SSSD Manual pages
sss-certmap
5
File Formats and Conventions
sss-certmap
SSSD Certificate Matching and Mapping Rules
DESCRIPTION
The manual page describes the rules which can be used by SSSD and
other components to match X.509 certificates and map them to
accounts.
Each rule has four components, a priority
, a
matching rule
, a mapping rule
and a
domain list
. All components are optional. A missing
priority
will add the rule with the lowest priority.
The default matching rule
will match certificates with
the digitalSignature key usage and clientAuth extended key usage. If
the mapping rule
is empty the certificates will be
searched in the userCertificate attribute as DER encoded binary. If
no domains are given only the local domain will be searched.
To allow extensions or completely different style of rule the
mapping
and matching rules
can
contain a prefix separated with a ':' from the main part of the
rule. The prefix may only contain upper-case ASCII letters and
numbers. If the prefix is omitted the default type will be used
which is 'KRB5' for the matching rules and 'LDAP' for the mapping
rules.
The 'sssctl' utility provides the 'cert-eval-rule' command to check
if a given certificate matches a matching rules and how the output
of a mapping rule would look like.
RULE COMPONENTS
PRIORITY
The rules are processed by priority while the number '0' (zero)
indicates the highest priority. The higher the number the lower is
the priority. A missing value indicates the lowest priority. The
rules processing is stopped when a matched rule is found and no
further rules are checked.
Internally the priority is treated as unsigned 32bit integer, using
a priority value larger than 4294967295 will cause an error.
If multiple rules have the same priority and only one of the related
matching rules applies, this rule will be chosen. If there are
multiple rules with the same priority which matches, one is chosen
but which one is undefined. To avoid this undefined behavior either
use different priorities or make the matching rules more specific
e.g. by using distinct <ISSUER> patterns.
MATCHING RULE
The matching rule is used to select a certificate to which the
mapping rule should be applied. It uses a system similar to the one
used by pkinit_cert_match
option of MIT Kerberos. It
consists of a keyword enclosed by '<' and '>' which identified
a certain part of the certificate and a pattern which should be
found for the rule to match. Multiple keyword pattern pairs can be
either joined with '&&' (and) or '||' (or).
Given the similarity to MIT Kerberos the type prefix for this rule
is 'KRB5'. But 'KRB5' will also be the default for matching
rules
so that "<SUBJECT>.*,DC=MY,DC=DOMAIN" and
"KRB5:<SUBJECT>.*,DC=MY,DC=DOMAIN" are equivalent.
The available options are:
<SUBJECT>regular-expression
With this a part or the whole subject name of the
certificate can be matched. For the matching POSIX
Extended Regular Expression syntax is used, see regex(7)
for details.
For the matching the subject name stored in the
certificate in DER encoded ASN.1 is converted into a
string according to RFC 4514. This means the most
specific name component comes first. Please note that
not all possible attribute names are covered by RFC
4514. The names included are 'CN', 'L', 'ST', 'O',
'OU', 'C', 'STREET', 'DC' and 'UID'. Other attribute
names might be shown differently on different platform
and by different tools. To avoid confusion those
attribute names are best not used or covered by a
suitable regular-expression.
Example: <SUBJECT>.*,DC=MY,DC=DOMAIN
Please note that the characters "^.[$()|*+?{\" have a
special meaning in regular expressions and must be
escaped with the help of the '\' character so that they
are matched as ordinary characters.
Example: <SUBJECT>^CN=.* \(Admin\),DC=MY,DC=DOMAIN$
<ISSUER>regular-expression
With this a part or the whole issuer name of the
certificate can be matched. All comments for
<SUBJECT> apply her as well.
Example: <ISSUER>^CN=My-CA,DC=MY,DC=DOMAIN$
<KU>key-usage
This option can be used to specify which key usage
values the certificate should have. The following values
can be used in a comma separated list:
digitalSignature
nonRepudiation
keyEncipherment
dataEncipherment
keyAgreement
keyCertSign
cRLSign
encipherOnly
decipherOnly
A numerical value in the range of a 32bit unsigned
integer can be used as well to cover special use cases.
