The LibreGraph Identity Management provides a LDAP server, which is easy to configure, does not have external dependencies and is tailored to work perfectly with other LibreGraph software.
The goal is that everyone who does not already have or needs an LDAP server, uses IDM.
Thus, IDM is a (currently read-only) drop in replacement for an existing LDAP server and does provide an LDAP interface if none is there already. IDM uses hard coded indexes and supports LDAP search, bind and unbind operations.
Until packages and containers for more environments are available it is the easiest to just create a local build of idmd
. For this just run make
.
IDM uses a mixture of environment variables and parameters for configuration and needs to be at least passed a the location of an individual ldif file or a directory containing multiple ldif files.
$ ./idmd serve --ldif-main ./export.ldif
INFO[0000] LDAP listener started listen_addr="127.0.0.1:10389"
INFO[0000] ready
The default base DN of IDM is dc=lg,dc=local
. There is usually no need to change, it if you don't use the LDAP data for anything else. The value needs to match what the clients have configured. Similarly, the default mail domain is lg.local
.
Both values can be changed by passing --ldap-base-dn
or --ldif-template-default-mail-domain
respectively.
IDM uses ldif files for its data source and those files, the location of these files needs to be passed at startup using the --ldif-main
parameter.
By default IDM does not have any users and anonymous bind is disabled. You can enable anonymous bind support for local requests by passing --ldap-allow-local-anonymous
when running idmd
. Alternatively a service user can be specified in the following way:
cat <<EOF > ./config.ldif
dn: cn=readonly,{{.BaseDN}}
cn: readonly
description: LDAP read only service user
objectClass: simpleSecurityObject
objectClass: organizationalRole
userPassword: readonly
EOF
And then passed as an additional parameter when starting idmd
by passing --ldif-config ./config.ldif
. The config.ldif
is for service users only and the data in there is used for bind requests only, but never returned for search requests.
idmd
serves all ldif files from the folder specified by --ldif-main
(loaded in lexical order and parsed as templates). Whenever any of the ldif files are changed, added or removed, make sure to restart idmd
.
idmd
listens on 127.0.0.1:10389
by default and does not ship with any default users. Example configuration can be found in the scripts directory of this repository.
IDM provides a way to create ldif data for new users using batch mode similar to the unix newusers
command using the following standard password file format:
uid:userPassword:uidNumber:gidNumber:cn,[mail][,mailAlternateAddress...]:ignored:ignored
For example, like this:
cat << EOF | ./idmd gen newusers - --min-password-strength=4 > ./ldif/50-users.ldif
jonas:passwordOfJonas123:::Jonas Brekke,[email protected]::
timmothy:passwordOfTimmothy456:::Timmothy Schöwalter::
EOF
This outputs an LDIF template file which you can modify as needed. When done run restart idmd
to make the new users available. Keep in mind that some of the attributes must be unique.
On the LDAP server export all its data using slapcat
and write the resulting ldif to for example ./ldif/10-main.ldif
. This is a drop in replacement and all what was in OpenLDAP is now also in IDM.
Either stop slapd
and change the IDM configuration to listen where slapd
used to listen or change the clients to connect to where idmd
listens to migrate.
All ldif files loaded by IDM support template syntax as defined in https://golang.org/pkg/text/template to allow auto generation and replacement of various values. You can find example templates in the scripts directory as well. All the gen
commands output template syntax if applicable.
IDM supports secure password hashing using ARGON2. To create such password hashes either use gen newusers
or the interactive gen passwd
which is very similar to slappasswd
from OpenLDAP.
./idmd gen passwd
New password:
Re-enter new password:
{ARGON2}$argon2id$v=19$m=65536,t=1,p=2$MaB5gX2BI484dATbGFyEIg$h2X8rbPowzZ/Exsz4W20Z/Zk54C30YnY+YbivSIRpcI
Since idmd
provides a standard LDAP interface, also standard LDAP tools can be used to interact with it for testing. Run apt install ldap-utils
to install LDAP commandline tools.
ldapsearch -x -H ldap://127.0.0.1:10389 -b "dc=lg,dc=local" -D "cn=readonly,dc=lg,dc=local" -w 'readonly'