On 10/25/2012 11:36 AM, Sumit Bose wrote:
On Thu, Oct 25, 2012 at 10:36:05AM +0200, Tomas Brandysky wrote:
> Hello,
>
> we're upgrading from Centos 5.8 to Centos 6.3 and have realized few
> things have changed in the system.
>
> We're using LDAP authentication (nss_ldap package) on our Centos 5.8
> servers and have different PAM ldap configuration files configured to be
> used for specific PAM services at the moment.
>
> Here is the example of our setup:
>
> /etc/pam.d/service1:
> auth sufficient pam_ldap.so config=/etc/ldap_service1.conf
>
> /etc/pam.d/service2:
> auth sufficient pam_ldap.so config=/etc/ldap_service2.conf
>
> Thus we can use specific LDAP filters for various different services as
> not all users having access to one service also have access to other
> services on the same server.
>
> Now we're facing the problem to manage the same functionality with
> System Security Services Daemon (SSSD) which was newly presented with
> RHEL 6.
>
> We didn't find out so far how to specify custom sssd configuration file
> (or specific part of the configuration section/domain) in PAM service
> configuration. According to documentation only these options can be
> specified when using pam_sss module: [forward_pass] [use_first_pass]
> [use_authtok].
>
> None of them can be used to make a difference in a ldap filter to be used.
>
> Is there a way how to configure specific search filters depending on PAM
> service ?
>
> Thank you for any suggestion
I think what you are looking for is covered in
https://fedorahosted.org/sssd/ticket/1021.
yes, that's exactly what I miss in sssd.
I'm surprised such a feature isn't supported yet as the same goal could
be accomplished in RHEL4/5 releases with older methods. I see this as a
step back. Is there some real possibility to have this feature in some
later release which could come as update in RHEL 6 ?
If you only want to allow/deny access for specific users to specific
service you can add an attribute to the user objects in the LDAP server
listing the allowed PAM services and use ldap_user_authorized_service.
See sssd-ldap man page for details.
I know about ldap_user_authorized_service but I need to specify a
combination of service and host access. I can't effort to grant users
access to ssh service globaly when they can access ssh only on some of
dozens servers we have.
If you want more fine grained access control you might want to have a
look at the FreeIPA HBAC rules.
ok, I've not heard about this. Will check it out.
Thank you
Tomas
HTH
bye,
Sumit
>
> Regards
>
> Tomas Brandysky
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