Example: <KU>digitalSignature,keyEncipherment
<EKU>extended-key-usage
This option can be used to specify which extended key
usage the certificate should have. The following value
can be used in a comma separated list:
serverAuth
clientAuth
codeSigning
emailProtection
timeStamping
OCSPSigning
KPClientAuth
pkinit
msScLogin
Extended key usages which are not listed above can be
specified with their OID in dotted-decimal notation.
Example: <EKU>clientAuth,1.3.6.1.5.2.3.4
<SAN>regular-expression
To be compatible with the usage of MIT Kerberos this
option will match the Kerberos principals in the PKINIT
or AD NT Principal SAN as <SAN:Principal> does.
Example: <SAN>.*@MY\.REALM
<SAN:Principal>regular-expression
Match the Kerberos principals in the PKINIT or AD NT
Principal SAN.
Example: <SAN:Principal>.*@MY\.REALM
<SAN:ntPrincipalName>regular-expression
Match the Kerberos principals from the AD NT Principal
SAN.
Example: <SAN:ntPrincipalName>.*@MY.AD.REALM
<SAN:pkinit>regular-expression
Match the Kerberos principals from the PKINIT SAN.
Example: <SAN:ntPrincipalName>.*@MY\.PKINIT\.REALM
<SAN:dotted-decimal-oid>regular-expression
Take the value of the otherName SAN component given by
the OID in dotted-decimal notation, interpret it as
string and try to match it against the regular
expression.
Example: <SAN:1.2.3.4>test
<SAN:otherName>base64-string
Do a binary match with the base64 encoded blob against
all otherName SAN components. With this option it is
possible to match against custom otherName components
with special encodings which could not be treated as
strings.
Example: <SAN:otherName>MTIz
<SAN:rfc822Name>regular-expression
Match the value of the rfc822Name SAN.
Example: <SAN:rfc822Name>.*@email\.domain
<SAN:dNSName>regular-expression
Match the value of the dNSName SAN.
Example: <SAN:dNSName>.*\.my\.dns\.domain
<SAN:x400Address>base64-string
Binary match the value of the x400Address SAN.
Example: <SAN:x400Address>MTIz
<SAN:directoryName>regular-expression
Match the value of the directoryName SAN. The same
comments as given for <ISSUER> and <SUBJECT>
apply here as well.
Example: <SAN:directoryName>.*,DC=com
<SAN:ediPartyName>base64-string
Binary match the value of the ediPartyName SAN.
Example: <SAN:ediPartyName>MTIz
<SAN:uniformResourceIdentifier>regular-expression
Match the value of the uniformResourceIdentifier SAN.
Example: <SAN:uniformResourceIdentifier>URN:.*
<SAN:iPAddress>regular-expression
Match the value of the iPAddress SAN.
Example: <SAN:iPAddress>192\.168\..*
<SAN:registeredID>regular-expression
Match the value of the registeredID SAN as
dotted-decimal string.
Example: <SAN:registeredID>1\.2\.3\..*
MAPPING RULE
The mapping rule is used to associate a certificate with one or more
accounts. A Smartcard with the certificate and the matching private
key can then be used to authenticate as one of those accounts.
Currently SSSD basically only supports LDAP to lookup user
information (the exception is the proxy provider which is not of
relevance here). Because of this the mapping rule is based on LDAP
search filter syntax with templates to add certificate content to
the filter. It is expected that the filter will only contain the
specific data needed for the mapping and that the caller will embed
it in another filter to do the actual search. Because of this the
filter string should start and stop with '(' and ')' respectively.
In general it is recommended to use attributes from the certificate
and add them to special attributes to the LDAP user object. E.g. the
'altSecurityIdentities' attribute in AD or the 'ipaCertMapData'
attribute for IPA can be used.
This should be preferred to read user specific data from the
certificate like e.g. an email address and search for it in the LDAP
server. The reason is that the user specific data in LDAP might
change for various reasons would break the mapping. On the
other hand it would be hard to break the mapping on purpose for a
specific user.
