SSSD\-IPA

Section: File Formats and Conventions (5)
Updated: 06/22/2012
Index Return to Main Contents
 

NAME

sssd-ipa - the configuration file for SSSD  

DESCRIPTION

This manual page describes the configuration of the IPA provider for sssd(8). For a detailed syntax reference, refer to the lqFILE FORMATrq section of the sssd.conf(5) manual page.

The IPA provider is a back end used to connect to an IPA server. (Refer to the freeipa.org web site for information about IPA servers.) This provider requires that the machine be joined to the IPA domain; configuration is almost entirely self-discovered and obtained directly from the server.

The IPA provider accepts the same options used by the sssd-ldap(5) identity provider and the sssd-krb5(5) authentication provider with some exceptions described below.

However, it is neither necessary nor recommended to set these options. IPA provider can also be used as an access and chpass provider. As an access provider it uses HBAC (host-based access control) rules. Please refer to freeipa.org for more information about HBAC. No configuration of access provider is required on the client side.  

CONFIGURATION OPTIONS

Refer to the section lqDOMAIN SECTIONSrq of the sssd.conf(5) manual page for details on the configuration of an SSSD domain.

ipa_domain (string)

Specifies the name of the IPA domain. This is optional. If not provided, the configuration domain name is used.

ipa_server (string)

The comma-separated list of IP addresses or hostnames of the IPA servers to which SSSD should connect in the order of preference. For more information on failover and server redundancy, see the lqFAILOVERrq section. This is optional if autodiscovery is enabled. For more information on service discovery, refer to the the lqSERVICE DISCOVERYrq section.

ipa_hostname (string)

Optional. May be set on machines where the hostname(5) does not reflect the fully qualified name used in the IPA domain to identify this host.

ipa_dyndns_update (boolean)

Optional. This option tells SSSD to automatically update the DNS server built into FreeIPA v2 with the IP address of this client.

NOTE: On older systems (such as RHEL 5), for this behavior to work reliably, the default Kerberos realm must be set properly in /etc/krb5.conf

Default: false

ipa_dyndns_iface (string)

Optional. Applicable only when ipa_dyndns_update is true. Choose the interface whose IP address should be used for dynamic DNS updates.

Default: Use the IP address of the IPA LDAP connection

ipa_hbac_search_base (string)

Optional. Use the given string as search base for HBAC related objects.

Default: Use base DN

ipa_host_search_base (string)

Optional. Use the given string as search base for host objects.

See lqldap_search_baserq for information about configuring multiple search bases.

If filter is given in any of search bases and ipa_hbac_support_srchost is set to False, the filter will be ignored.

Default: the value of ldap_search_base

ipa_selinux_search_base (string)

Optional. Use the given string as search base for SELinux user maps.

See lqldap_search_baserq for information about configuring multiple search bases.

Default: the value of ldap_search_base

krb5_validate (boolean)

Verify with the help of krb5_keytab that the TGT obtained has not been spoofed.

Default: true

Note that this default differs from the traditional Kerberos provider back end.

krb5_realm (string)

The name of the Kerberos realm. This is optional and defaults to the value of lqipa_domainrq.

The name of the Kerberos realm has a special meaning in IPA - it is converted into the base DN to use for performing LDAP operations.

krb5_canonicalize (boolean)

Specifies if the host and user principal should be canonicalized when connecting to IPA LDAP and also for AS requests. This feature is available with MIT Kerberos >= 1.7

Default: true

ipa_hbac_refresh (integer)

The amount of time between lookups of the HBAC rules against the IPA server. This will reduce the latency and load on the IPA server if there are many access-control requests made in a short period.

Default: 5 (seconds)

ipa_hbac_treat_deny_as (string)

This option specifies how to treat the deprecated DENY-type HBAC rules. As of FreeIPA v2.1, DENY rules are no longer supported on the server. All users of FreeIPA will need to migrate their rules to use only the ALLOW rules. The client will support two modes of operation during this transition period:

DENY_ALL: If any HBAC DENY rules are detected, all users will be denied access.

IGNORE: SSSD will ignore any DENY rules. Be very careful with this option, as it may result in opening unintended access.

Default: DENY_ALL

ipa_hbac_support_srchost (boolean)

If this is set to false, then srchost as given to SSSD by PAM will be ignored.

Note that if set to False, this option casuses filters given in ipa_host_search_base to be ignored;

Default: false

ipa_automount_location (string)

The automounter location this IPA client will be using

Default: The location named "default"

ipa_netgroup_member_of (string)

The LDAP attribute that lists netgroup's memberships.

