Changes for page KerberosAndLDAP
Last modified by Sirius Rayner-Karlsson on 2024/05/09 10:54
From version 14.1
edited by Sirius Rayner-Karlsson
on 2024/05/01 17:15
on 2024/05/01 17:15
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To version 35.1
edited by Sirius Rayner-Karlsson
on 2024/05/09 09:59
on 2024/05/09 09:59
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... ... @@ -1,76 +1,281 @@ 1 +{{box cssClass="floatinginfobox" title="**Contents**"}} 2 +{{toc/}} 3 +{{/box}} 4 + 1 1 = Debian = 2 2 3 -The guide I followed was [[https:~~/~~/wiki.debian.org/LDAP/OpenLDAPSetup#Kerberos>>https://wiki.debian.org/LDAP/OpenLDAPSetup#Kerberos]]which while it worked required some minor tweaks. I obtained edit privileges for the Debian Wiki and updated the guide with the fixes that I found. I however have a Synology NAS and that can run an LDAP Server. So this guide differsa littlefrom the upstream Debian Guide.7 +The guide I followed was https://wiki.debian.org/LDAP/OpenLDAPSetup#Kerberos which while it worked required some minor tweaks. I obtained edit privileges for the Debian Wiki and updated the guide with the fixes that I found. I however have a Synology NAS and that can run an LDAP Server. So this guide differs from the upstream Debian Guide. 4 4 9 +Assumption is that you have installed the LDAP Server package on your NAS and gone through initial configuration steps, so it has a domain, there is a DN you can bind as and so forth. It is also assumed you have a Debian system (12.5 or later, though this guide should work with 11.x and likely 10.x as well) that will become your KDC and KAdmin server. 5 5 6 - First,installthe packagescontainingtheLDAP-enabledKerberosservers ([[krb5-kdc-ldap>>url:https://packages.debian.org/krb5-kdc-ldap]]and[[krb5-admin-server>>url:https://packages.debian.org/krb5-admin-server]])and the[[schema2ldif>>url:https://packages.debian.org/schema2ldif]]tool:11 +Recommendation is that you create actual ##.ldif## files rather than use here-documents as used in this guide. It is far easier to make adjustments to things if you have a file to edit rather than having to type it all out again or paste it and then have to try and make edits to it without making mistakes. 7 7 8 - ##{{{$sudo apt installkrb5-kdc-ldapkrb5-admin-serverschema2ldif}}}##13 +**The guide is for illustration. Expectation is that you do not follow it verbatim but adapt it to your needs.** 9 9 10 10 11 - Thenloadthe ##kerberos##schema:16 +=== Install packages === 12 12 13 -##{{{$ zcat /usr/share/doc/krb5-kdc-ldap/kerberos.openldap.ldif.gz | ldapadd -H ldap:~/~/nas.fqdn/ -D uid=root,cn=users,dc=example,dc=com}}}## 18 +(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 19 +The packages you need are [[krb5-kdc-ldap>>url:https://packages.debian.org/krb5-kdc-ldap]], [[krb5-admin-server>>url:https://packages.debian.org/krb5-admin-server]] for the actual KDC and [[schema2ldif>>url:https://packages.debian.org/schema2ldif]] plus [[slapd>>https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=slapd]] for adding the schema and ##slappasswd##. They are to be installed on your designated Debian host. 14 14 15 -##{{{Password:}}}## 21 +(% style="color:#400" %) 22 +##{{{$ sudo apt install krb5-kdc-ldap krb5-admin-server schema2ldif}}}## 16 16 17 -##{{{adding new entry "cn=kerberos,cn=schema,cn=config"}}}## 18 18 19 - ##{{{$}}}##25 +=== Load kerberos LDAP schema === 20 20 27 +Now you need to load the kerberos schema into the LDAP server on the Synology. Use the ##cn=config## DN. 21 21 22 -Having an index on the ##krbPrincipalName## improves performance and also suppresses some log messages if ##slapd## is configured to log more than default for the database(s) where you intend to store Kerberos data. As this is OpenLDAP on the Synology, it does not use mdb format, it uses bdb: 29 +(% style="color:#400" %) 30 +##{{{ 31 +$ zcat /usr/share/doc/krb5-kdc-ldap/kerberos.openldap.ldif.gz | ldapadd -H