LDAP Authorization
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MongoDB Enterprise supports
querying an LDAP server for the LDAP groups to which the authenticated user
belongs. MongoDB maps the distinguished names (DN) of each returned group
to roles on the admin
database. MongoDB authorizes the
user based on the mapped roles and their associated privileges. See
LDAP Authorization for more information.
The LDAP Authorization process is summarized below:
A client connects to MongoDB and performs authentication with any authentication mechanism that supports external authentication.
To use Client Sessions and Causal Consistency Guarantees with
$external
authentication users (Kerberos, LDAP, or x.509 users), usernames cannot be greater than 10k bytes.MongoDB binds to the LDAP server specified with
security.ldap.servers
using the credentials specified withsecurity.ldap.bind.queryUser
andsecurity.ldap.bind.queryPassword
.MongoDB uses simple binding by default, but can use
sasl
binding instead if configured insecurity.ldap.bind.method
andsecurity.ldap.bind.saslMechanisms
.MongoDB constructs an LDAP query using the
security.ldap.authz.queryTemplate
and queries the LDAP server for the authenticated user's group membership.MongoDB can use the
security.ldap.userToDNMapping
option to transform the username for supporting the query template.The LDAP server evaluates the query and returns the list of groups to which the authenticated user belongs.
MongoDB authorizes the user to perform actions on the server by mapping each returned group's Distinguished Name (DN) into a role on the
admin
database. If a returned group DN exactly matches the name of an existing role on theadmin
database, MongoDB grants the user the roles and privileges assigned to that role. See MongoDB Roles for LDAP Authorization for more information.The client can perform actions on the MongoDB server which require the roles or privileges granted to the authenticated user.
At an interval defined by
ldapUserCacheInvalidationInterval
, MongoDB flushes the$external
cache. Prior to executing subsequent operations performed by externally authorized users, MongoDB re-acquires their group membership from the LDAP server.
Considerations
A full description of LDAP is beyond the scope of this documentation. This page assumes prior knowledge of LDAP.
This documentation only describes MongoDB LDAP authorization, and does not replace other resources on LDAP. We encourage you to thoroughly familiarize yourself with LDAP and its related subject matter before configuring LDAP authentication.
MongoDB can provide professional services for optimal configuration of LDAP authorization for your MongoDB deployment.
Compatible Authentication Mechanism
The following authentication mechanisms are compatible with MongoDB LDAP authorization:
Connection Pool
Starting in version 4.2.0, when connecting to the LDAP server for authentication/authorization, MongoDB, by default:
Uses connection pooling if run:
on Windows or
on Linux where MongoDB Enterprise binaries are linked against libldap_r.
Does not use connection pooling if run:
on Linux where MongoDB Enterprise binaries are linked against libldap.
To change the connection pooling behavior, update the
ldapUseConnectionPool
parameter.
libldap
and libldap_r
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.
User Management
With LDAP authorization, user creation and management occurs on the LDAP
server. MongoDB requires creation of roles on the admin
database, with the name of each role exactly matching a LDAP group
Distinguished Name (DN). This is in contrast to MongoDB managed authorization,
which requires creating users on the $external
database.
To manage roles on the MongoDB server, authenticate as a user whose group
membership corresponds to a admin
database role with role administration
privileges, such as those provided by userAdmin
. Create or update
roles corresponding to LDAP group DNs such that users with membership in that
group receive the appropriate roles and privileges.
For example, an LDAP group for database administrators might have a role with administrative roles and privileges. An LDAP group for marketing or analytics users may have a role with only have read privileges on certain databases.
Important
When configuring a role for a corresponding LDAP Group, remember that all users with membership in that group can receive the configured roles and privileges. Consider applying the principle of least privilege when configuring MongoDB roles, LDAP groups, or group membership.
If no role with role administration privileges exists AND no
non-$external
user with these privileges exists, you effectively cannot
perform user management, as no new or existing roles can be altered to reflect
additions or changes to groups or group membership on the LDAP server.
To remedy a scenario where you cannot manage roles on the MongoDB server, perform the following procedure:
Restart the MongoDB server without authentication and LDAP authorization
Create a role on the
admin
database whose name corresponds to the appropriate LDAP group Distinguished Name. When choosing a group DN, consider which group is most appropriate for database administration.Restart the MongoDB server with authentication and LDAP authorization
Authenticate as a user with membership in the group corresponding to the created administrative role.
