Authenticate Using SASL and LDAP with OpenLDAP
MongoDB Enterprise provides support for proxy authentication of users. This allows administrators to configure a MongoDB cluster to authenticate users by proxying authentication requests to a specified Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) service.
Note
For MongoDB 4.2 Enterprise binaries linked against
libldap
(such as when running on RHEL), access to the
libldap
is synchronized, incurring some performance/latency
costs.
For MongoDB 4.2 Enterprise binaries linked against
libldap_r
, there is no change in behavior from earlier MongoDB
versions.
Considerations
Warning
MongoDB Enterprise for Windows does not support binding via
saslauthd
.
Linux MongoDB servers support binding to an LDAP server via the
saslauthd
daemon.Use secure encrypted or trusted connections between clients and the server, as well as between
saslauthd
and the LDAP server. The LDAP server uses theSASL PLAIN
mechanism, sending and receiving data in plain text. You should use only a trusted channel such as a VPN, a connection encrypted with TLS/SSL, or a trusted wired network.
Configure saslauthd
LDAP support for user authentication requires proper configuration of
the saslauthd
daemon process as well as the MongoDB server.
Specify the mechanism.
On systems that configure saslauthd
with the
/etc/sysconfig/saslauthd
file, such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux,
Fedora, CentOS, and Amazon Linux AMI, set the mechanism MECH
to
ldap
:
MECH=ldap
On systems that configure saslauthd
with the
/etc/default/saslauthd
file, such as Ubuntu, set the MECHANISMS
option to ldap
:
MECHANISMS="ldap"
Adjust caching behavior.
On certain Linux distributions, saslauthd
starts with the caching
of authentication credentials enabled. Until restarted or until the
cache expires, saslauthd
will not contact the LDAP server to
re-authenticate users in its authentication cache. This allows
saslauthd
to successfully authenticate users in its cache, even in
the LDAP server is down or if the cached users' credentials are revoked.
To set the expiration time (in seconds) for the authentication cache, see
the -t option of
saslauthd
.
Configure LDAP Options with OpenLDAP.
If the saslauthd.conf
file does not exist, create it.
The saslauthd.conf
file usually resides in the /etc
folder. If specifying a different file path, see the
-O option of
saslauthd
.
To connect to an OpenLDAP server, update the saslauthd.conf
file with the following configuration options:
ldap_servers: <ldap uri> ldap_search_base: <search base> ldap_filter: <filter>
The ldap_servers
specifies the uri of the LDAP server used
for authentication. In general, for OpenLDAP installed on the
local machine, you can specify the value ldap://localhost:389
or if using LDAP over TLS/SSL, you can specify the value
ldaps://localhost:636
.
The ldap_search_base
specifies distinguished name to which
the search is relative. The search includes the base or objects
below.
The ldap_filter
specifies the search filter.
The values for these configuration options should correspond to the
values specific for your test. For example, to filter on email, specify
ldap_filter: (mail=%n)
instead.
OpenLDAP Example
A sample saslauthd.conf
file for OpenLDAP includes the following content:
ldap_servers: ldaps://ad.example.net ldap_search_base: ou=Users,dc=example,dc=com ldap_filter: (uid=%u)
To use this sample OpenLDAP configuration, create users with a uid
attribute (login name) and place under the Users
organizational
unit (ou
) under the domain components (dc
) example
and
com
.
For more information on saslauthd
configuration, see
http://www.openldap.org/doc/admin24/guide.html#Configuringsaslauthd.
Test the saslauthd
configuration.
Use testsaslauthd
utility to test the saslauthd
configuration. For example:
testsaslauthd -u testuser -p testpassword -f /var/run/saslauthd/mux
0: OK "Success"
indicates successful authentication.0: NO "authentication failed"
indicates a username, password, or configuration error.
Modify the file path with respect to the location of the
saslauthd
directory on the host operating system.
Important
The parent directory of the saslauthd
Unix domain socket file
specified to security.sasl.saslauthdSocketPath
or
--setParameter saslauthdPath
must grant
read and execute (r-x
) permissions for either:
The mongod
or mongos
cannot successfully authenticate via
saslauthd
without the specified permission on the saslauthd
directory and its contents.
Configure MongoDB
Add user to MongoDB for authentication.
Add the user to the $external
database in MongoDB. To specify the
user's privileges, assign roles to the
user.