ldaps://nas.example.com/ -D cn=config -W 32 +Enter LDAP Password: 33 +adding new entry "cn=kerberos,cn=schema,cn=config" 34 +$ 35 +}}}## 23 23 24 -##{{{$ sudo ldapmodify -H ldap://nas.fqhn <<EOF 37 + 38 +=== Create Index on krbPrincipalName === 39 + 40 +Having an index on the ##krbPrincipalName## improves performance. Synology OpenLDAP does not use ##mdb## format, it uses ##bdb##. Debian ##slapd## uses ##mdb## format. It is different database format, but the principle is the same. Again, as you are modifying config, the DN is ##cn=config##. Use the main password you set for the Synology LDAP server. Create a file ##step1.ldif## with the following content: 41 + 42 +(% style="color:#400" %) 43 +##{{{ 25 25 dn: olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config 26 26 add: olcDbIndex 27 27 olcDbIndex: krbPrincipalName eq,pres,sub 28 -EOF 29 -Password: 47 +}}}## 30 30 49 +and apply it with 50 + 51 +(% style="color:#400" %) 52 +##{{{ 53 +$ ldapmodify -H ldaps://nas.example.com/ -D cn=config -W -f step1.ldif 54 +Enter LDAP Password: 31 31 modifying entry "olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config" 32 -$ 56 +$ 33 33 }}}## 34 34 35 35 60 +=== Create principals kadmin and kdc === 36 36 37 -Next, you need to create and configure two entries which will be used by the Kerberos servers to connect to OpenLDAP. If you are running Kerberos and OpenLDAP on the same system, these steps are optional, but recommended. In order to keep things nicely separated, everything will be created under a separate ##organizationalUnit##. Note that a simple bind (##-x -D##) is used instead of an ##EXTERNAL## bind since write access to the dc=example,dc=com DIT is necessary: 62 +Next, you create and configure two entries which will be used by the Kerberos servers to connect to OpenLDAP. Not running the Kerberos KDC and Admin Server on the same host as OpenLDAP, these steps are required. Keeping things confined, everything will be created under a separate ##organizationalUnit##. My guide differs from the official Debian guide here. Due to Synology OpenLDAP having a strict password policy, it was necessary to adjust the DNs of ##kdc## and ##kadmin##. The official guide use placeholder passwords which does not work with the Synology LDAP server. 63 +Generate the passwords upfront with ##slappasswd -h {SSHA}##. Then create a file ##step2.ldif## with the following content: 38 38 39 - 40 -{{{ # ldapadd -x -D cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com -W <<EOF41 -dn: ou= Services,dc=example,dc=com65 +(% style="color:#400" %) 66 +##{{{ 67 +dn: ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com 42 42 objectClass: organizationalUnit 43 43 objectClass: top 44 -ou: Services 45 - 46 -dn: ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com 47 -objectClass: organizationalUnit 48 -objectClass: top 49 49 ou: kerberos 50 50 51 -dn: uid=kdc,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com 52 -uid: kdc 53 -objectClass: account 54 -objectClass: simpleSecurityObject 55 -userPassword: {CRYPT}x 72 +dn: cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com 73 +cn: kdc 74 +sn: kdc 75 +objectClass: person 76 +objectClass: pwdPolicy 77 +pwdAttribute: userPassword 78 +pwdMinLength: 8 79 +pwdCheckQuality: 2 80 +pwdPolicySubentry: cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com 81 +userPassword: {SSHA}<password-hash> 56 56 description: Kerberos KDC Account 57 57 58 -dn: uid=kadmin,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com 59 -uid: kadmin 60 -objectClass: account 61 -objectClass: simpleSecurityObject 62 -userPassword: {CRYPT}x 63 -description: Kerberos Admin Server Account 84 +dn: cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com 85 +cn: kadmin 86 +sn: kadmin 87 +objectClass: person 88 +objectClass: pwdPolicy 89 +pwdAttribute: userPassword 90 +pwdMinLength: 8 91 +pwdCheckQuality: 2 92 +pwdPolicySubentry: cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com 