idmap_ad
8
Samba
System Administration tools
&doc.version;
idmap_ad
Samba's idmap_ad Backend for Winbind
DESCRIPTION
The idmap_ad plugin provides a way for Winbind to read
id mappings from an AD server that uses RFC2307/SFU schema
extensions. This module implements only the "idmap"
API, and is READONLY. Mappings must be provided in advance
by the administrator by adding the uidNumber attributes for
users and gidNumber attributes for groups in the AD. Winbind
will only map users that have a uidNumber and whose primary
group have a gidNumber attribute set. It is however
recommended that all groups in use have gidNumber attributes
assigned, otherwise they are not working.
Currently, the ad backend
does not work as the default idmap backend, but one has
to configure it separately for each domain for which one wants
to use it, using disjoint ranges. One usually needs to configure
a writeable default idmap range, using for example the
tdb or ldap
backend, in order to be able to map the BUILTIN sids and
possibly other trusted domains. The writeable default config
is also needed in order to be able to create group mappings.
This catch-all default idmap configuration should have a range
that is disjoint from any explicitly configured domain with
idmap backend ad. See the example below.
IDMAP OPTIONS
range = low - high
Defines the available matching UID and GID range for which the
backend is authoritative. Note that the range acts as a filter.
If specified any UID or GID stored in AD that fall outside the
range is ignored and the corresponding map is discarded.
It is intended as a way to avoid accidental UID/GID overlaps
between local and remotely defined IDs.
schema_mode = <rfc2307 | sfu | sfu20>
Defines the schema that idmap_ad should use when querying
Active Directory regarding user and group information.
This can be either the RFC2307 schema support included
in Windows Server 2003 R2 and newer or the Service for
Unix (SFU) schema for versions before Windows Server
2003 R2.
For SFU 3.0 or 3.5 please choose "sfu", for SFU 2.0
please choose "sfu20".
Please note that the behavior of primary group membership is
controlled by the unix_primary_group option.
Default: rfc2307
unix_primary_group = yes/no
Defines whether the user's primary group is fetched from the SFU
attributes or the AD primary group. If set to
yes the primary group membership is fetched
from the LDAP attributes (gidNumber).
If set to no the primary group membership is
calculated via the "primaryGroupID" LDAP attribute.
Default: no
unix_nss_info = yes/no
If set to yes winbind will retrieve the login
shell and home directory from the LDAP attributes. If set to
no or the AD LDAP entry lacks the SFU
attributes the options template shell and
template homedir are used.
Default: no
all_groupmem = yes/no
If set to yes winbind will retrieve all
group members for getgrnam(3), getgrgid(3) and getgrent(3) calls,
including those with missing uidNumber.
Default: no
deny ous
This parameter is a list of OUs from
which objects will not be mapped via the ad idmap
module. If deny ous is set but
allow ous is not set, every
object outside the OUs listed in deny
ous is allowed.
Default: none
allow ous
This parameter is a list of OUs from
which objects will be mapped via the ad idmap
module. If allow ous is set but
deny ous is not set, every
object outside the OUs allow
ous is denied.
If both allow ous and
deny ous are set,
deny ous is evaluated first,
then allow ous is looked at. If
an AD object matches neither, it is denied.
Default: none
EXAMPLES
The following example shows how to retrieve idmappings from our principal and
trusted AD domains. If trusted domains are present id conflicts must be
resolved beforehand, there is no
guarantee on the order conflicting mappings would be resolved at this point.
This example also shows how to leave a small non conflicting range for local
id allocation that may be used in internal backends like BUILTIN.
[global]
workgroup = CORP
idmap config * : backend = tdb
idmap config * : range = 1000000-1999999
idmap config CORP : backend = ad
idmap config CORP : range = 1000-999999
AUTHOR
The original Samba software and related utilities
were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed
by the Samba Team as an Open Source project similar
to the way the Linux kernel is developed.