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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-06 01:23:53 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-06 01:23:53 +0000 |
commit | c000cad09d0b54c455c99271bfb996c2dfe13073 (patch) | |
tree | e47ca809ed512d7fb43ec3d555753b1b658e9819 /doc/guide/admin/access-control.sdf | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | openldap-c000cad09d0b54c455c99271bfb996c2dfe13073.tar.xz openldap-c000cad09d0b54c455c99271bfb996c2dfe13073.zip |
Adding upstream version 2.4.47+dfsg.upstream/2.4.47+dfsgupstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/guide/admin/access-control.sdf | 1341 |
1 files changed, 1341 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guide/admin/access-control.sdf b/doc/guide/admin/access-control.sdf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6977da3 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/guide/admin/access-control.sdf @@ -0,0 +1,1341 @@ +# $OpenLDAP$ +# Copyright 1999-2018 The OpenLDAP Foundation, All Rights Reserved. +# COPYING RESTRICTIONS APPLY, see COPYRIGHT. + +H1: Access Control + +H2: Introduction + +As the directory gets populated with more and more data of varying sensitivity, +controlling the kinds of access granted to the directory becomes more and more +critical. For instance, the directory may contain data of a confidential nature +that you may need to protect by contract or by law. Or, if using the directory +to control access to other services, inappropriate access to the directory may +create avenues of attack to your sites security that result in devastating +damage to your assets. + +Access to your directory can be configured via two methods, the first using +{{SECT:The slapd Configuration File}} and the second using the {{slapd-config}}(5) +format ({{SECT:Configuring slapd}}). + +The default access control policy is allow read by all clients. Regardless of +what access control policy is defined, the {{rootdn}} is always allowed full +rights (i.e. auth, search, compare, read and write) on everything and anything. + +As a consequence, it's useless (and results in a performance penalty) to explicitly +list the {{rootdn}} among the {{<by>}} clauses. + +The following sections will describe Access Control Lists in greater depth and +follow with some examples and recommendations. See {{slapd.access}}(5) for +complete details. + +H2: Access Control via Static Configuration + +Access to entries and attributes is controlled by the +access configuration file directive. The general form of an +access line is: + +> <access directive> ::= access to <what> +> [by <who> [<access>] [<control>] ]+ +> <what> ::= * | +> [dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex> | dn.<scope-style>=<DN>] +> [filter=<ldapfilter>] [attrs=<attrlist>] +> <basic-style> ::= regex | exact +> <scope-style> ::= base | one | subtree | children +> <attrlist> ::= <attr> [val[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] | <attr> , <attrlist> +> <attr> ::= <attrname> | entry | children +> <who> ::= * | [anonymous | users | self +> | dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex> | dn.<scope-style>=<DN>] +> [dnattr=<attrname>] +> [group[/<objectclass>[/<attrname>][.<basic-style>]]=<regex>] +> [peername[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] +> [sockname[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] +> [domain[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] +> [sockurl[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] +> [set=<setspec>] +> [aci=<attrname>] +> <access> ::= [self]{<level>|<priv>} +> <level> ::= none | disclose | auth | compare | search | read | write | manage +> <priv> ::= {=|+|-}{m|w|r|s|c|x|d|0}+ +> <control> ::= [stop | continue | break] + +where the <what> part selects the entries and/or attributes to which +the access applies, the {{EX:<who>}} part specifies which entities +are granted access, and the {{EX:<access>}} part specifies the +access granted. Multiple {{EX:<who> <access> <control>}} triplets +are supported, allowing many entities to be granted different access +to the same set of entries and attributes. Not all of these access +control options are described here; for more details see the +{{slapd.access}}(5) man page. + + +H3: What to control access to + +The <what> part of an access specification determines the entries +and attributes to which the access control applies. Entries are +commonly selected in two ways: by DN and by filter. The following +qualifiers select entries by DN: + +> to * +> to dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex> +> to dn.<scope-style>=<DN> + +The first form is used to select all entries. The second form may +be used to select entries by matching a regular expression against +the target entry's {{normalized DN}}. (The second form is not +discussed further in this document.) The third form is used to +select entries which are within the requested scope of DN. The +<DN> is a string representation of the Distinguished Name, as +described in {{REF:RFC4514}}. + +The scope can be either {{EX:base}}, {{EX:one}}, {{EX:subtree}}, +or {{EX:children}}. Where {{EX:base}} matches only the entry with +provided DN, {{EX:one}} matches the entries whose parent is the +provided DN, {{EX:subtree}} matches all entries in the subtree whose +root is the provided DN, and {{EX:children}} matches all entries +under the DN (but not the entry named by the DN). + +For example, if the directory contained entries named: + +> 0: o=suffix +> 1: cn=Manager,o=suffix +> 2: ou=people,o=suffix +> 3: uid=kdz,ou=people,o=suffix +> 4: cn=addresses,uid=kdz,ou=people,o=suffix +> 5: uid=hyc,ou=people,o=suffix + +\Then: +. {{EX:dn.base="ou=people,o=suffix"}} match 2; +. {{EX:dn.one="ou=people,o=suffix"}} match 3, and 5; +. {{EX:dn.subtree="ou=people,o=suffix"}} match 2, 3, 4, and 5; and +. {{EX:dn.children="ou=people,o=suffix"}} match 3, 4, and 5. + + +Entries may also be selected using a filter: + +> to filter=<ldap filter> + +where <ldap filter> is a string representation of an LDAP +search filter, as described in {{REF:RFC4515}}. For example: + +> to filter=(objectClass=person) + +Note that entries may be selected by both DN and filter by +including both qualifiers in the <what> clause. + +> to dn.one="ou=people,o=suffix" filter=(objectClass=person) + +Attributes within an entry are selected by including a comma-separated +list of attribute names in the <what> selector: + +> attrs=<attribute list> + +A specific value of an attribute is selected by using a single +attribute name and also using a value selector: + +> attrs=<attribute> val[.