Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2013 01:07:47 +0200 From: Jan Bramkamp <crest@rlwinm.de> To: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: LDAP authentication confusion Message-ID: <51E480C3.50008@rlwinm.de> In-Reply-To: <20130715224748.GA45649@anubis.morrow.me.uk> References: <Pine.GSO.4.64.1307151438370.8901@sea.ntplx.net> <CAHDg04v8xV-yaCXDzSbOzWEvHRMhDy8x0A=B2eho4iK4b1UuJA@mail.gmail.com> <Pine.GSO.4.64.1307151507130.8901@sea.ntplx.net> <1373915752.13754.140661255962197.3CA2BD96@webmail.messagingengine.com> <Pine.GSO.4.64.1307151550030.8901@sea.ntplx.net> <20130715224748.GA45649@anubis.morrow.me.uk>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On 16.07.2013 00:47, Ben Morrow wrote: > Quoth Jan Bramkamp <crest@rlwinm.de>: >> On 15.07.2013 21:51, Daniel Eischen wrote: >>> >>> Wouldn't it be easier just to edit /etc/nsswitch.conf >>> anyway? >> PAM and NSS switch are two different subsystems. NSS is just for >> resource lookups (users, groups, hosts, ...). PAM is for access control. >> >> With ldap in nsswitch.conf for users and groups you can lookup a LDAP >> user but the user can't log into $service through PAM. This requires >> pam_ldap.so in pam.d/$service. > > The default pam_unix.so calls getpwent, so if nss_ldap returns cryptable > passwords in its result I think pam_unix can authenticate against those. > > This is not the same as authenticating by LDAP bind, but may end up > accepting the same passwords. If you want every process to read your hashed passwords and you use non-portable crypt hashes it could work. The correct solution would be authenticate users by LDAP binds without allowing anyone to read the password or to use the {SASL} password style and authenticate users against Kerberos with saslauthd. Just don't let you users play with passwords. Either your password policy allows dumb users to pick trivial password or it forces complex password structures on them resulting in post-it notes with passwords around every second desk.
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?51E480C3.50008>