Changes for page KerberosAndLDAP
Last modified by Sirius Rayner-Karlsson on 2024/05/09 10:54
From version 24.1
edited by Sirius Rayner-Karlsson
on 2024/05/06 02:55
on 2024/05/06 02:55
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To version 6.1
edited by Sirius Rayner-Karlsson
on 2024/05/01 17:00
on 2024/05/01 17:00
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... ... @@ -1,105 +3,75 @@ 1 -{{toc/}} 2 - 3 3 = Debian = 4 4 5 -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 a little from the upstream Debian Guide. 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 differs a little from the upstream Debian Guide. 6 6 7 - I will assumethatyou haveinstalledtheLDAP Serverpackage onyour NAS and gonethroughinitial configurationsteps,so it has adomain,thereis a DN you can bind asandso forth. TheSynology NAS can be leveragedformultitudeof things,andrunningDNS, DHCP, WebServicesandContainers arebutfew.I willalsossumeyou have aDebiansystem(12.5 orlater, thoughthisuidehouldwork with 11.xand likely 10.x aswell) that will become your KDCandKAdminserver.5 +First, install the packages containing the LDAP-enabled Kerberos servers ([[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: 8 8 9 - Ialsorecommendthat youcreateactual~#~#.ldif~#~#filesrather than use here-documents as usedin this guide. It is fareasierto make adjustments to thingsif you havea file to editrather than having to typeit all out again orpaste it and then have to try andmake edits to it without making mistakes. The guide is for illustration andexpectation is that you do notfollowit verbatim but adapt it to your needs.7 +{{{ $ sudo apt install krb5-kdc-ldap krb5-admin-server schema2ldif }}} 10 10 11 11 12 - ===== Install thepackages containingtheLDAP-enabled Kerberos servers:=====10 +Then load the ##kerberos## schema: 13 13 14 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %) 15 -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]] and [[schema2ldif>>url:https://packages.debian.org/schema2ldif]] . 12 +{{{$ 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 16 16 17 -(% style="color:#400" %) 18 -##{{{$ sudo apt install krb5-kdc-ldap krb5-admin-server schema2ldif}}}## 14 +adding new entry "cn=kerberos,cn=schema,cn=config" 19 19 16 +}}} 20 20 21 -===== Load the ##kerberos## schema into the LDAP server on your Synology: ===== 22 22 23 -(% style="color:#400" %) 24 -##{{{$ zcat /usr/share/doc/krb5-kdc-ldap/kerberos.openldap.ldif.gz | ldapadd -H ldap://nas.example.com/ -D uid=root,cn=users,dc=example,dc=com -W}}}## 25 -##{{{Enter LDAP Password:}}}## 26 -##{{{adding new entry "cn=kerberos,cn=schema,cn=config"}}}## 27 -##{{{$}}}## 19 +And add an index on the ##krbPrincipalName## (improves performance and also suppresses some log messages if ##slapd## is configured to log more than default) for the database(s) where you intend to store Kerberos data: 28 28 21 +{{{# ldapmodify -H ldap:~/~/nas.fqhn <<EOF 29 29 30 - ===== Create Index onkrbPrincipalName:=====23 +dn: olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config 31 31 32 - Having an index on the ##krbPrincipalName## improves performance andalsosuppresses somelog messages if ##slapd## isconfigured to log more than default for the database(s) where you intend to store Kerberos data. As this is OpenLDAP on the Synology, it does not use ~#~###mdb~#~### format, it uses ##~#~#bdb~#~###.If you install ~#~#slapd~#~# on Debian, it uses ~#~#mdb~#~# format.25 +add: olcDbIndex 33 33 34 -(% style="color:#400" %) 35 -##{{{$ ldapmodify -H ldap://nas.example.com/ -D uid=root,cn=users,dc=example,dc=com -W <<EOF}}}## 36 -##{{{dn: olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config}}}## 37 -##{{{add: olcDbIndex}}}## 38 -##{{{olcDbIndex: krbPrincipalName eq,pres,sub}}}## 39 -##{{{EOF}}}## 40 -##{{{Enter LDAP Password:}}}## 41 -##{{{modifying entry "olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config"}}}## 42 -##{{{$}}}## 27 +olcDbIndex: krbPrincipalName eq,pres,sub 43 43 29 +EOF 44 44 45 - =====Createthe twoprincipals ~#~#kadmin~#~#and~#~#kdc~#~#:=====31 +modifying entry "olcDatabase={1}bdb,cn=config" 46 46 47 - Next, you need to create and configure two entries which will be used by the Kerberos servers to connect to OpenLDAP. As you will not run the Kerberos KDC and Admin Server on the same host as OpenLDAP, these steps are required. In order to keep things nicely separated, everything will be created under a separate ##organizationalUnit##.33 +}}} 48 48 49 -(% style="color:#400" %) 50 -##{{{$ ldapadd -H ldap://nas.fqdn/ -D uid=root,cn=users,dc=example,dc=com -W <<EOF}}}## 51 -##{{{dn: ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com}}}## 52 -##{{{objectClass: