroupID
map passwd gidNumber primaryGroupID
map group uniqueMember member
: For details about the parameter, see the <code>nslcd.conf (5)</code> man page.
# LDAP bind (Account in AD that is used from nslcd to bind to the directory)
binddn cn=ldap-connect,cn=Users,dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
bindpw xxxxx


* Append <tt>ldap</tt> to the <tt>passwd</tt> and <tt>group</tt> entry of your <tt>/etc/nsswitch.conf</tt>, to let the system query LDAP for these databases.
* To enable LDAP databases for the name service switch (NSS), add the <code>ldap</code> option to the following lines in the <code>/etc/nsswitch.conf</code> file:


passwd: files ldap
passwd: files ldap
group: files ldap
group: files ldap


* Start the nslcd daemon.
* Start the <code>nslcd</code> service.


* All domain accounts/groups are now available to the local system.




== Authenticating nslcd to AD Using Kerberos ==


To enable the <code>nslcd</code> service to authenticate to Active Directory (AD) using Kerberos:
== Method 2: Connecting to AD via Kerberos ==


* Create a new user in AD. For example: <code>nslcd-ad</code>
The following basic example of an nslcd.conf let nslcd retrieve it's information by using Kerberos. The connection will be <u>encrypted</u>.
: Set the following options in the account's settings:
:* Password never expires
:* User cannot change password, note: this can only be set from Windows


* Extract the Kerberos keytab for the <code>nslcd-ad</code> account to the <code>/etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab</code> file, run:
* Create a new user account in your AD. Make sure, that you configure this account with the „Password never expires“ option! It's recommented also to set „User cannot change password“. If the machine is joined to the domain, you can skip this step and use the machine account instead, if you want. The following example uses the domain account „ldap-connect“.


# samba-tool domain exportkeytab /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab --principal=nslcd-ad
* Add a [http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms677949%28v=vs.85%29.aspx SPN (service principal name)] to the account you've created. On your Samba host this can be done by the following command (replace „dc1.samdom.example.com“ with the name of the host you'll run nslcd on):

# samba-tool spn add nslcd/dc1.samdom.example.com ldap-connect

* Extract the keytab for this account and make sure, it is readable only for the user nslcd runs under:

# samba-tool domain exportkeytab /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab --principal=ldap-connect
# chown nslcd:root /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab
# chown nslcd:root /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab
# chmod 600 /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab
# chmod 600 /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab


* Make sure that the Kerberos ticket is automatically renewed before it expires. For example, to auto-renew Kerberos tickets using the <code>k5start</code> utility:
* As Kerberos tickets have to be renewed before they expire, you have to take care of this job. <tt>k5start</tt> is a usefull tool for that. The following command starts k5start in background mode. The above created keytab is used and the owner of the the cache file will be the local account, nslcd uses to run (parameter „uid“ in <tt>nslcd.conf</tt>):


# k5start -f /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab -U -o nslcd -K 360 -b -k /tmp/nslcd.tkt
# k5start -f /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab -U -o nslcd -K 360 -b -k /tmp/nslcd.tkt


: For details about the parameters, see the <code>k5start (5)</code> man page. Make sure that the utility used for renewal is automatically started at boot time.
:Remember to start k5start on system startup. Otherwise the ticket won't be renewed after reboot!


* Use the following content in your <tt>/etc/nslcd.conf</tt>:
* Add the following parameter to the <code>[global]</code> section of your <code>smb.conf</code> file:


acl:search = no
# User/group with which the daemon should run (must be a local account!)

* Restart Samba.

* Edit the <code>/etc/nslcd.conf</code> file and set the following settings:

# Local user account and group, nslcd uses.
uid nslcd
uid nslcd
gid ldap
gid nslcd
# LDAP/AD server settings
# Active Directory server settings
uri ldap://127.0.0.1:389
uri ldap://dc1.samdom.example.com/
base dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
base dc=samdom,dc=example,dc=com
pagesize 1000
referrals off
# SSL Settings
nss_nested_groups yes
ssl on
tls_reqcert allow
# Some settings for AD
# Kerberos authentication to AD
sasl_mech GSSAPI
pagesize 1000
sasl_realm SAMDOM.EXAMPLE.COM
referrals off
krb5_ccname /tmp/nslcd.tkt
# Filters
# Filters (only required if your accounts doesn't have objectClass=posixAccount
# and your groups haven't objectClass=posixGroup. This objectClasses won't be added
# by ADUC. So they won't be there automatically!)
filter passwd (objectClass=user)
filter passwd (objectClass=user)
filter group (objectClass=group)
filter group (objectClass=group)
# Attribut mappings (depending on your nslcd version, some might not be
# Attribut mappings
# necessary or can cause errors and can/must be removed)
map passwd uid sAMAccountName
map passwd uid sAMAccountName
map passwd homeDirectory unixHomeDirectory
map passwd homeDirectory unixHomeDirectory
map passwd gecos displayName
map passwd gecos displayName
# Uncomment the following line to use Domain Users as the users primary group
map passwd gidNumber primaryGroupID
map group uniqueMember member
#map passwd gidNumber primaryGroupID
: For details about the parameter, see the <code>nslcd.conf (5)</code> man page.
# Kerberos
sasl_mech GSSAPI
sasl_realm SAMDOM.EXAMPLE.COM
krb5_ccname /tmp/nslcd.tkt