Existing Users
A MongoDB server using LDAP for authorization makes any existing users on the
$external
database inaccessible. If there are existing users in
$external
database, you must meet the following requirements for each user
on the $external
database to ensure continued access:
User has a corresponding user object on the LDAP server
User object has membership in the appropriate LDAP groups
MongoDB has roles on the
admin
database named for the user's LDAP groups, such that the granted roles and privileges are identical to those granted to the non-$external
user.
If you want to continue allowing access by users not on the
$external
database, ensure the
authenticationMechanisms
parameter includes
SCRAM-SHA-1
and/or SCRAM-SHA-256
as appropriate. Alternatively,
apply the requirements listed above for transitioning those users to
LDAP authorization.
Replica Sets
For replica sets, configure LDAP authorization on the secondary and arbiter members first before configuring the primary. This also applies to shard replica sets, or config server replica sets. Configure one replica set member at a time to maintain a majority of members for write availability.
Sharded Clusters
In sharded clusters, you must configure LDAP authorization on the config servers for cluster-level users. You can optionally configure LDAP authorization on each shard for shard-local users.
Configuration
You must configure the following settings to use LDAP Authorization:
To use LDAP for authorization via operating system libraries, specify the
following settings as a part of your mongod
or mongos
configuration file:
Option | Description | Required |
---|---|---|
Quote-enclosed comma-separated list of LDAP servers in host[:port]
format. | YES | |
An RFC4515 and RFC4516 LDAP formatted query URL
template executed by MongoDB to obtain the LDAP groups to
which the user belongs to. The query is relative to the host or hosts
specified in You can use the following tokens in the template:
Only | YES | |
The identity the MongoDB server binds as when connecting to and executing operations and queries on an LDAP server. Use with The user specified must have the appropriate privileges to support the
LDAP queries generated from the configured
| YES | |
The password used to bind to an LDAP server when using
queryUser . | YES | |
Used to specify the method the Defaults to | NO, unless using sasl for binding to the LDAP server. | |
NO, unless setting method to
sasl , and you need different or additional SASL mechanisms. | ||
Windows MongoDB deployments can use the operating system credentials in
place of queryUser and
queryPassword for authenticating or binding
as when connecting to the LDAP server. | NO, unless replacing queryUser and
queryPassword . | |
Depending on your queryTemplate ,
the authenticated client username may require transformation to
support the LDAP query URL.
userToDNMapping allows MongoDB to
transform incoming usernames. | NO, unless client usernames require transformation into LDAP DNs. |
LDAP Query Template
MongoDB uses the security.ldap.authz.queryTemplate
to create an
RFC4516 formatted LDAP query URL. In
the template, you can use either:
{USER}
placeholder to substitute the authenticated username into the LDAP query URL. If MongoDB transformed the username usinguserToDNMapping
, MongoDB replaces the{USER}
token with the transformed username when constructing the LDAP query URL.{PROVIDED_USER}
placeholder to substitute the supplied username, i.e. before either authentication or LDAP transformation, into the LDAP query.
Design the query template to retrieve the user's groups.
Example
The following query template returns any groups listed in the
LDAP user object's memberOf
attribute. This query assumes the memberOf
attribute exists - your specific LDAP deployment may use a different attribute
or methodology for tracking group membership. This query also assumes
the user authenticates using their full LDAP DN as their username.
"{USER}?memberOf?base"
The LDAP query URL must conform to the format defined in RFC4516:
[ dn [ ? [attributes] [ ? [scope] [ ? [filter] [ ? [Extensions] ] ] ] ] ]
Consider the definition of each component, as quoted from RFC4516:
The
dn
is an LDAP Distinguished Name using the string format described in RFC4514. It identifies the base object of the LDAP search or the target of a non-search operation.The
attributes
construct is used to indicate which attributes should be returned from the entry or entries.The
scope
construct is used to specify the scope of the search to perform in the given LDAP server. The allowable scopes are "base" for a base object search, "one" for a one-level search, or "sub" for a subtree search.The
filter
is used to specify the search filter to apply to entries within the specified scope during the search. It has the format specified in [RFC4515].The
extensions
construct provides the LDAP URL with an extensibility mechanism, allowing the capabilities of the URL to be extended in the future.