<style>]=<regex> + +There are two special {{pseudo}} attributes {{EX:entry}} and +{{EX:children}}. To read (and hence return) a target entry, the +subject must have {{EX:read}} access to the target's {{entry}} +attribute. To perform a search, the subject must have +{{EX:search}} access to the search base's {{entry}} attribute. +To add or delete an entry, the subject must have +{{EX:write}} access to the entry's {{EX:entry}} attribute AND must +have {{EX:write}} access to the entry's parent's {{EX:children}} +attribute. To rename an entry, the subject must have {{EX:write}} +access to entry's {{EX:entry}} attribute AND have {{EX:write}} +access to both the old parent's and new parent's {{EX:children}} +attributes. The complete examples at the end of this section should +help clear things up. + +Lastly, there is a special entry selector {{EX:"*"}} that is used to +select any entry. It is used when no other {{EX:<what>}} +selector has been provided. It's equivalent to "{{EX:dn=.*}}" + + +H3: Who to grant access to + +The <who> part identifies the entity or entities being granted +access. Note that access is granted to "entities" not "entries." +The following table summarizes entity specifiers: + +!block table; align=Center; coltags="EX,N"; \ + title="Table 6.3: Access Entity Specifiers" +Specifier|Entities +*|All, including anonymous and authenticated users +anonymous|Anonymous (non-authenticated) users +users|Authenticated users +self|User associated with target entry +dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex>|Users matching a regular expression +dn.<scope-style>=<DN>|Users within scope of a DN +!endblock + +The DN specifier behaves much like <what> clause DN specifiers. + +Other control factors are also supported. For example, a {{EX:<who>}} +can be restricted by an entry listed in a DN-valued attribute in +the entry to which the access applies: + +> dnattr=<dn-valued attribute name> + +The dnattr specification is used to give access to an entry +whose DN is listed in an attribute of the entry (e.g., give +access to a group entry to whoever is listed as the owner of +the group entry). + +Some factors may not be appropriate in all environments (or any). +For example, the domain factor relies on IP to domain name lookups. +As these can easily be spoofed, the domain factor should be avoided. + + +H3: The access to grant + +The kind of <access> granted can be one of the following: + +!block table; colaligns="LRL"; coltags="EX,EX,N"; align=Center; \ + title="Table 6.4: Access Levels" +Level Privileges Description +none =0 no access +disclose =d needed for information disclosure on error +auth =dx needed to authenticate (bind) +compare =cdx needed to compare +search =scdx needed to apply search filters +read =rscdx needed to read search results +write =wrscdx needed to modify/rename +manage =mwrscdx needed to manage +!endblock + +Each level implies all lower levels of access. So, for example, +granting someone {{EX:write}} access to an entry also grants them +{{EX:read}}, {{EX:search}}, {{EX:compare}}, {{EX:auth}} and +{{EX:disclose}} access. However, one may use the privileges specifier +to grant specific permissions. + + +H3: Access Control Evaluation + +When evaluating whether some requester should be given access to +an entry and/or attribute, slapd compares the entry and/or attribute +to the {{EX:<what>}} selectors given in the configuration file. +For each entry, access controls provided in the database which holds +the entry (or the global access directives if not held in any database) apply +first, followed by the global access directives. However, when dealing with +an access list, because the global access list is effectively appended +to each per-database list, if the resulting list is non-empty then the +access list will end with an implicit {{EX:access to * by * none}} directive. +If there are no access directives applicable to a backend, then a default +read is used. + +Within this +priority, access directives are examined in the order in which they +appear in the config file. Slapd stops with the first {{EX:<what>}} +selector that matches the entry and/or attribute. The corresponding +access directive is the one slapd will use to evaluate access. + +Next, slapd compares the entity requesting access to the {{EX:<who>}} +selectors within the access directive selected above in the order +in which they appear. It stops with the first {{EX:<who>}} selector +that matches the requester. This determines the access the entity +requesting access has to the entry and/or attribute. + +Finally, slapd compares the access granted in the selected +{{EX:<access>}} clause to the access requested by the client. If +it allows greater or equal access, access is granted. Otherwise, +access is denied. + +The order of evaluation of access directives makes their placement +in the configuration file important. If one access directive is +more specific than another in terms of the entries it selects, it +should appear first in the config file. Similarly, if one {{EX:<who>}} +selector is more specific than another it should come first in the +access directive. The access control examples given below should +help make this clear. + + + +H3: Access Control Examples + +The access control facility described above is quite powerful. This +section shows some examples of its use for descriptive purposes. + +A simple example: + +> access to * by * read + +This access directive grants read access to everyone. + +> access to * +> by self write +> by anonymous auth +> by * read + +This directive allows the user to modify their entry, allows anonymous +to authenticate against these entries, and allows all others to +read these entries. Note that only the first {{EX:by <who>}} clause +which matches applies. Hence, the anonymous users are granted +{{EX:auth}}, not {{EX:read}}. The last clause could just as well +have been "{{EX:by users read}}". + +It is often desirable to restrict operations based upon the level +of protection in place. The following shows how security strength +factors (SSF) can be used. + +> access to * +> by ssf=128 self write +> by ssf=64 anonymous auth +> by ssf=64 users read + +This directive allows users to modify their own entries if security +protections have of strength 128 or better have been established, +allows authentication access to anonymous users, and read access +when 64 or better security protections have been established. If +client has not establish sufficient security protections, the +implicit {{EX:by * none}} clause would be applied. + +The following example shows the use of a style specifiers to select +the entries by DN in two access directives where ordering is +significant. + +> access to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" +> by * search +> access to dn.children="dc=com" +> by * read + +Read access