* Append <tt>ldap</tt> to the <tt>passwd</tt> and <tt>group</tt> entry of your <tt>/etc/nsswitch.conf</tt>, to let the system query LDAP for these databases.
* To enable LDAP databases for the name service switch (NSS), add the <code>ldap</code> option to the following lines in the <code>/etc/nsswitch.conf</code> file:


passwd: files ldap
passwd: files ldap
group: files ldap
group: files ldap


* Start the nslcd daemon.


* All domain accounts/groups are now available to the local system.


Edit the /etc/default/nslcd file and set the following settings:


# Defaults for nslcd init script
# Whether to start k5start (for obtaining and keeping a Kerberos ticket)
# By default k5start is started if nslcd.conf has sasl_mech set to GSSAPI
# and krb5_ccname is set to a file-type ticket cache.
# Set to "yes" to force starting k5start, any other value will not start
# k5start.
#K5START_START="yes"
# Options for k5start.
#K5START_BIN=/usr/bin/k5start
K5START_KEYTAB=/etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab
#K5START_CCREFRESH=60
K5START_PRINCIPAL="nslcd-ad"


* Start the <code>nslcd</code> service.
== Testing ==


* Test 1: Retrieving accounts via <tt>getent</tt>. This should show local and domain accounts with posix attributes. Please check that all fields contain the values set in AD (UID, primaryGroup, homeDirectory, shell).


# getent passwd
...
Administrator:*:10000:10513:Administrator:/home/Administrator:/bin/bash
demo1:*:10008:10513:demo1:/home/demo1:/bin/bash


* Test 2: Retrieving groups via <tt>getent</tt>. This should show local and domain groups with posix attributes. Please check that the output contains all fields set in AD (GID, members).


# getent group
...
Domain Users:*:10513:
demo-group:*:10015:demo1


= Testing the User and Group Retrieval =
* Test 3: Change owner/group of of a file to a domain user/group:
# touch /tmp/testfile
# chown Administrator:"Domain Users" /tmp/testfile
# ls -l /tmp/testfile
-rw-r--r-- 1 Administrator Domain Users 0 26. Aug 22:35 /tmp/testfile


To list users and groups having Unix attributes in Active Directory (AD) set:


* To list a users account, enter:


# getent passwd demo
demo:*:10001:10001:demo1:/home/demo:/bin/bash


* To list a group, enter:


# getent group demo-group
= Configuring PAM (pam_ldap) =
demo-group:*:10001:demo1


== Method 1: Connecting to AD via Bind DN and password ==


To authenticate local services (SSH, FTP, etc.) which uses PAM, you can setup <tt>pam_ldap</tt> to authenticate against AD via LDAP.


* Edit <tt>/etc/pam_ldap.conf</tt>:


base dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
binddn cn=ldap-connect,cn=Users,dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
bindpw xxxxx
bind_policy soft
pam_login_attribute sAMAccountName
uri ldap://127.0.0.1:389:389/
ssl no


* If your distribution is shipped with a tool for doing changes on PAM configurations, you should use them, instead of editing manually. E. g. SLES provides <tt>pam-config</tt> and Debian <tt>pam-auth-update</tt> for that.


* Edit your PAM configuration file(s) corresponding to the services you want to hook up. The following is an example for a PAM configuration, that can be used e. g. for ssh (<tt>/etc/pam.d/sshd</tt>). But be carefull: Change take effect immediately!


= Troubleshooting =
#%PAM-1.0M-1.0

auth required pam_nologin.so
If the <code>getent</code> command fails to load users and groups from Active Directory (AD):
auth sufficient pam_ldap.so

auth required pam_unix.so use_first_pass # set_secrpc
* Stop the <code>nslcd</code> service.
account required pam_unix.so
password required pam_pwcheck.so
password required pam_ldap.so use_authtok
password required pam_unix.so use_first_pass use_authtok
session required pam_unix.so
session required pam_limits.so
session required pam_env.so


* Start the <code>nslcd</code> service in debug mode:


# nslcd -d


: The service will start in the foreground and the output is displayed on the screen.
== Testing ==


* On a second terminal, run the failed <code>getent</code> command again and watch the <code>nslcd</code> debug output.
* Test 1: Try accessing a service or log into a service, you have configured to use pam_ldap. Example for ssh:
# ssh demo1@DC1
demo1@dc1's password:
Last login: Mon Aug 26 22:59:40 2013 from pc01.samdom.example.com
[demo1@DC1 ~]$

Revision as of 08:23, 22 August 2019

Introduction

The nslcd service enables you to configure your local system to load users and groups from an LDAP directory, such as Active Directory (AD).

