squid_ldap_auth
NAMESYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
EXAMPLES
NOTES
AUTHOR
KNOWN ISSUES
QUESTIONS
REPORTING BUGS
SEE ALSO
NAME
squid_ldap_auth - Squid LDAP authentication helper
SYNOPSIS
squid_ldap_auth
-b "base DN" [-u attribute] [options]
[ldap_server_name[:port]|URI]...
squid_ldap_auth -b "base DN" -f "LDAP
search filter" [options]
[ldap_server_name[:port]|URI]...
DESCRIPTION
This helper allows Squid to connect to a LDAP directory to validate the user name and password of Basic HTTP authentication. LDAP options are specified as parameters on the command line, while the username(s) and password(s) to be checked against the LDAP directory are specified on subsequent lines of input to the helper, one username/password pair per line separated by a space.
As expected by the basic authentication construct of Squid, after specifying a username and password followed by a new line, this helper will produce either OK or ERR on the following line to show if the specified credentials are correct according to the LDAP directory.
The program has
two major modes of operation. In the default mode of
operation the users DN is constructed using the base DN and
user attribute. In the other mode of operation a search
filter is used to locate valid user DN’s below the
base DN.
-b basedn (REQUIRED)
Specifies the base DN under which the users are located.
-f filter
LDAP search filter to locate the user DN. Required if the users are in a hierarchy below the base DN, or if the login name is not what builds the user specific part of the users DN.
The search filter can contain up to 15 occurrences of %s which will be replaced by the username, as in "uid=%s" for RFC2037 directories. For a detailed description of LDAP search filter syntax see RFC2254.
-u userattr
Specifies the name of the DN attribute that contains the username/login. Combined with the base DN to construct the users DN when no search filter is specified (-f option). Defaults to ’uid’
Note: This can only be done if all your users are located directly under the same position in the LDAP tree and the login name is used for naming each user object. If your LDAP tree does not match these criterias or if you want to filter who are valid users then you need to use a search filter to search for your users DN (-f option).
-U passwordattr
Use ldap_compare instead of ldap_simple_bind to verify the users password. passwordattr is the LDAP attribute storing the users password.
-s base|one|sub
search scope when performing user DN searches specified by the -f option. Defaults to ’sub’.
base object only, one level below the base object or subtree below the base object
-D binddn -w password
The DN and password to bind as while performing searches. Required by the -f flag if the directory does not allow anonymous searches.
As the password needs to be printed in plain text in your Squid configuration it is strongly recommended to use a account with minimal associated privileges. This to limit the damage in case someone could get hold of a copy of your Squid configuration file.
-D binddn -W secretfile
The DN and the name of a file containing the password to bind as while performing searches.
Less insecure version of the former parameter pair with two advantages: The password does not occur in the process listing, and the password is not being compromised if someone gets the squid configuration file without getting the secretfile.
-P |
Use a persistent LDAP connection. Normally the LDAP connection is only open while validating a username to preserve resources at the LDAP server. This option causes the LDAP connection to be kept open, allowing it to be reused for further user validations. Recommended for larger installations. |
||
-O |
Only bind once per LDAP connection. Some LDAP servers do not allow re-binding as another user after a successful ldap_bind. The use of this option always opens a new connection for each login attempt. If combined with the -P option for persistent LDAP connection then the connection used for searching for the user DN is kept persistent but a new connection is opened to verify each users password once the DN is found. |
||
-R |
do not follow referrals |
-a never|always|search|find
when to dereference aliases. Defaults to ’never’
never dereference aliases (default), always dereference aliases, only while searching or only to find the base object
-H ldapuri
Specity the LDAP server to connect to by LDAP URI (requires OpenLDAP libraries). Servers can also be specified last on the command line.
-h ldapserver
Specify the LDAP server to connect to. Servers can also be specified last on the command line.
-p ldapport
Specify an alternate TCP port where the ldap server is listening if other than the default LDAP port 389. Can also be specified within the server specificiation by using servername:port syntax.
-v 2|3 |
LDAP protocol version. Defaults to 2 if not specified. |
||
-Z |
Use TLS encryption |
-Scertpath
Enable LDAP over SSL (requires Netscape LDAP API libraries)
-cconnect_timeout
Specify timeout used when connecting to LDAP servers (requires Netscape LDAP API libraries)
-tsearch_timeout
Specify time limit on LDAP search operations
-d |
Debug mode where each step taken will get reported in detail. Useful for understanding what goes wrong if the results is not what is expected. |
EXAMPLES
For directories using the RFC2307 layout with a single domain, all you need to specify is usually the base DN under where your users are located and the server name:
squid_ldap_auth -b "ou=people,dc=your,dc=domain" ldapserver
If you have sub-domains then you need to use a search filter approach to locate your user DNs as these can no longer be constructed direcly from the base DN and login name alone:
squid_ldap_auth -b "dc=your,dc=domain" -f "uid=%s" ldapserver
And similarily if you only want to allow access to users having a specific attribute
squid_ldap_auth -b "dc=your,dc=domain" -f "(&(uid=%s)(specialattribute=value))" ldapserver
Or if the user attribute of the user DN is "cn" instead of "uid" and you do not want to have to search for the users then you could use something like the following example for Active Directory:
squid_ldap_auth -u cn -b "cn=Users,dc=your,dc=domain" ldapserver
If you want to search for the user DN and your directory does not allow anonymous searches then you must also use the -D and -w flags to specify a user DN and password to log in as to perform the searches, as in the following complex Active Directory example
squid_ldap_auth -P -R -b "dc=your,dc=domain" -D "cn=squid,cn=users,dc=your,dc=domain" -w "secretsquidpassword" -f "(&(userPrincipalName=%s)(objectClass=Person))" activedirectoryserver
NOTES
When constructing search filters it is strongly recommended to test the filter using ldapsearch before you attempt to use squid_ldap_auth. This to verify that the filter matches what you expect.
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Henrik Nordstrom <[email protected]>
squid_ldap_auth is written by Glenn Newton <[email protected]> and Henrik Nordstrom <[email protected]>
KNOWN ISSUES
Will crash if other % values than %s is used in -f, or if more than 15 %s is used.
QUESTIONS
Any questions on usage can be sent to Squid Users <[email protected]>, or to your favorite LDAP list/friend if the question is more related to LDAP than Squid.
REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs or bug-fixes to Squid Bugs <[email protected]> or ideas for new improvements to Squid Developers <[email protected]>
SEE ALSO
ldapsearch(1),
Your favorite LDAP documentation
RFC2254 - The String Representation of LDAP Search
Filters,
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