The default mapping rule
type is 'LDAP' which can be
added as a prefix to a rule like e.g.
'LDAP:(userCertificate;binary={cert!bin})'. There is an extension
called 'LDAPU1' which offer more templates for more flexibility. To
allow older versions of this library to ignore the extension the
prefix 'LDAPU1' must be used when using the new templates in a
mapping rule
otherwise the old version of this
library will fail with a parsing error. The new templates are
described in section .
The templates to add certificate data to the search filter are based
on Python-style formatting strings. They consist of a keyword in
curly braces with an optional sub-component specifier separated by a
'.' or an optional conversion/formatting option separated by a '!'.
Allowed values are:
{issuer_dn[!((ad|ad_x500)|ad_ldap|nss_x500|(nss|nss_ldap))]}
This template will add the full issuer DN converted to a
string according to RFC 4514. If X.500 ordering (most
specific RDN comes last) an option with the '_x500'
prefix should be used.
The conversion options starting with 'ad_' will use
attribute names as used by AD, e.g. 'S' instead of 'ST'.
The conversion options starting with 'nss_' will use
attribute names as used by NSS.
The default conversion option is 'nss', i.e. attribute
names according to NSS and LDAP/RFC 4514 ordering.
Example: (ipacertmapdata=X509:<I>{issuer_dn!ad}<S>{subject_dn!ad})
{subject_dn[!((ad|ad_x500)|ad_ldap|nss_x500|(nss|nss_ldap))]}
This template will add the full subject DN converted to
string according to RFC 4514. If X.500 ordering (most
specific RDN comes last) an option with the '_x500'
prefix should be used.
The conversion options starting with 'ad_' will use
attribute names as used by AD, e.g. 'S' instead of 'ST'.
The conversion options starting with 'nss_' will use
attribute names as used by NSS.
The default conversion option is 'nss', i.e. attribute
names according to NSS and LDAP/RFC 4514 ordering.
Example: (ipacertmapdata=X509:<I>{issuer_dn!nss_x500}<S>{subject_dn!nss_x500})
{cert[!(bin|base64)]}
This template will add the whole DER encoded certificate
as a string to the search filter. Depending on the
conversion option the binary certificate is either
converted to an escaped hex sequence '\xx' or base64.
The escaped hex sequence is the default and can e.g. be
used with the LDAP attribute 'userCertificate;binary'.
Example: (userCertificate;binary={cert!bin})
{subject_principal[.short_name]}
This template will add the Kerberos principal which is
taken either from the SAN used by pkinit or the one used
by AD. The 'short_name' component represents the first
part of the principal before the '@' sign.
Example: (|(userPrincipal={subject_principal})(samAccountName={subject_principal.short_name}))
{subject_pkinit_principal[.short_name]}
This template will add the Kerberos principal which is
given by the SAN used by pkinit. The 'short_name'
component represents the first part of the principal
before the '@' sign.
Example: (|(userPrincipal={subject_pkinit_principal})(uid={subject_pkinit_principal.short_name}))
{subject_nt_principal[.short_name]}
This template will add the Kerberos principal which is
given by the SAN used by AD. The 'short_name' component
represent the first part of the principal before the '@'
sign.
Example: (|(userPrincipalName={subject_nt_principal})(samAccountName={subject_nt_principal.short_name}))
{subject_rfc822_name[.short_name]}
This template will add the string which is stored in the
rfc822Name component of the SAN, typically an email
address. The 'short_name' component represents the first
part of the address before the '@' sign.
Example: (|(mail={subject_rfc822_name})(uid={subject_rfc822_name.short_name}))
{subject_dns_name[.short_name]}
This template will add the string which is stored in the
dNSName component of the SAN, typically a fully-qualified host name.
The 'short_name' component represents the first
part of the name before the first '.' sign.
Example: (|(fqdn={subject_dns_name})(host={subject_dns_name.short_name}))
{subject_uri}
This template will add the string which is stored in the
uniformResourceIdentifier component of the SAN.
Example: (uri={subject_uri})
{subject_ip_address}
This template will add the string which is stored in the
iPAddress component of the SAN.