93 +userPassword: {SSHA}<password-hash> 94 +description: Kerberos KDC Account 95 +}}}## 96 + 97 +Apply it with 98 + 99 +(% style="color:#400" %) 100 +##{{{ 101 +$ ldapadd -H ldaps://nas.example.com/ -D uid=root,cn=users,dc=example,dc=com -W -f step2.ldif 102 +Enter LDAP Password: 103 + 104 +adding new entry "ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com" 105 + 106 +adding new entry "cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com" 107 + 108 +adding new entry "cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com" 109 +}}}## 110 + 111 + 112 + 113 +=== Grant kdc and kadmin permissions === 114 + 115 +This switches back to the ##cn=config## DN as you are changing the permissions. 116 + 117 +$ ldapmodify -H ldaps:~/~/ds723.trudheim.com -W -D cn=config <<EOF 118 + 119 +dn: olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config 120 +add: olcAccess 121 +olcAccess: {0}to attrs=krbPrincipalKey 122 + by anonymous auth 123 + by dn.exact="cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com" write 124 + by dn.exact="cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com" write 125 + by self write 126 + by * none 127 +- 128 +add: olcAccess 129 +olcAccess: {1}to dn.subtree="cn=krbContainer,ou=kerberos,dc=example,dc=com" 130 + by dn.exact="cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com" write 131 + by dn.exact="cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com" write 132 + by * none 133 + 64 64 EOF 65 -Enter LDAP Password: SECRET 66 66 67 -adding new entry "ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com" 136 +Enter LDAP Password: 137 +modifying entry "olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config" 68 68 69 - adding new entry "ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com"139 +$ 70 70 71 -adding new entry "uid=kdc,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com" 72 72 73 -a ddingnew entry"uid=kadmin,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com"}}}142 +Note that we now reference our kdc and kadmin accounts and we grant them permission to the krbContainer which will house all our kerberos principals. Give both of them write access, because we do want to have the ability to track last login and lock accounts if there are login failures. We like security. 74 74 75 75 145 +=== Create krb5.conf === 146 + 147 +Over to adjusting /etc/krb5.conf so that it will point to the right thing later. It should look something like this: 148 + 149 + 150 +{{{[libdefaults] 151 + default_realm = EXAMPLE.COM 152 + dns_lookup_realm = false 153 + dns_lookup_kdc = false 154 + ticket_lifetime = 24h 155 + forwardable = true 156 + proxiable = true 157 + rdns = false 158 + 159 +[realms] 160 + EXAMPLE.COM = { 161 + kdc = debian.example.com 162 + admin_server = debian.example.com 163 + default_domain = example.com 164 + } 165 + [domain_realm] 166 + .example.com = EXAMPLE.COM 167 + example.com = EXAMPLE.COM}}} 168 + 169 +Make sure your designated debian server have ports 88, 464 and 749 open, both for TCP and UDP, in its firewall. 88 is for the kdc, 464 and 749 is for kadmin. 170 + 171 + 172 +=== Create kdc.conf === 173 + 174 +Next, we need to write up /etc/krb5kdc/kdc.conf. Something like this should work 175 + 176 + 177 +[libdefaults] 178 + 179 +[realms] 180 + TRUDHEIM.COM = { 181 + database_module = openldap_ldapconf 182 + max_life = 7d 183 + max_renewable_life = 6d 184 + } 185 + 186 +[dbdefaults] 187 + ldap_kerberos_container_dn = cn=krbContainer,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com 188 + 189 +[dbmodules] 190 + openldap_ldapconf = { 191 + db_library = kldap 192 + disable_last_success = false 193 + disable_lockout = false 194 + ldap_conns_per_server = 5 195 + ldap_servers = ldaps:~/~/ds723.trudheim.com 196 + ldap_kdc_dn = "cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com" 197 + ldap_kadmind_dn = "cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com" 198 + ldap_service_password_file = /etc/krb5kdc/service.keyfile 199 + } 200 + 201 + 202 +=== Create kadm5.acl === 203 + 204 +Then you need to create ##/etc/krb5kdc/kadm5.acl and put in it## 205 + 206 +##*/admin@EXAMPLE.COM *## 207 + 208 + 209 +so that administrator principals can run kadmin. Now we are ready to create the domain. And that we do with 210 + 211 + 212 +=== Create the kerberos domain === 213 + 214 +# 215 + 216 +kdb5_ldap_util -D uid=root,cn=users,dc=trudheim,dc=com -H ldaps:~/~/ds723.trudheim.com -r TRUDHEIM.COM create -subtrees dc=trudheim,dc=com -maxtktlife '7 Days' -maxrenewlife '6 Days' -s 217 +Password for "uid=root,cn=users,dc=trudheim,dc=com": 218 +Initializing database for realm 'TRUDHEIM.COM' 219 +You will be prompted for the database Master Password. 220 +It is important that you NOT FORGET this password. 221 +Enter KDC database master key: 222 +Re-enter KDC database master key to verify: 223 + 224 +kdb5_ldap_util -D uid=root,cn=users,dc=trudheim,dc=com -H ldaps:~/~/ds723.trudheim.com stashsrvpw -f /etc/krb5kdc/service.keyfile cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com 225 +Password for "uid=root,cn=users,dc=trudheim,dc=com": 226 +Password for "cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com": 227 +Re-enter password for "cn=kdc,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com": 228 + 229 +kdb5_ldap_util -D uid=root,cn=users,dc=trudheim,dc=com -H ldaps:~/~/ds723.trudheim.com stashsrvpw -f /etc/krb5kdc/service.keyfile cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com 230 +Password for "uid=root,cn=users,dc=trudheim,dc=com": 231 +Password for "cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com": 232 +Re-enter password for "cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,dc=trudheim,dc=com": 233 + 234 + 235 +=== Create the first regular principals === 236 + 237 +Here, you will run kadmin.local to create first a regular user, and then an admin version of that user. 238 + 239 +# kadmin.local 240 + 241 +Authenticating as principal root/admin@TRUDHEIM.COM with password. 242 +kadmin.local: addprinc user 243 + 244 +No policy specified for user@TRUDHEIM.COM; defaulting to no policy 245 +Enter password for principal "user@TRUDHEIM.COM": 246 +Re-enter password for principal "user@TRUDHEIM.COM": 247 +Principal "user@TRUDHEIM.COM" created. 248 + 249 +kadmin.local: addprinc user/admin 250 +No policy specified for user/admin@TRUDHEIM.COM; defaulting to no policy 251 +Enter password for principal "user/admin@TRUDHEIM.COM": 252 +Re-enter password for principal "user/admin@TRUDHEIM.COM": 253 +Principal "user/admin@TRUDHEIM.COM" created. 254 +kadmin.local: q 255 + 256 +# 257 + 258 +Worth to note here is that [[user@EXAMPLE.COM>>mailto:user@EXAMPLE.COM]] and [[user/admin@EXAMPLE.COM>>mailto:user/admin@EXAMPLE.COM]] can have (and should have) different passwords as the admin variant is allowed to do things to the kerberos database. And this is why you want to have the registering of failures to login enabled. Should you have the system exposed to the internet, you can and should expect intrusion attempts. Having Kerberos deployed makes it harder for perpetrators to gain access, but not impossible. 259 + 260 +If you later kerberise your storage and leverage it for NFS4 mounts from your NAS, you can have NFS exposed to the internet as well. Unless someone has a valid kerberos ticket, even if they somehow could mount the share, they see nothing on it without the krbtgt. 261 + 262 + 263 +=== Test your new principal === 264 + 265 +$ kinit [[user@EXAMPLE.COM>>mailto:user@EXAMPLE.COM]] 266 + 267 +Password for user@EXAMPLE.COM: 268 + 269 +$ klist 270 +Ticket cache: FILE:/tmp/krb5cc_1000 271 +Default principal: user@EXAMPLE.COM 272 + 273 +Valid starting Expires Service principal 274 +09/05/24 08:07:35 10/05/24 08:07:35 krbtgt/EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM 275 + 276 +$ 277 + 278 + 279 +=== Set up pam and sssd === 280 + 76 76