If the query includes an attribute
, MongoDB assumes the query retrieves a
the DNs which this entity is member of.
If the query does not include an attribute, MongoDB assumes the query retrieves all entities for which the user is member of.
MongoDB currently ignores any extensions specified in the LDAP query.
Important
A full description of RFC4516 or LDAP query URL construction is out of scope for this documentation.
Tutorials
The following tutorials contain procedures for connecting to an LDAP server via the Operating System LDAP libraries:
Connecting to a MongoDB server using LDAP Authorization
When using LDAP for authorization, users connecting via
mongosh
must:
set
--authenticationDatabase
to$external
.set
--authenticationMechanism
to the appropriate authentication mechanism.If using LDAP authentication, set this to
PLAIN
.If using Kerberos authentication, set this to
GSSAPI
.If using x.509, set this to
MONGODB-X.509
.set
--username
to a username that respects thesecurity.ldap.authz.queryTemplate
, or any configuredsecurity.ldap.userToDNMapping
template.set
--password
to the appropriate password.
Include the --host
and --port
of the MongoDB server,
along with any other options relevant to your deployment.
For example, the following operation authenticates to a MongoDB server running with LDAP authentication and authorization:
mongosh --username alice@dba.example.com --password --authenticationDatabase '$external' --authenticationMechanism "PLAIN" --host "mongodb.example.com" --port 27017
If you do not specify the password to the --password
command-line option, mongosh
prompts for the password.
Important
The $external
argument must be placed in single quotes, not
double quotes, to prevent the shell from interpreting $external
as a variable.
MongoDB Roles for LDAP Authorization
MongoDB maps each returned group distinguished name (DN) returned by
the LDAP query
to a
role on the admin
database.
If MongoDB acquires a group whose DN exactly matches the name of an existing role, MongoDB grants the authenticated user roles and privileges associated with that role. If MongoDB cannot map any of the returned groups to a role, MongoDB grants no privileges to the user.
Note
LDAP and kerberos
authentication normally require creating users in the $external
database. If you also use LDAP for authorization, you do not need to
create users in the $external
database. You only need to create the
appropriate roles in the admin
database. Users still authenticate
against the $external
database.
Important
If you are using LDAP for authorization and your LDAP group DNs
contain RFC4514 escaped
sequences, the roles you create in the admin
database must also
be escaped following RFC4514.
Example
A database has the following roles configured on the admin
database:
{ role: "CN=dba,CN=Users,DC=example,DC=com", privileges: [], roles: [ "dbAdminAnyDatabase", "clusterAdmin" ] } { role: "CN=analytics,CN=Users,DC=example,DC=com" privileges: [], roles: [ { role : "read", db : "web_statistics" }, { role : "read", db : "user_statistics" } ] }
After authenticating a user alice@dba.example.com
against the
$external
database, the MongoDB server performs a query derived from
the configured query template
to retrieve the groups which include
the authenticated user as a member. In this example, the MongoDB server
retrieves the following group DNs for the user:
dn:CN=dba,CN=Users,dc=example,dc=com dn:CN=admin,CN=Users,dc=example,dc=com
MongoDB maps these group DNs to roles on the admin
database. The first
group DN matches the first role, and MongoDB grants the authenticated user
its roles and privileges. The second group DN does not match to any role on
the server, so MongoDB grants no additional permissions.
A new user bob@analytics.example.com
authenticates against the
$external
database. The MongoDB server repeats the query process, using
the provided username in the query template. In this example, the MongoDB
server retrieves the following group DNs for the user:
dn:cn=analytics,CN=Users,dc=example,dc=com
MongoDB maps these group DNs to roles on the admin
database and grants
the authenticated user the roles and privileges of the second role.
A new user workstation@guest.example.com
authenticates against the
$external
database. The MongoDB server repeats the query process, using
the provided username in the query template. In this example, the MongoDB
server retrieves the following group DNs for the user:
dn:cn=guest,CN=Users,dc=example,dc=com
MongoDB maps the group to a role on the admin
database and, because no
matching roles exist, grants the user no additional permissions.