Example: (ip={subject_ip_address})
{subject_x400_address}
This template will add the value which is stored in the
x400Address component of the SAN as escaped hex
sequence.
Example: (attr:binary={subject_x400_address})
{subject_directory_name[!((ad|ad_x500)|ad_ldap|nss_x500|(nss|nss_ldap))]}
This template will add the DN string of the value which
is stored in the directoryName component of the SAN.
Example: (orig_dn={subject_directory_name})
{subject_ediparty_name}
This template will add the value which is stored in the
ediPartyName component of the SAN as escaped hex
sequence.
Example: (attr:binary={subject_ediparty_name})
{subject_registered_id}
This template will add the OID which is stored in the
registeredID component of the SAN as a dotted-decimal
string.
Example: (oid={subject_registered_id})
LDAPU1 extension
The following template are available when using the 'LDAPU1'
extension:
{serial_number[!(dec|hex[_ucr])]}
This template will add the serial number of the
certificate. By default it will be printed as a
hexadecimal number with lower-case letters.
With the formatting option '!dec' the number will be
printed as decimal string. The hexadecimal output can
be printed with upper-case letters ('!hex_u'), with a
colon separating the hexadecimal bytes ('!hex_c') or
with the hexadecimal bytes in reverse order ('!hex_r').
The postfix letters can be combined so that e.g.
'!hex_uc' will produce a colon-separated hexadecimal
string with upper-case letters.
Example: LDAPU1:(serial={serial_number})
{subject_key_id[!hex[_ucr]]}
This template will add the subject key id of the
certificate. By default it will be printed as a
hexadecimal number with lower-case letters.
The hexadecimal output can
be printed with upper-case letters ('!hex_u'), with a
colon separating the hexadecimal bytes ('!hex_c') or
with the hexadecimal bytes in reverse order ('!hex_r').
The postfix letters can be combined so that e.g.
'!hex_uc' will produce a colon-separated hexadecimal
string with upper-case letters.
Example: LDAPU1:(ski={subject_key_id})
{cert[!DIGEST[_ucr]]}
This template will add the hexadecimal digest/hash of
the certificate where DIGEST must be replaced with the
name of a digest/hash function supported by OpenSSL,
e.g. 'sha512'.
The hexadecimal output can
be printed with upper-case letters ('!sha512_u'), with a
colon separating the hexadecimal bytes ('!sha512_c') or
with the hexadecimal bytes in reverse order
('!sha512_r'). The postfix letters can be combined so
that e.g. '!sha512_uc' will produce a colon-separated
hexadecimal string with upper-case letters.
Example: LDAPU1:(dgst={cert!sha256})
{subject_dn_component[(.attr_name|[number]]}
This template will add an attribute value of a component
of the subject DN, by default the value of the most
specific component.
A different component can it either selected by
attribute name, e.g. {subject_dn_component.uid} or by
position, e.g. {subject_dn_component.[2]} where
positive numbers start counting from the most specific
component and negative numbers start counting from the
least specific component. Attribute name and the
position can be combined as e.g.
{subject_dn_component.uid[2]} which means that the name
of the second component must be 'uid'.
Example: LDAPU1:(uid={subject_dn_component.uid})
{issuer_dn_component[(.attr_name|[number]]}
This template will add an attribute value of a component
of the issuer DN, by default the value of the most
specific component.
See 'subject_dn_component' for details about the
attribute name and position specifiers.
Example: LDAPU1:(domain={issuer_dn_component.[-2]}.{issuer_dn_component.dc[-1]})
{sid[.rid]}
This template will add the SID if the corresponding
extension introduced by Microsoft with the OID
1.3.6.1.4.1.311.25.2 is available. With the '.rid'
selector only the last component, i.e. the RID, will be
added.
Example: LDAPU1:(objectsid={sid})
DOMAIN LIST
If the domain list is not empty users mapped to a given certificate
are not only searched in the local domain but in the listed domains
as well as long as they are know by SSSD. Domains not know to SSSD
will be ignored.