SSSD Manual pages
sssd-krb5
5
File Formats and Conventions
sssd-krb5
the configuration file for SSSD
DESCRIPTION
This manual page describes the configuration of the Kerberos
5 authentication backend for
sssd
8
.
For a detailed syntax reference, please refer to the FILE FORMAT
section of the
sssd.conf
5
manual page.
The Kerberos 5 authentication backend contains auth and chpass
providers. It must be paired with an identity provider in
order to function properly (for example, id_provider = ldap). Some
information required by the Kerberos 5 authentication backend must
be provided by the identity provider, such as the user's Kerberos
Principal Name (UPN). The configuration of the identity provider
should have an entry to specify the UPN. Please refer to the man
page for the applicable identity provider for details on how to
configure this.
This backend also provides access control based on the .k5login
file in the home directory of the user. See
.k5login5
for more details. Please note that an empty .k5login
file will deny all access to this user. To activate this feature,
use 'access_provider = krb5' in your SSSD configuration.
In the case where the UPN is not available in the identity backend,
sssd will construct a UPN using the format
username@krb5_realm.
CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
If the auth-module krb5 is used in an SSSD domain, the following
options must be used. See the
sssd.conf
5
manual page, section DOMAIN SECTIONS
,
for details on the configuration of an SSSD domain.
krb5_server, krb5_backup_server (string)
Specifies the comma-separated list of IP addresses or hostnames
of the Kerberos servers to which SSSD should
connect, in the order of preference. For more
information on failover and server redundancy,
see the FAILOVER
section. An optional
port number (preceded by a colon) may be appended to
the addresses or hostnames.
If empty, service discovery is enabled;
for more information, refer to the
SERVICE DISCOVERY
section.
When using service discovery for KDC or kpasswd servers,
SSSD first searches for DNS entries that specify _udp as
the protocol and falls back to _tcp if none are found.
This option was named krb5_kdcip
in
earlier releases of SSSD. While the legacy name is recognized
for the time being, users are advised to migrate their config
files to use krb5_server
instead.
krb5_realm (string)
The name of the Kerberos realm. This option is required
and must be specified.
krb5_kpasswd, krb5_backup_kpasswd (string)
If the change password service is not running on the
KDC, alternative servers can be defined here. An
optional port number (preceded by a colon) may be
appended to the addresses or hostnames.
For more information on failover and server
redundancy, see the FAILOVER
section.
NOTE: Even if there are no more kpasswd
servers to try, the backend is not switched to operate offline
if authentication against the KDC is still possible.
Default: Use the KDC
krb5_ccachedir (string)
Directory to store credential caches. All the
substitution sequences of krb5_ccname_template can
be used here, too, except %d and %P. If the
directory does not exist, it will be created. If %u,
%U, %p or %h are used, a private directory belonging
to the user is created. Otherwise, a public directory
with restricted deletion flag (aka sticky bit, as
described in
chmod
1
for details) is created.
Default: /tmp
krb5_ccname_template (string)
Location of the user's credential cache. Three
credential cache types are currently supported:
FILE
, DIR
and
KEYRING:persistent
. The cache can
be specified either as
TYPE:RESIDUAL, or as an
absolute path, which implies the
FILE
type. In the template, the
following sequences are substituted:
%u
login name
%U
login UID
%p
principal name
%r
realm name
%h
home directory
%d
value of krb5ccache_dir
%P
the process ID of the SSSD
client
%%
a literal '%'
If the template ends with 'XXXXXX' mkstemp(3) is
used to create a unique filename in a safe way.
When using KEYRING types, the only supported
mechanism is KEYRING:persistent:%U
,
which uses the Linux kernel keyring to store
credentials on a per-UID basis. This is also the
recommended choice, as it is the most secure and
predictable method.
Default: FILE:%d/krb5cc_%U_XXXXXX
krb5_auth_timeout (integer)
Timeout in seconds after an online authentication request
or change password request is aborted. If possible, the
authentication request is continued offline.