is granted to entries under the {{EX:dc=com}} subtree, +except for those entries under the {{EX:dc=example,dc=com}} subtree, +to which search access is granted. No access is granted to +{{EX:dc=com}} as neither access directive matches this DN. If the +order of these access directives was reversed, the trailing directive +would never be reached, since all entries under {{EX:dc=example,dc=com}} +are also under {{EX:dc=com}} entries. + +Also note that if no {{EX:access to}} directive matches or no {{EX:by +<who>}} clause, {{B:access is denied}}. That is, every {{EX:access +to}} directive ends with an implicit {{EX:by * none}} clause. When dealing +with an access list, because the global access list is effectively appended +to each per-database list, if the resulting list is non-empty then the access +list will end with an implicit {{EX:access to * by * none}} directive. If +there are no access directives applicable to a backend, then a default read is +used. + +The next example again shows the importance of ordering, both of +the access directives and the {{EX:by <who>}} clauses. It also +shows the use of an attribute selector to grant access to a specific +attribute and various {{EX:<who>}} selectors. + +> access to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" attrs=homePhone +> by self write +> by dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" search +> by peername.regex=IP=10\..+ read +> access to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" +> by self write +> by dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" search +> by anonymous auth + +This example applies to entries in the "{{EX:dc=example,dc=com}}" +subtree. To all attributes except {{EX:homePhone}}, an entry can +write to itself, entries under {{EX:example.com}} entries can search +by them, anybody else has no access (implicit {{EX:by * none}}) +excepting for authentication/authorization (which is always done +anonymously). The {{EX:homePhone}} attribute is writable by the +entry, searchable by entries under {{EX:example.com}}, readable by +clients connecting from network 10, and otherwise not readable +(implicit {{EX:by * none}}). All other access is denied by the +implicit {{EX:access to * by * none}}. + +Sometimes it is useful to permit a particular DN to add or +remove itself from an attribute. For example, if you would like to +create a group and allow people to add and remove only +their own DN from the member attribute, you could accomplish +it with an access directive like this: + +> access to attrs=member,entry +> by dnattr=member selfwrite + +The dnattr {{EX:<who>}} selector says that the access applies to +entries listed in the {{EX:member}} attribute. The {{EX:selfwrite}} access +selector says that such members can only add or delete their +own DN from the attribute, not other values. The addition of +the entry attribute is required because access to the entry is +required to access any of the entry's attributes. + +!if 0 +For more details on how to use the {{EX:access}} directive, +consult the {{Advanced Access Control}} chapter. +!endif + + +H2: Access Control via Dynamic Configuration + +Access to slapd entries and attributes is controlled by the +olcAccess attribute, whose values are a sequence of access directives. +The general form of the olcAccess configuration is: + +> olcAccess: <access directive> +> <access directive> ::= to <what> +> [by <who> [<access>] [<control>] ]+ +> <what> ::= * | +> [dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex> | dn.<scope-style>=<DN>] +> [filter=<ldapfilter>] [attrs=<attrlist>] +> <basic-style> ::= regex | exact +> <scope-style> ::= base | one | subtree | children +> <attrlist> ::= <attr> [val[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] | <attr> , <attrlist> +> <attr> ::= <attrname> | entry | children +> <who> ::= * | [anonymous | users | self +> | dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex> | dn.<scope-style>=<DN>] +> [dnattr=<attrname>] +> [group[/<objectclass>[/<attrname>][.<basic-style>]]=<regex>] +> [peername[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] +> [sockname[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] +> [domain[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] +> [sockurl[.<basic-style>]=<regex>] +> [set=<setspec>] +> [aci=<attrname>] +> <access> ::= [self]{<level>|<priv>} +> <level> ::= none | disclose | auth | compare | search | read | write | manage +> <priv> ::= {=|+|-}{m|w|r|s|c|x|d|0}+ +> <control> ::= [stop | continue | break] + +where the <what> part selects the entries and/or attributes to which +the access applies, the {{EX:<who>}} part specifies which entities +are granted access, and the {{EX:<access>}} part specifies the +access granted. Multiple {{EX:<who> <access> <control>}} triplets +are supported, allowing many entities to be granted different access +to the same set of entries and attributes. Not all of these access +control options are described here; for more details see the +{{slapd.access}}(5) man page. + + +H3: What to control access to + +The <what> part of an access specification determines the entries +and attributes to which the access control applies. Entries are +commonly selected in two ways: by DN and by filter. The following +qualifiers select entries by DN: + +> to * +> to dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex> +> to dn.<scope-style>=<DN> + +The first form is used to select all entries. The second form may +be used to select entries by matching a regular expression against +the target entry's {{normalized DN}}. (The second form is not +discussed further in this document.) The third form is used to +select entries which are within the requested scope of DN. The +<DN> is a string representation of the Distinguished Name, as +described in {{REF:RFC4514}}. + +The scope can be either {{EX:base}}, {{EX:one}}, {{EX:subtree}}, +or {{EX:children}}. Where {{EX:base}} matches only the entry with +provided DN, {{EX:one}} matches the entries whose parent is the +provided DN, {{EX:subtree}} matches all entries in the subtree whose +root is the provided DN, and {{EX:children}} matches all entries +under the DN (but not the entry named by the DN). + +For example, if the directory contained entries named: + +> 0: o=suffix +> 1: cn=Manager,o=suffix +> 2: ou=people,o=suffix +> 3: uid=kdz,ou=people,o=suffix +> 4: cn=addresses,uid=kdz,ou=people,o=suffix +> 5: uid=hyc,ou=people,o=suffix + +\Then: +. {{EX:dn.base="ou=people,o=suffix"}} match 2; +. {{EX:dn.one="ou=people,o=suffix"}} match 3, and 5; +. {{EX:dn.subtree="ou=people,o=suffix"}} match 2, 3, 4, and 5; and +. {{EX:dn.children="ou=people,o=suffix"}} match 3, 4, and 5. + + +Entries may also be selected using a filter: + +> to filter=<ldap filter> + +where <ldap filter> is a string representation of an LDAP +search filter, as described in {{REF:RFC4515}}. For example: + +> to filter=(objectClass=person) + +Note that entries may be selected by both DN and filter by +including both qualifiers in the <what> clause. + +> to dn.one="ou=people,o=suffix" filter=(objectClass=person) + +Attributes within an entry are selected by including a comma-separated +list of attribute names in the <what> selector: + +> attrs=<attribute list> + +A specific value of an attribute is selected by using a single +attribute name and also using a value selector: + +> attrs=<attribute> val[.