* example_config: moving nslcd old guide to NSLCD.md * example_config: creating README for SSSD * example_config: creating sssd.conf * example_config: removing explicit links and adding a reference to the old NSLCD guide * example_config: fixing images in pam README * example_config: add how to enable automatic home directory creation * example_config: fixing typo in command to edit ssh config * example_config: using commments instead of line numbers for the example sssd.conf file --------- Co-authored-by: nitnelave <valentin@tolmer.fr>
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Getting Started with UNIX PAM using SSSD
Configuring LLDAP
Configure LDAPS
You must use LDAPS. You MUST NOT use plain LDAP. Even over a private network this costs you nearly nothing, and passwords will be sent in PLAIN TEXT without it.
[ldaps_options]
enabled=true
port=6360
cert_file="cert.pem"
key_file="key.pem"
You can generate an SSL certificate for it with the following command. The subjectAltName is REQUIRED. Make sure all domains are listed there, even your CN.
openssl req -x509 -nodes -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem -sha256 -days 36500 -nodes -subj "/CN=lldap.example.net" -addext "subjectAltName = DNS:lldap.example.net"
Setting up the custom attributes
You will need to add the following custom attributes to the user schema.
- uidNumber (integer)
- gidNumber (integer, multiple values)
- homeDirectory (string)
- unixShell (string)
- sshPublicKey (string) (only if you’re setting up SSH Public Key Sync)
You will need to add the following custom attributes to the group schema.
- gidNumber (integer)
You will now need to populate these values for all the users you wish to be able to login.
Client setup
Install the client packages
You need to install the packages sssd sssd-tools libnss-sss libpam-sss libsss-sudo .
E.g. on Debian/Ubuntu
sudo apt update; sudo apt install -y sssd sssd-tools libnss-sss libpam-sss libsss-sudo
Configure the client packages
Use your favourite text editor to create/open the file /etc/sssd/sssd.conf .
E.g. Using nano
sudo nano /etc/sssd/sssd.conf
Insert the contents of the provided template (sssd.conf), but you will need to change some of the configuration in the file. Comments have been made to guide you. The config file is an example if your LLDAP server is hosted at lldap.example.com and your domain is example.com with your dc being dc=example,dc=com.
SSSD will refuse to run if it’s config file is world-readable, so apply the following permissions to it:
sudo chmod 600 /etc/sssd/sssd.conf
Restart SSSD to apply any changes:
sudo systemctl restart sssd
Enable automatic creation of home directories
sudo pam-auth-update --enable mkhomedir
Permissions and SSH Key sync
SSH Key Sync
In order to do this, you need to setup the custom attribute sshPublicKey in the user schema. Then, you must uncomment the following line in the SSSD config file (assuming you are using the provided template):
sudo nano /etc/sssd/sssd.conf
ldap_user_ssh_public_key = sshPublicKey
And the following to the bottom of your OpenSSH config file:
sudo nano /etc/ssh/sshd_config
AuthorizedKeysCommand /usr/bin/sss_ssh_authorizedkeys
AuthorizedKeysCommandUser nobody
Now restart both SSH and SSSD:
sudo systemctl restart ssh
sudo systemctl restart sssd
Permissions Sync
Linux often manages permissions to tools such as Sudo and Docker based on group membership. There are two possible ways to achieve this.
Number 1
If all your client systems are setup identically, you can just check the group id of the local group, i.e. Sudo being 27 on most Debian and Ubuntu installs, and set that as the gid in LLDAP. For tools such as docker, you can create a group before install with a custom gid on the system, which must be the same on all, and use that GID on the LLDAP group
Sudo
Docker
sudo groupadd docker -g 722
Number 2
Create a group in LLDAP that you would like all your users who have sudo access to be in, and add the following to the bottom of /etc/sudoers .
E.g. if your group is named lldap_sudo
%lldap_sudo ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL
Debugging
To verify your config file’s validity, you can run the following command
sudo sssctl config-check
To flush SSSD’s cache
sudo sss_cache -E
Final Notes
To see the old guide for NSLCD, go to NSLCD.md.