Default: 6
krb5_validate (boolean)
Verify with the help of krb5_keytab that the TGT
obtained has not been spoofed. The keytab is checked for
entries sequentially, and the first entry with a matching
realm is used for validation. If no entry matches the realm, the last
entry in the keytab is used. This process can be used to validate
environments using cross-realm trust by placing the appropriate
keytab entry as the last entry or the only entry in the keytab file.
Default: false
krb5_keytab (string)
The location of the keytab to use when validating
credentials obtained from KDCs.
Default: /etc/krb5.keytab
krb5_store_password_if_offline (boolean)
Store the password of the user if the provider is
offline and use it to request a TGT when the
provider comes online again.
NOTE: this feature is only available on Linux.
Passwords stored in this way are kept in
plaintext in the kernel keyring and are
potentially accessible by the root user
(with difficulty).
Default: false
krb5_renewable_lifetime (string)
Request a renewable ticket with a total
lifetime, given as an integer immediately followed
by a time unit:
s for seconds
m for minutes
h for hours
d for days.
If there is no unit given, s is
assumed.
NOTE: It is not possible to mix units. To set
the renewable lifetime to one and a half hours,
use '90m' instead of '1h30m'.
Default: not set, i.e. the TGT is not renewable
krb5_lifetime (string)
Request ticket with a lifetime, given as an
integer immediately followed by a time unit:
s for seconds
m for minutes
h for hours
d for days.
If there is no unit given s is
assumed.
NOTE: It is not possible to mix units.
To set the lifetime to one and a half
hours please use '90m' instead of '1h30m'.
Default: not set, i.e. the default ticket lifetime
configured on the KDC.
krb5_renew_interval (string)
The time in seconds between two checks if the TGT
should be renewed. TGTs are renewed if about half
of their lifetime is exceeded, given as an integer
immediately followed by a time unit:
s for seconds
m for minutes
h for hours
d for days.
If there is no unit given, s is
assumed.
NOTE: It is not possible to mix units. To set
the renewable lifetime to one and a half hours,
use '90m' instead of '1h30m'.
If this option is not set or is 0 the automatic
renewal is disabled.
Default: not set
krb5_use_fast (string)
Enables flexible authentication secure tunneling
(FAST) for Kerberos pre-authentication. The
following options are supported:
never use FAST. This is
equivalent to not setting this option at all.
try to use FAST. If the server
does not support FAST, continue the
authentication without it.
demand to use FAST. The
authentication fails if the server does not
require fast.
Default: not set, i.e. FAST is not used.
NOTE: a keytab is required to use FAST.
NOTE: SSSD supports FAST only with
MIT Kerberos version 1.8 and later. If SSSD is used
with an older version of MIT Kerberos, using this
option is a configuration error.
krb5_fast_principal (string)
Specifies the server principal to use for FAST.
krb5_canonicalize (boolean)
Specifies if the host and user principal should be
canonicalized. This feature is available with MIT
Kerberos 1.7 and later versions.
Default: false
krb5_use_kdcinfo (boolean)
Specifies if the SSSD should instruct the Kerberos
libraries what realm and which KDCs to use. This option
is on by default, if you disable it, you need to configure
the Kerberos library using the
krb5.conf
5
configuration file.
See the
sssd_krb5_locator_plugin
8
manual page for more information on the locator plugin.
Default: true
krb5_use_enterprise_principal (boolean)
Specifies if the user principal should be treated
as enterprise principal. See section 5 of RFC 6806
for more details about enterprise principals.
Default: false (AD provide: true)
EXAMPLE
The following example assumes that SSSD is correctly
configured and FOO is one of the domains in the
[sssd] section. This example shows
only configuration of Kerberos authentication; it does not include
any identity provider.
[domain/FOO]
auth_provider = krb5
krb5_server = 192.168.1.1
krb5_realm = EXAMPLE.COM