<style>]=<regex> + +There are two special {{pseudo}} attributes {{EX:entry}} and +{{EX:children}}. To read (and hence return) a target entry, the +subject must have {{EX:read}} access to the target's {{entry}} +attribute. To perform a search, the subject must have +{{EX:search}} access to the search base's {{entry}} attribute. +To add or delete an entry, the subject must have +{{EX:write}} access to the entry's {{EX:entry}} attribute AND must +have {{EX:write}} access to the entry's parent's {{EX:children}} +attribute. To rename an entry, the subject must have {{EX:write}} +access to entry's {{EX:entry}} attribute AND have {{EX:write}} +access to both the old parent's and new parent's {{EX:children}} +attributes. The complete examples at the end of this section should +help clear things up. + +Lastly, there is a special entry selector {{EX:"*"}} that is used to +select any entry. It is used when no other {{EX:<what>}} +selector has been provided. It's equivalent to "{{EX:dn=.*}}" + + +H3: Who to grant access to + +The <who> part identifies the entity or entities being granted +access. Note that access is granted to "entities" not "entries." +The following table summarizes entity specifiers: + +!block table; align=Center; coltags="EX,N"; \ + title="Table 5.3: Access Entity Specifiers" +Specifier|Entities +*|All, including anonymous and authenticated users +anonymous|Anonymous (non-authenticated) users +users|Authenticated users +self|User associated with target entry +dn[.<basic-style>]=<regex>|Users matching a regular expression +dn.<scope-style>=<DN>|Users within scope of a DN +!endblock + +The DN specifier behaves much like <what> clause DN specifiers. + +Other control factors are also supported. For example, a {{EX:<who>}} +can be restricted by an entry listed in a DN-valued attribute in +the entry to which the access applies: + +> dnattr=<dn-valued attribute name> + +The dnattr specification is used to give access to an entry +whose DN is listed in an attribute of the entry (e.g., give +access to a group entry to whoever is listed as the owner of +the group entry). + +Some factors may not be appropriate in all environments (or any). +For example, the domain factor relies on IP to domain name lookups. +As these can easily be spoofed, the domain factor should be avoided. + + +H3: The access to grant + +The kind of <access> granted can be one of the following: + +!block table; colaligns="LRL"; coltags="EX,EX,N"; align=Center; \ + title="Table 5.4: Access Levels" +Level Privileges Description +none =0 no access +disclose =d needed for information disclosure on error +auth =dx needed to authenticate (bind) +compare =cdx needed to compare +search =scdx needed to apply search filters +read =rscdx needed to read search results +write =wrscdx needed to modify/rename +manage =mwrscdx needed to manage +!endblock + +Each level implies all lower levels of access. So, for example, +granting someone {{EX:write}} access to an entry also grants them +{{EX:read}}, {{EX:search}}, {{EX:compare}}, {{EX:auth}} and +{{EX:disclose}} access. However, one may use the privileges specifier +to grant specific permissions. + + +H3: Access Control Evaluation + +When evaluating whether some requester should be given access to +an entry and/or attribute, slapd compares the entry and/or attribute +to the {{EX:<what>}} selectors given in the configuration. For +each entry, access controls provided in the database which holds +the entry (or the global access directives if not held in any database) apply +first, followed by the global access directives (which are held in +the {{EX:frontend}} database definition). However, when dealing with +an access list, because the global access list is effectively appended +to each per-database list, if the resulting list is non-empty then the +access list will end with an implicit {{EX:access to * by * none}} directive. +If there are no access directives applicable to a backend, then a default +read is used. + +Within this priority, +access directives are examined in the order in which they appear +in the configuration attribute. Slapd stops with the first +{{EX:<what>}} selector that matches the entry and/or attribute. The +corresponding access directive is the one slapd will use to evaluate +access. + +Next, slapd compares the entity requesting access to the {{EX:<who>}} +selectors within the access directive selected above in the order +in which they appear. It stops with the first {{EX:<who>}} selector +that matches the requester. This determines the access the entity +requesting access has to the entry and/or attribute. + +Finally, slapd compares the access granted in the selected +{{EX:<access>}} clause to the access requested by the client. If +it allows greater or equal access, access is granted. Otherwise, +access is denied. + +The order of evaluation of access directives makes their placement +in the configuration file important. If one access directive is +more specific than another in terms of the entries it selects, it +should appear first in the configuration. Similarly, if one {{EX:<who>}} +selector is more specific than another it should come first in the +access directive. The access control examples given below should +help make this clear. + + + +H3: Access Control Examples + +The access control facility described above is quite powerful. This +section shows some examples of its use for descriptive purposes. + +A simple example: + +> olcAccess: to * by * read + +This access directive grants read access to everyone. + +> olcAccess: to * +> by self write +> by anonymous auth +> by * read + +This directive allows the user to modify their entry, allows anonymous +to authenticate against these entries, and allows all others to +read these entries. Note that only the first {{EX:by <who>}} clause +which matches applies. Hence, the anonymous users are granted +{{EX:auth}}, not {{EX:read}}. The last clause could just as well +have been "{{EX:by users read}}". + +It is often desirable to restrict operations based upon the level +of protection in place. The following shows how security