Default: memberOf

ipa_netgroup_member_user (string)

The LDAP attribute that lists system users and groups that are direct members of the netgroup.

Default: memberUser

ipa_netgroup_member_host (string)

The LDAP attribute that lists hosts and host groups that are direct members of the netgroup.

Default: memberHost

ipa_netgroup_member_ext_host (string)

The LDAP attribute that lists FQDNs of hosts and host groups that are members of the netgroup.

Default: externalHost

ipa_netgroup_domain (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains NIS domain name of the netgroup.

Default: nisDomainName

ipa_host_object_class (string)

The object class of a host entry in LDAP.

Default: ipaHost

ipa_host_fqdn (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains FQDN of the host.

Default: fqdn

ipa_selinux_usermap_object_class (string)

The object class of a host entry in LDAP.

Default: ipaHost

ipa_selinux_usermap_name (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains the name of SELinux usermap.

Default: cn

ipa_selinux_usermap_member_user (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains all users / groups this rule match against.

Default: memberUser

ipa_selinux_usermap_member_host (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains all hosts / hostgroups this rule match against.

Default: memberHost

ipa_selinux_usermap_see_also (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains DN of HBAC rule which can be used for matching instead of memberUser and memberHost

Default: seeAlso

ipa_selinux_usermap_selinux_user (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains SELinux user string itself.

Default: ipaSELinuxUser

ipa_selinux_usermap_enabled (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains whether or not is user map enabled for usage.

Default: ipaEnabledFlag

ipa_selinux_usermap_user_category (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains user category such as 'all'.

Default: userCategory

ipa_selinux_usermap_host_category (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains host category such as 'all'.

Default: hostCategory

ipa_selinux_usermap_uuid (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains unique ID of the user map.

Default: ipaUniqueID

ipa_host_ssh_public_key (string)

The LDAP attribute that contains the host's SSH public keys.

Default: ipaSshPubKey

 

FAILOVER

The failover feature allows back ends to automatically switch to a different server if the primary server fails.  

Failover Syntax

The list of servers is given as a comma-separated list; any number of spaces is allowed around the comma. The servers are listed in order of preference. The list can contain any number of servers.  

The Failover Mechanism

The failover mechanism distinguishes between a machine and a service. The back end first tries to resolve the hostname of a given machine; if this resolution attempt fails, the machine is considered offline. No further attempts are made to connect to this machine for any other service. If the resolution attempt succeeds, the back end tries to connect to a service on this machine. If the service connection attempt fails, then only this particular service is considered offline and the back end automatically switches over to the next service. The machine is still considered online and might still be tried for another service.

Further connection attempts are made to machines or services marked as offline after a specified period of time; this is currently hard coded to 30 seconds.

If there are no more machines to try, the back end as a whole switches to offline mode, and then attempts to reconnect every 30 seconds.  

SERVICE DISCOVERY

The service discovery feature allows back ends to automatically find the appropriate servers to connect to using a special DNS query.  

Configuration

If no servers are specified, the back end automatically uses service discovery to try to find a server. Optionally, the user may choose to use both fixed server addresses and service discovery by inserting a special keyword, lq_srv_rq, in the list of servers. The order of preference is maintained. This feature is useful if, for example, the user prefers to use service discovery whenever possible, and fall back to a specific server when no servers can be discovered using DNS.  

The domain name

Please refer to the lqdns_discovery_domainrq parameter in the sssd.conf(5) manual page for more details.  

The protocol

The queries usually specify _tcp as the protocol. Exceptions are documented in respective option description.  

See Also

For more information on the service discovery mechanism, refer to RFC 2782.  

EXAMPLE

The following example assumes that SSSD is correctly configured and example.com is one of the domains in the [sssd] section. This examples shows only the ipa provider-specific options.

    [domain/example.com]
    id_provider = ipa
    ipa_server = ipaserver.example.com
    ipa_hostname = myhost.example.com

 

SEE ALSO

sssd.conf(5), sssd-ldap(5), sssd-krb5(5), sssd(8)  

AUTHORS

The SSSD upstream - http://fedorahosted.org/sssd


 

Index

NAME
DESCRIPTION
CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
FAILOVER
Failover Syntax
The Failover Mechanism
SERVICE DISCOVERY
Configuration
The domain name
The protocol
See Also
EXAMPLE
SEE ALSO
AUTHORS

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Time: 05:34:00 GMT, December 24, 2015