organizationalUnit}}}## 53 -##{{{objectClass: top}}}## 54 -##{{{ou: Services}}}## 55 -## ## 56 -##{{{dn: ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com}}}## 57 -##{{{objectClass: organizationalUnit}}}## 58 -##{{{objectClass: top}}}## 59 -##{{{ou: kerberos}}}## 60 -## ## 61 -##{{{dn: uid=kdc,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com}}}## 62 -##{{{uid: kdc}}}## 63 -##{{{objectClass: account}}}## 64 -##{{{objectClass: simpleSecurityObject}}}## 65 -##{{{userPassword: {CRYPT}x}}}## 66 -##{{{description: Kerberos KDC Account}}}## 67 -## ## 68 -##{{{dn: uid=kadmin,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com}}}## 69 -##{{{uid: kadmin}}}## 70 -##{{{objectClass: account}}}## 71 -##{{{objectClass: simpleSecurityObject}}}## 72 -##{{{userPassword: {CRYPT}x}}}## 73 -##{{{description: Kerberos Admin Server Account}}}## 74 -##{{{EOF}}}## 75 -##{{{Enter LDAP Password:}}}## 76 -## ## 77 -##{{{adding new entry "ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com"}}}## 78 -## ## 79 -##{{{adding new entry "ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com"}}}## 80 -## ## 81 -##{{{adding new entry "uid=kdc,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com"}}}## 82 -## ## 83 -##{{{adding new entry "uid=kadmin,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com"}}}## 84 84 36 +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: 85 85 86 -Now, it was at this point that I had a problem, because the LDAP server on the Synology did not like adding users with placeholder passwords, because Synology puts in place password policies. I ended up working around it using a different construct: 87 87 88 -(% style="color:#400" %) 89 -##{{{dn: cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com}}}## 90 -##{{{sn: kadmin}}}## 91 -##{{{cn: kadmin}}}## 92 -##{{{objectClass: person}}}## 93 -##{{{objectClass: pwdPolicy}}}## 94 -##{{{pwdAttribute: userPassword}}}## 95 -##{{{pwdMinLength: 8}}}## 96 -##{{{pwdCheckQuality: 2}}}## 97 -##{{{pwdPolicySubentry: cn=kadmin,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com}}}## 98 -##{{{userPassword: {SSHA}<hashed password>}}}## 99 -##{{{description: Kerberos Admin Server Account}}}## 39 +{{{# ldapadd -x -D cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com -W <<EOF 40 +dn: ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com 41 +objectClass: organizationalUnit 42 +objectClass: top 43 +ou: Services 100 100 101 -and that seems to have worked out fine as my KDC is fully functioning. 45 +dn: ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com 46 +objectClass: organizationalUnit 47 +objectClass: top 48 +ou: kerberos 102 102 103 -It required modifying the rest of the guide with the fact that it no longer was ##uid=kadmin## and ##uid=kdc##, but rather ##cn=kadmin## and ##cn=kdc##. The most important thing is that it works. As an aside, I am not sure it is required to have two nested Organisation Units, ##Services## and ##kerberos## - so I will likely re-deploy and get rid of the ##Services## Organisational Unit altogether. It shortens the DN's used for binds to LDAP and limits the risk for typos. I also find it highly unlikely that deploying this in a real organisation that there would be an existing Organisational Unit called '##kerberos##' while the risk for there being an existing department called '##Services##' is much more likely. 50 +dn: uid=kdc,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com 51 +uid: kdc 52 +objectClass: account 53 +objectClass: simpleSecurityObject 54 +userPassword: {CRYPT}x 55 +description: Kerberos KDC Account 104 104 105 -A note on the above workaround. In order to add a password policy on ##kadmin## and ##kdc## in LDAP, they have to have an attribute that is "physical". And when adding that object class the entries could no longer be a ##uid##. Hence the ##sn## and ##cn## parts. I spent a fair time looking things up as whenever I thought I made progress, something else turned out to be a blocker. When you create the ##{SSHA}## password hash, use ##slappasswd## from the ##slapd## package. 57 +dn: uid=kadmin,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com 58 +uid: kadmin 59 +objectClass: account 60 +objectClass: simpleSecurityObject 61 +userPassword: {CRYPT}x 62 +description: Kerberos Admin Server Account 63 +EOF 64 +Enter LDAP Password: SECRET 65 + 66 +adding new entry "ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com" 67 + 68 +adding new entry "ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com" 69 + 70 +adding new entry "uid=kdc,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com" 71 + 72 +adding new entry "uid=kadmin,ou=kerberos,ou=Services,dc=example,dc=com"}}} 73 + 74 + 75 +