strength +factors (SSF) can be used. + +> olcAccess: to * +> by ssf=128 self write +> by ssf=64 anonymous auth +> by ssf=64 users read + +This directive allows users to modify their own entries if security +protections of strength 128 or better have been established, +allows authentication access to anonymous users, and read access +when strength 64 or better security protections have been established. If +the client has not establish sufficient security protections, the +implicit {{EX:by * none}} clause would be applied. + +The following example shows the use of style specifiers to select +the entries by DN in two access directives where ordering is +significant. + +> olcAccess: to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" +> by * search +> olcAccess: to dn.children="dc=com" +> by * read + +Read access is granted to entries under the {{EX:dc=com}} subtree, +except for those entries under the {{EX:dc=example,dc=com}} subtree, +to which search access is granted. No access is granted to +{{EX:dc=com}} as neither access directive matches this DN. If the +order of these access directives was reversed, the trailing directive +would never be reached, since all entries under {{EX:dc=example,dc=com}} +are also under {{EX:dc=com}} entries. + +Also note that if no {{EX:olcAccess: to}} directive matches or no {{EX:by +<who>}} clause, {{B:access is denied}}. When dealing with an access list, +because the global access list is effectively appended to each per-database +list, if the resulting list is non-empty then the access list will end with +an implicit {{EX:access to * by * none}} directive. If there are no access +directives applicable to a backend, then a default read is used. + +The next example again shows the importance of ordering, both of +the access directives and the {{EX:by <who>}} clauses. It also +shows the use of an attribute selector to grant access to a specific +attribute and various {{EX:<who>}} selectors. + +> olcAccess: to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" attrs=homePhone +> by self write +> by dn.children=dc=example,dc=com" search +> by peername.regex=IP=10\..+ read +> olcAccess: to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" +> by self write +> by dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" search +> by anonymous auth + +This example applies to entries in the "{{EX:dc=example,dc=com}}" +subtree. To all attributes except {{EX:homePhone}}, an entry can +write to itself, entries under {{EX:example.com}} entries can search +by them, anybody else has no access (implicit {{EX:by * none}}) +excepting for authentication/authorization (which is always done +anonymously). The {{EX:homePhone}} attribute is writable by the +entry, searchable by entries under {{EX:example.com}}, readable by +clients connecting from network 10, and otherwise not readable +(implicit {{EX:by * none}}). All other access is denied by the +implicit {{EX:access to * by * none}}. + +Sometimes it is useful to permit a particular DN to add or +remove itself from an attribute. For example, if you would like to +create a group and allow people to add and remove only +their own DN from the member attribute, you could accomplish +it with an access directive like this: + +> olcAccess: to attrs=member,entry +> by dnattr=member selfwrite + +The dnattr {{EX:<who>}} selector says that the access applies to +entries listed in the {{EX:member}} attribute. The {{EX:selfwrite}} access +selector says that such members can only add or delete their +own DN from the attribute, not other values. The addition of +the entry attribute is required because access to the entry is +required to access any of the entry's attributes. + + + +H3: Access Control Ordering + +Since the ordering of {{EX:olcAccess}} directives is essential to their +proper evaluation, but LDAP attributes normally do not preserve the +ordering of their values, OpenLDAP uses a custom schema extension to +maintain a fixed ordering of these values. This ordering is maintained +by prepending a {{EX:"{X}"}} numeric index to each value, similarly to +the approach used for ordering the configuration entries. These index +tags are maintained automatically by slapd and do not need to be specified +when originally defining the values. For example, when you create the +settings + +> olcAccess: to attrs=member,entry +> by dnattr=member selfwrite +> olcAccess: to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" +> by * search +> olcAccess: to dn.children="dc=com" +> by * read + +when you read them back using slapcat or ldapsearch they will contain + +> olcAccess: {0}to attrs=member,entry +> by dnattr=member selfwrite +> olcAccess: {1}to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" +> by * search +> olcAccess: {2}to dn.children="dc=com" +> by * read + +The numeric index may be used to specify a particular value to change +when using ldapmodify to edit the access rules. This index can be used +instead of (or in addition to) the actual access value. Using this +numeric index is very helpful when multiple access rules are being managed. + +For example, if we needed to change the second rule above to grant +write access instead of search, we could try this LDIF: + +> changetype: modify +> delete: olcAccess +> olcAccess: to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" by * search +> - +> add: olcAccess +> olcAccess: to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" by * write +> - + +But this example {{B:will not}} guarantee that the existing values remain in +their original order, so it will most likely yield a broken security +configuration. Instead, the numeric index should be used: + +> changetype: modify +> delete: olcAccess +> olcAccess: {1} +> - +> add: olcAccess +> olcAccess: {1}to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" by * write +> - + +This example deletes whatever rule is in value #1 of the {{EX:olcAccess}} +attribute (regardless of its value) and adds a new value that is +explicitly inserted as value #1. The result will be + +> olcAccess: {0}to attrs=member,entry +> by dnattr=member selfwrite +> olcAccess: {1}to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" +> by * write +> olcAccess: {2}to dn.children="dc=com" +> by * read + +which is exactly what was intended. + +!if 0 +For more details on how to use the {{EX:access}} directive, +consult the {{Advanced Access Control}} chapter. +!endif + + +H2: Access Control Common Examples + +H3: Basic ACLs + +Generally one should start with some basic ACLs such as: + +> access to attrs=userPassword +> by self =xw +> by anonymous auth +> by * none +> +> +> access to * +> by self write +> by users read +> by * none + +The first ACL allows users to update (but not read) their passwords, anonymous +users to authenticate against this attribute, and (implicitly) denying all +access to others. + +The second ACL allows users full access to their entry, authenticated users read +access to anything, and (implicitly) denying all access to others (in this case, +anonymous users). + + +H3: Matching Anonymous and Authenticated users + +An anonymous user has a empty DN. While the {{dn.exact=""}} or {{dn.regex="^$"}} + could be used, {{slapd}}(8)) offers an anonymous shorthand which should be +used instead. + +> access to * +> by anonymous none +> by * read + +denies all access to anonymous users while granting others read. + +Authenticated users have a subject DN. While {{dn.regex=".