To enable the nslcd service to load user and group information, you have to set the Unix attributes for users and groups in AD. For details, see Maintaining Unix Attributes in AD using ADUC.



Configuring the nslcd Service

Authenticating nslcd to AD Using a User Name and Password

To enable the nslcd service to authenticate to Active Directory (AD) using a user name and password:

  • Create a new user in AD. For example: nslcd-ad
Set the following options in the account's settings:
  • Password never expires
  • User cannot change password
  • Add the following parameter to the [global] section of your smb.conf file:
acl:search = no
  • Restart Samba.
  • Edit the /etc/nslcd.conf file and set the following settings:
# Local user account and group, nslcd uses.
uid nslcd
gid ldap

# Active Directory server settings (SSL encryption)
uri             ldaps://127.0.0.1:636/
ssl             on
tls_reqcert     allow
base            dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
pagesize        1000
referrals       off
nss_nested_groups yes

# LDAP bind account (AD account created in earlier)
binddn cn=nslcd-ad,cn=Users,dc=SAMDOM,dc=example,dc=com
bindpw ...

# Filters
filter  passwd  (objectClass=user)
filter  group   (objectClass=group)

# Attribute mappings
map     passwd  uid                sAMAccountName
map     passwd  homeDirectory      unixHomeDirectory
map     passwd  gecos              displayName
map     passwd  gidNumber          primaryGroupID

For details about the parameter, see the nslcd.conf (5) man page.
  • To enable LDAP databases for the name service switch (NSS), add the ldap option to the following lines in the /etc/nsswitch.conf file:
passwd:     files ldap
group:      files ldap
  • Start the nslcd service.


Authenticating nslcd to AD Using Kerberos

To enable the nslcd service to authenticate to Active Directory (AD) using Kerberos:

  • Create a new user in AD. For example: nslcd-ad
Set the following options in the account's settings:
  • Password never expires
  • User cannot change password, note: this can only be set from Windows
  • Extract the Kerberos keytab for the nslcd-ad account to the /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab file, run:
# samba-tool domain exportkeytab /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab --principal=nslcd-ad
# chown nslcd:root /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab 
# chmod 600 /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab
  • Make sure that the Kerberos ticket is automatically renewed before it expires. For example, to auto-renew Kerberos tickets using the k5start utility:
# k5start -f /etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab -U -o nslcd -K 360 -b -k /tmp/nslcd.tkt
For details about the parameters, see the k5start (5) man page. Make sure that the utility used for renewal is automatically started at boot time.
  • Add the following parameter to the [global] section of your smb.conf file:
acl:search = no
  • Restart Samba.
  • Edit the /etc/nslcd.conf file and set the following settings:
# Local user account and group, nslcd uses.
uid nslcd
gid nslcd

# Active Directory server settings
uri             ldap://dc1.samdom.example.com/
base            dc=samdom,dc=example,dc=com
pagesize        1000
referrals       off
nss_nested_groups yes

# Kerberos authentication to AD
sasl_mech       GSSAPI
sasl_realm      SAMDOM.EXAMPLE.COM
krb5_ccname     /tmp/nslcd.tkt

# Filters
filter  passwd  (objectClass=user)
filter  group   (objectClass=group)

# Attribut mappings
map     passwd  uid                sAMAccountName
map     passwd  homeDirectory      unixHomeDirectory
map     passwd  gecos              displayName
# Uncomment the following line to use Domain Users as the users primary group
#map     passwd  gidNumber          primaryGroupID

For details about the parameter, see the nslcd.conf (5) man page.
  • To enable LDAP databases for the name service switch (NSS), add the ldap option to the following lines in the /etc/nsswitch.conf file:
passwd:     files ldap
group:      files ldap


Edit the /etc/default/nslcd file and set the following settings:

# Defaults for nslcd init script

# Whether to start k5start (for obtaining and keeping a Kerberos ticket)
# By default k5start is started if nslcd.conf has sasl_mech set to GSSAPI
# and krb5_ccname is set to a file-type ticket cache.
# Set to "yes" to force starting k5start, any other value will not start
# k5start.
#K5START_START="yes"

# Options for k5start.
#K5START_BIN=/usr/bin/k5start
K5START_KEYTAB=/etc/krb5.nslcd.keytab
#K5START_CCREFRESH=60
K5START_PRINCIPAL="nslcd-ad"
  • Start the nslcd service.



Testing the User and Group Retrieval

To list users and groups having Unix attributes in Active Directory (AD) set:

  • To list a users account, enter:
# getent passwd demo
demo:*:10001:10001:demo1:/home/demo:/bin/bash
  • To list a group, enter:
# getent group demo-group
demo-group:*:10001:demo1




Troubleshooting

If the getent command fails to load users and groups from Active Directory (AD):

  • Stop the nslcd service.
  • Start the nslcd service in debug mode:
# nslcd -d
The service will start in the foreground and the output is displayed on the screen.
  • On a second terminal, run the failed getent command again and watch the nslcd debug output.