Changed in version 3.6.3: To use sessions with $external
authentication users (i.e.
Kerberos, LDAP, x.509 users), the usernames cannot be greater
than 10k bytes.
For example, the following adds a user with read-only access to
the records
database.
db.getSiblingDB("$external").createUser( { user : <username>, roles: [ { role: "read", db: "records" } ] } )
Add additional principals as needed. For more information about creating and managing users, see User Management Commands.
Configure MongoDB server.
To configure the MongoDB server to use the saslauthd
instance for
proxy authentication, include the following options when starting mongod
:
--auth
command line option orsecurity.authorization
setting,authenticationMechanisms
parameter set toPLAIN
, andsaslauthdPath
parameter set to the path to the Unix-domain Socket of thesaslauthd
instance.Important
The parent directory of the
saslauthd
Unix domain socket file specified tosecurity.sasl.saslauthdSocketPath
or--setParameter saslauthdPath
must grant read and execute (r-x
) permissions for either:The
mongod
ormongos
cannot successfully authenticate viasaslauthd
without the specified permission on thesaslauthd
directory and its contents.
If you use the authorization
option to enforce
authentication, you will need privileges to create a user.
Use specific saslauthd
socket path.
For socket path of /<some>/<path>/saslauthd
, set the
saslauthdPath
to /<some>/<path>/saslauthd/mux
,
as in the following command line example:
mongod --auth --setParameter saslauthdPath=/<some>/<path>/saslauthd/mux --setParameter authenticationMechanisms=PLAIN
Include additional options as required for your configuration. For
instance, if you wish remote clients to connect to your deployment
or your deployment members are run on different hosts, specify the
--bind_ip
. For more information, see
Localhost Binding Compatibility Changes.
Or if using a YAML format configuration file, specify the following settings in the file:
security: authorization: enabled setParameter: saslauthdPath: /<some>/<path>/saslauthd/mux authenticationMechanisms: PLAIN
Or, if using the older configuration file format:
auth=true setParameter=saslauthdPath=/<some>/<path>/saslauthd/mux setParameter=authenticationMechanisms=PLAIN
Use default Unix-domain socket path.
To use the default Unix-domain socket path, set the
saslauthdPath
to the empty string ""
, as in the
following command line example:
mongod --auth --setParameter saslauthdPath="" --setParameter authenticationMechanisms=PLAIN
Include additional options as required for your configuration. For
instance, if you wish remote clients to connect to your deployment
or your deployment members are run on different hosts, specify the
--bind_ip
. For more information, see
Localhost Binding Compatibility Changes.
Or if using a YAML format configuration file, specify the following settings in the file:
security: authorization: enabled setParameter: saslauthdPath: "" authenticationMechanisms: PLAIN
Or, if using the older configuration file format:
auth=true setParameter=saslauthdPath="" setParameter=authenticationMechanisms=PLAIN
Include additional options as required
for your configuration. For instance, if you wish remote clients to
connect to your deployment or your deployment members are run on
different hosts, specify the net.bindIp
setting. For more
information, see Localhost Binding Compatibility Changes.
Authenticate the user in the mongo
shell.
You can authenticate from the command line during connection, or
connect first and then authenticate using db.auth()
method.
To authenticate when connecting with the mongo
shell,
run mongo
with the following command-line
options, substituting <host>
and <user>
, and
enter your password when prompted:
mongo --host <host> --authenticationMechanism PLAIN --authenticationDatabase '$external' -u <user> -p
Alternatively, connect without supplying credentials and then call
the db.auth()
method on the $external
database. Specify
the value "PLAIN"
in the mechanism
field, the user and
password in the user
and pwd
fields respectively. Use the default
digestPassword
value (false
) since the server must receive an
undigested password to forward on to saslauthd
, as in the
following example:
Tip
Starting in version 4.2 of the mongo
shell, you can
use the passwordPrompt()
method in conjunction with
various user authentication/management methods/commands to prompt
for the password instead of specifying the password directly in the
method/command call. However, you can still specify the password
directly as you would with earlier versions of the
mongo
shell.
db.getSiblingDB("$external").auth( { mechanism: "PLAIN", user: <username>, pwd: passwordPrompt() // or cleartext password } )
Enter the password when prompted.
The server forwards the password in plain text. In general, use only on a trusted channel (VPN, TLS/SSL, trusted wired network). See Considerations.