+"}} will match any +authenticated user, OpenLDAP provides the users short hand which should be used +instead. + +> access to * +> by users read +> by * none + +This ACL grants read permissions to authenticated users while denying others +(i.e.: anonymous users). + + +H3: Controlling rootdn access + +You could specify the {{rootdn}} in {{slapd.conf}}(5) or {{slapd.d}} without +specifying a {{rootpw}}. Then you have to add an actual directory entry with +the same dn, e.g.: + +> dn: cn=Manager,o=MyOrganization +> cn: Manager +> sn: Manager +> objectClass: person +> objectClass: top +> userPassword: {SSHA}someSSHAdata + +Then binding as the {{rootdn}} will require a regular bind to that DN, which +in turn requires auth access to that entry's DN and {{userPassword}}, and this +can be restricted via ACLs. E.g.: + +> access to dn.base="cn=Manager,o=MyOrganization" +> by peername.regex=127\.0\.0\.1 auth +> by peername.regex=192\.168\.0\..* auth +> by users none +> by * none + +The ACLs above will only allow binding using rootdn from localhost and +192.168.0.0/24. + + +H3: Managing access with Groups + +There are a few ways to do this. One approach is illustrated here. Consider the +following DIT layout: + +> +-dc=example,dc=com +> +---cn=administrators,dc=example,dc=com +> +---cn=fred blogs,dc=example,dc=com + +and the following group object (in LDIF format): + +> dn: cn=administrators,dc=example,dc=com +> cn: administrators of this region +> objectclass: groupOfNames (important for the group acl feature) +> member: cn=fred blogs,dc=example,dc=com +> member: cn=somebody else,dc=example,dc=com + +One can then grant access to the members of this this group by adding appropriate +{{by group}} clause to an access directive in {{slapd.conf}}(5). For instance, + +> access to dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" +> by self write +> by group.exact="cn=Administrators,dc=example,dc=com" write +> by * auth + +Like by {{dn}} clauses, one can also use {{expand}} to expand the group name +based upon the regular expression matching of the target, that is, the to {{dn.regex}}). +For instance, + +> access to dn.regex="(.+,)?ou=People,(dc=[^,]+,dc=[^,]+)$" +> attrs=children,entry,uid +> by group.expand="cn=Managers,$2" write +> by users read +> by * auth + + +The above illustration assumed that the group members are to be found in the +{{member}} attribute type of the {{groupOfNames}} object class. If you need to +use a different group object and/or a different attribute type then use the +following {{slapd.conf}}(5) (abbreviated) syntax: + +> access to <what> +> by group/<objectclass>/<attributename>=<DN> <access> + +For example: + +> access to * +> by group/organizationalRole/roleOccupant="cn=Administrator,dc=example,dc=com" write + +In this case, we have an ObjectClass {{organizationalRole}} which contains the +administrator DN's in the {{roleOccupant}} attribute. For instance: + +> dn: cn=Administrator,dc=example,dc=com +> cn: Administrator +> objectclass: organizationalRole +> roleOccupant: cn=Jane Doe,dc=example,dc=com + +Note: the specified member attribute type MUST be of DN or {{NameAndOptionalUID}} syntax, +and the specified object class SHOULD allow the attribute type. + +Dynamic Groups are also supported in Access Control. Please see {{slapo-dynlist}}(5) +and the {{SECT:Dynamic Lists}} overlay section. + + +H3: Granting access to a subset of attributes + +You can grant access to a set of attributes by specifying a list of attribute names +in the ACL {{to}} clause. To be useful, you also need to grant access to the +{{entry}} itself. Also note how {{children}} controls the ability to add, delete, +and rename entries. + +> # mail: self may write, authenticated users may read +> access to attrs=mail +> by self write +> by users read +> by * none +> +> # cn, sn: self my write, all may read +> access to attrs=cn,sn +> by self write +> by * read +> +> # immediate children: only self can add/delete entries under this entry +> access to attrs=children +> by self write +> +> # entry itself: self may write, all may read +> access to attrs=entry +> by self write +> by * read +> +> # other attributes: self may write, others have no access +> access to * +> by self write +> by * none + +ObjectClass names may also be specified in this list, which will affect +all the attributes that are required and/or allowed by that {{objectClass}}. +Actually, names in {{attrlist}} that are prefixed by {{@}} are directly treated +as objectClass names. A name prefixed by {{!}} is also treated as an objectClass, +but in this case the access rule affects the attributes that are not required +nor allowed by that {{objectClass}}. + + +H3: Allowing a user write to all entries below theirs + +For a setup where a user can write to its own record and to all of its children: + +> access to dn.regex="(.+,)?(uid=[^,]+,o=Company)$" +> by dn.exact,expand="$2" write +> by anonymous auth + +(Add more examples for above) + + +H3: Allowing entry creation + +Let's say, you have it like this: + +> o=<basedn> +> ou=domains +> associatedDomain=<somedomain> +> ou=users +> uid=<someuserid> +> uid=<someotheruserid> +> ou=addressbooks +> uid=<someuserid> +> cn=<someone> +> cn=<someoneelse> + +and, for another domain <someotherdomain>: + +> o=<basedn> +> ou=domains +> associatedDomain=<someotherdomain> +> ou=users +> uid=<someuserid> +> uid=<someotheruserid> +> ou=addressbooks +> uid=<someotheruserid> +> cn=<someone> +> cn=<someoneelse> + +then, if you wanted user {{uid=<someuserid>}} to {{B:ONLY}} create an entry +for its own thing, you could write an ACL like this: + +> # this rule lets users of "associatedDomain=<matcheddomain>" +> # write under "ou=addressbook,associatedDomain=<matcheddomain>,ou=domains,o=<basedn>", +> # i.e. a user can write ANY entry below its domain's address book; +> # this permission is necessary, but not sufficient, the next +> # will restrict this permission further +> +> +> access to dn.regex="^ou=addressbook,associatedDomain=([^,]+),ou=domains,o=<basedn>$" attrs=children +> by dn.regex="^uid=([^,]+),ou=users,associatedDomain=$1,ou=domains,o=<basedn>$$" write +> by * none +> +> +> # Note that above the "by" clause needs a "regex" style to make sure +> # it expands to a DN that starts with a "uid=<someuserid>" pattern +> # while substituting the associatedDomain submatch from the "what" clause. +> +> +> # This rule lets a user with "uid=<matcheduid>" of "<associatedDomain=matcheddomain>" +> # write (i.e. add, modify, delete) the entry whose DN is exactly +> # "uid=<matcheduid>,ou=addressbook,associatedDomain=<matcheddomain>,ou=domains,o=<basedn>" +> # and ANY entry as subtree of it +> +> +> access to dn.regex="^(.+,)?uid=([^,]+),ou=addressbook,associatedDomain=([^,]+),ou=domains,o=<basedn>$" +> by dn.exact,expand="uid=$2,ou=users,associatedDomain=$3,ou=domains,o=<basedn>" write +> by * none +> +> +> # Note that above the "by" clause uses the "exact" style with the "expand" +> # modifier because now the whole pattern can be rebuilt by means of the +> # submatches from the "what" clause, so a "regex" compilation and evaluation +> # is no longer required. + + +H3: Tips for using regular expressions in Access Control + +Always use {{dn.regex=<pattern>}} when you intend to use regular expression +matching. {{dn=<pattern>}} alone defaults to {{dn.exact<pattern>}}. + +Use {{(.+)}} instead of {{(.*)}} when you want at least one char to be matched. +{{(.*)}} matches the empty string as well. + +Don't use regular expressions for matches that can be done otherwise in a safer +and cheaper manner. Examples: + +> dn.regex=".*dc=example,dc=com" + +is unsafe and expensive: + + * unsafe because any string containing {{dc=example,dc=com }}will match, +not only those that end with the desired pattern; use {{.*dc=example,dc=com$}} instead. + * unsafe also because it would allow any {{attributeType}} ending with {{dc}} + as naming attribute for the first RDN in the string, e.g. a custom attributeType +{{mydc}} would match as well. If you really need a regular expression that allows +just {{dc=example,dc=com}} or any of its subtrees, use {{^(.+,)?dc=example,dc=com$}}, +which means: anything to the left of dc=..., if any (the question mark after the +pattern within brackets), must end with a comma; + * expensive because if you don't need submatches, you could use scoping styles, e.g. + +> dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" + +to include {{dc=example,dc=com}} in the matching patterns, + +> dn.children="dc=example,dc=com" + +to exclude {{dc=example,dc=com}} from the matching patterns, or + +> dn.onelevel="dc=example,dc=com" + +to allow exactly one sublevel matches only. + +Always use {{^}} and {{$}} in regexes, whenever appropriate, because +{{ou=(.+),ou=(.+),ou=addressbooks,o=basedn}} will match +{{something=bla,ou=xxx,ou=yyy,ou=addressbooks,o=basedn,ou=addressbooks,o=basedn,dc=some,dc=org}} + +Always use {{([^,]+)}} to indicate exactly one RDN, because {{(.+)}} can +include any number of RDNs; e.g. {{ou=(.+),dc=example,dc=com}} will match +{{ou=My,o=Org,dc=example,dc=com}}, which might not be what you want. + +Never add the rootdn to the by clauses. ACLs are not even processed for operations +performed with rootdn identity (otherwise there would be no reason to define a +rootdn at all). + +Use shorthands. The user directive matches authenticated users and the anonymous +directive matches anonymous users. + +Don't use the {{dn.regex}} form for <by> clauses if all you need is scoping +and/or substring replacement; use scoping styles (e.g. {{exact}}, {{onelevel}}, +{{children}} or {{subtree}}) and the style modifier expand to cause substring expansion. + +For instance, + +> access to dn.regex=".+,dc=([^,]+),dc=([^,]+)$" +> by dn.regex="^[^,],ou=Admin,dc=$1,dc=$2$$" write + +although correct, can be safely and efficiently replaced by + +> access to dn.regex=".+,(dc=[^,]+,dc=[^,]+)$" +> by dn.onelevel,expand="ou=Admin,$1" write + +where the regex in the {{<what>}} clause is more compact, and the one in the {{<by>}} +clause is replaced by a much more efficient scoping style of onelevel with substring expansion. + + +H3: Granting and Denying access based on security strength factors (ssf) + +You can restrict access based on the security strength factor (SSF) + +> access to dn="cn=example,cn=edu" +> by * ssf=256 read + +0 (zero) implies no protection, +1 implies integrity protection only, +56 DES or other weak ciphers, +112 triple DES and other strong ciphers, +128 RC4, Blowfish and other modern strong ciphers. + +Other possibilities: + +> transport_ssf=<n> +> tls_ssf=<n> +> sasl_ssf=<n> + +256 is recommended. + +See {{slapd.conf}}(5) for information on {{ssf}}. + + +H3: When things aren't working as expected + +Consider this example: + +> access to * +> by anonymous auth +> +> access to * +> by self write +> +> access to * +> by users read + +You may think this will allow any user to login, to read everything and change +his own data if he is logged in. But in this example only the login works and +an ldapsearch returns no data. The Problem is that SLAPD goes through its access +config line by line and stops as soon as it finds a match in the part of the +access rule.(here: {{to *}}) + +To get what we wanted the file has to read: + +> access to * +> by anonymous auth +> by self write +> by users read + +The general rule is: "special access rules first, generic access rules last" + +See also {{slapd.access}}(5), loglevel 128 and {{slapacl}}(8) for debugging +information. + + +H2: Sets - Granting rights based on relationships + +Sets are best illustrated via examples. The following sections will present +a few set ACL examples in order to facilitate their understanding. + +(Sets in Access Controls FAQ Entry: {{URL:http://www.openldap.org/faq/data/cache/1133.html}}) + +Note: Sets are considered experimental. + + +H3: Groups of Groups + +The OpenLDAP ACL for groups doesn't expand groups within groups, which are +groups that have another group as a member. For example: + +> dn: cn=sudoadm,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com +> cn: sudoadm +> objectClass: groupOfNames +> member: uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com +> member: cn=accountadm,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com +> +> dn: cn=accountadm,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com +> cn: accountadm +> objectClass: groupOfNames +> member: uid=mary,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com + +If we use standard group ACLs with the above entries and allow members of the +{{F:sudoadm}} group to write somewhere, {{F:mary}} won't be included: + +> access to dn.subtree="ou=sudoers,dc=example,dc=com" +> by group.exact="cn=sudoadm,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com" write +> by * read + +With sets we can make the ACL be recursive and consider group within groups. So +for each member that is a group, it is further expanded: + +> access to dn.subtree="ou=sudoers,dc=example,dc=com" +> by set="[cn=sudoadm,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com]/member* & user" write +> by * read + +This set ACL means: take the {{F:cn=sudoadm}} DN, check its {{F:member}} +attribute(s) (where the "{{F:*}}" means recursively) and intersect the result +with the authenticated user's DN. If the result is non-empty, the ACL is +considered a match and write access is granted. + +The following drawing explains how this set is built: +!import "set-recursivegroup.png"; align="center"; title="Building a recursive group" +FT[align="Center"] Figure X.Y: Populating a recursive group set + +First we get the {{F:uid=john}} DN. This entry doesn't have a {{F:member}} +attribute, so the expansion stops here. Now we get to {{F:cn=accountadm}}. +This one does have a {{F:member}} attribute, which is {{F:uid=mary}}. The +{{F:uid=mary}} entry, however, doesn't have member, so we stop here again. The +end comparison is: + +> {"uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com","uid=mary,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"} & user + +If the authenticated user's DN is any one of those two, write access is +granted. So this set will include {{F:mary}} in the {{F:sudoadm}} group and she +will be allowed the write access. + +H3: Group ACLs without DN syntax + +The traditional group ACLs, and even the previous example about recursive groups, require +that the members are specified as DNs instead of just usernames. + +With sets, however, it's also possible to use simple names in group ACLs, as this example will +show. + +Let's say we want to allow members of the {{F:sudoadm}} group to write to the +{{F:ou=suders}} branch of our tree. But our group definition now is using {{F:memberUid}} for +the group members: + +> dn: cn=sudoadm,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com +> cn: sudoadm +> objectClass: posixGroup +> gidNumber: 1000 +> memberUid: john + +With this type of group, we can't use group ACLs. But with a set ACL we can +grant the desired access: + +> access to dn.subtree="ou=sudoers,dc=example,dc=com" +> by set="[cn=sudoadm,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com]/memberUid & user/uid" write +> by * read + +We use a simple intersection where we compare the {{F:uid}} attribute +of the connecting (and authenticated) user with the {{F:memberUid}} attributes +of the group. If they match, the intersection is non-empty and the ACL will +grant write access. + +This drawing illustrates this set when the connecting user is authenticated as +{{F:uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com}}: +!import "set-memberUid.png"; align="center"; title="Sets with memberUid" +FT[align="Center"] Figure X.Y: Sets with {{F:memberUid}} + +In this case, it's a match. If it were {{F:mary}} authenticating, however, she +would be denied write access to {{F:ou=sudoers}} because her {{F:uid}} +attribute is not listed in the group's {{F:memberUid}}. + +H3: Following references + +We will now show a quite powerful example of what can be done with sets. This +example tends to make OpenLDAP administrators smile after they have understood +it and its implications. + +Let's start with an user entry: + +> dn: uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com +> uid: john +> objectClass: inetOrgPerson +> givenName: John +> sn: Smith +> cn: john +> manager: uid=mary,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com + +Writing an ACL to allow the manager to update some attributes is quite simple +using sets: + +> access to dn.exact="uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" +> attrs=carLicense,homePhone,mobile,pager,telephoneNumber +> by self write +> by set="this/manager & user" write +> by * read + +In that set, {{F:this}} expands to the entry being accessed, so that +{{F:this/manager}} expands to {{F:uid=mary,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com}} when +john's entry is accessed. If the manager herself is accessing John's entry, +the ACL will match and write access to those attributes will be granted. + +So far, this same behavior can be obtained with the {{F:dnattr}} keyword. With +sets, however, we can further enhance this ACL. Let's say we want to allow the +secretary of the manager to also update these attributes. This is how we do it: + +> access to dn.exact="uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" +> attrs=carLicense,homePhone,mobile,pager,telephoneNumber +> by self write +> by set="this/manager & user" write +> by set="this/manager/secretary & user" write +> by * read + +Now we need a picture to help explain what is happening here (entries shortened +for clarity): + +!import "set-following-references.png"; align="center"; title="Sets jumping through entries" +FT[align="Center"] Figure X.Y: Sets jumping through entries + +In this example, Jane is the secretary of Mary, which is the manager of John. +This whole relationship is defined with the {{F:manager}} and {{F:secretary}} +attributes, which are both of the distinguishedName syntax (i.e., full DNs). +So, when the {{F:uid=john}} entry is being accessed, the +{{F:this/manager/secretary}} set becomes +{{F:{"uid=jane,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com"}}} (follow the references in the +picture): + +> this = [uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com] +> this/manager = \ +> [uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com]/manager = uid=mary,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com +> this/manager/secretary = \ +> [uid=mary,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com]/secretary = uid=jane,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com + +The end result is that when Jane accesses John's entry, she will be granted +write access to the specified attributes. Better yet, this will happen to any +entry she accesses which has Mary as the manager. + +This is all cool and nice, but perhaps gives too much power to secretaries. Maybe we need to further +restrict it. For example, let's only allow executive secretaries to have this power: + +> access to dn.exact="uid=john,ou=people,dc=example,dc=com" +> attrs=carLicense,homePhone,mobile,pager,telephoneNumber +> by self write +> by set="this/manager & user" write +> by set="this/manager/secretary & +> [cn=executive,ou=group,dc=example,dc=com]/member* & +> user" write +> by * read + +It's almost the same ACL as before, but we now also require that the connecting user be a member +of the (possibly nested) {{F:cn=executive}} group. + + |