Important
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Configuring the LDAP Authorizer¶
Configuration Overview¶
The broker configuration (in the server.properties
file) must set authorizer.class.name
to
io.confluent.kafka.security.ldap.authorizer.LdapAuthorizer
to enable LDAP group-based authorization.
authorizer.class.name=io.confluent.kafka.security.ldap.authorizer.LdapAuthorizer
authorizer.class.name
Fully qualified class name of the Apache Kafka® broker authorizer implementation class that implements the
kafka.security.auth.Authorizer
interface.- Type: class
- Default: “”
- Importance: low
The following configuration options of SimpleAclAuthorizer
are also processed by the LDAP Authorizer.
super.users
Semicolon-separated list of principals of super users or super groups who are allowed access to all of the resources for all of the actions for all of the hosts. If a resource has no ACLs associated with it, then only super users can access the resource. For an example of how to set this, see Configure Brokers.
- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: medium
allow.everyone.if.no.acl.found
Boolean flag that indicates if everyone is allowed access to a resource if no ACL is found for the user principal or any of the groups that the user belongs to.
- Type: boolean
- Default: false
- Importance: medium
Note
To enable the LDAP Authorizer to obtain the user principal to group mappings from your
LDAP server, configure these options to match the settings on your LDAP server.
In 5.3.0 and later, when using the LDAP Authorizer, you can use either the
ldap.
or ldap.authorizer.
prefix (ldap.authorizer.
is supported for backward compatibility).
Configuring LDAP Context¶
All standard Java LDAP configurations are supported. Broker configurations starting with
ldap.java.naming
and ldap.com.sun.jndi
are stripped of their ldap.
prefix
and these standard Java LDAP configurations are used to make connections to the LDAP server.
You can also use the prefix ldap.authorizer.
. You must configure
ldap.java.naming.provider.url
with the URL of your LDAP server. For example:
ldap.java.naming.provider.url=ldap://somehost:389
For a complete list of standard Java configurations for the LDAP naming service provider and Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI), see LDAP Naming Service Provider for the Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI).
Configuring SSL for LDAP¶
Enable SSL for the connections from the LDAP Authorizer to your LDAP server
by setting ldap.java.naming.security.protocol=SSL
. LDAP provider
URL must use the protocol ldaps
if SSL is enabled. All the SSL configuration
options of Kafka clients are supported and must be prefixed with ldap.
or ldap.authorizer.
.
For example:
# Configure provider URL with `ldaps` as protocol
ldap.java.naming.provider.url=ldaps://somehost:389
# Enable SSL for connections to LDAP server
ldap.java.naming.security.protocol=SSL
# Path of truststore for connections to LDAP
ldap.ssl.truststore.location=/path/to/truststore.jks
# Password of LDAP truststore
ldap.ssl.truststore.password=truststore-secret
For a list of supported SSL configurations, see Encryption and Authentication with SSL.
Note
In Java 8 update 181 and later, host name verification is enabled by default
on LDAPS connections. You can disable this verification by setting
KAFKA_OPTS=-Dcom.sun.jndi.ldap.object.disableEndpointIdentification=true
,
but you should avoid using this option in production systems. Prior to Java 8
update 181, host name verification was disabled by default for LDAPS
connections. For improved security, consider upgrading to Java 8 181 or later.
Configuring GSSAPI for LDAP¶
You can use GSSAPI to authenticate the LDAP Authorizer with your LDAP server if Kerberos
is enabled on your LDAP server. The JAAS configuration for GSSAPI may be configured using
the config option ldap.sasl.jaas.config
. Authentication protocol and security
principal must also be configured using standard Java LDAP configs prefixed with ldap.
or ldap.authorizer.
.
For example:
# Configure SASL/GSSAPI as the authentication protocol for LDAP context.
ldap.java.naming.security.authentication=GSSAPI
# Security principal for LDAP context
ldap.java.naming.security.principal=ldap@EXAMPLE.COM
# JAAS configuration for Kerberos authentication with LDAP server
ldap.sasl.jaas.config=com.sun.security.auth.module.Krb5LoginModule required \
keyTab="/tmp/keytabs/ldap.keytab" \
principal="ldap@EXAMPLE.COM" \
storeKey="true" \
useKeyTab="true";
If ldap.sasl.jaas.config
is not configured, the default JAAS configuration
of the broker will be used. The default JAAS configuration (e.g configured using the
system property java.security.auth.login.config
) is loaded from the login context
KafkaServer
that is used as broker’s login context using a single shared login. This
should be used for LDAP only if the principal in this context can be used to search LDAP.
Configuring Password Credentials for LDAP¶
If password authentication is enabled on your LDAP server, then you can configure
the user principal and password so that brokers can authenticate with the LDAP
server using simple authentication. Use standard Java configurations prefixed
with ldap.
or ldap.authorizer.
to configure LDAP credentials for the
broker. For example:
# Specify the LDAP security authentication protocol
ldap.java.naming.security.authentication=SIMPLE
# Identify the principal for the LDAP context
ldap.java.naming.security.principal=CN=Kafka Broker,OU=Users,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
# Security credential is the password of the user that performs LDAP search
ldap.java.naming.security.credentials=broker-secret
Configuring LDAP Search¶
To perform group-based authorization, brokers require a mapping of the user principal. This mapping is determined during authentication to group principals that define access rules.
You can configure broker search parameters so that your
LDAP server derives group principals for every user that connects to Confluent Platform.
The mapping can be derived from either user entries or group entries in LDAP by
configuring the search mode to use either USERS
or GROUPS
. You must
configure the search mode based on which entry contains both user and group
principals in the format used for authentication and authorization. You can
configure the LDAP attributes containing user and group principals in your LDAP
server entries, and regular expression patterns to extract the principal
from these attributes.
Sample Configuration for Group-Based Search¶
By default, brokers read group entries from LDAP using group-based mode. If the LDAP group entries in your LDAP server contain the user principal of members in the format used to authenticate the principal by Kafka brokers, then you can use the default group search.
For example, consider an LDAP server with a group entry that contains the following attributes:
dn: CN=Kafka Developers,OU=Groups,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
cn: kafkadev
objectClass: groupOfNames
member: UID=alice,OU=Users,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
member: UID=bob,OU=Users,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
If the user principals used by Kafka are User:alice
and User:bob
, then you
can configure the group-based search to map User:alice
and User:bob
to the group
principal Group:kafkadev
using the following configuration:
ldap.search.mode=GROUPS
ldap.group.search.base=DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
ldap.group.object.class=groupOfNames
ldap.group.name.attribute=cn
ldap.group.member.attribute=member
ldap.group.member.attribute.pattern=UID=(.*),OU=Users,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
In some environments, the distinguished name (DN) of the user in the member entry may not contain the principal generated by Kafka brokers during authentication. In these cases, you can configure user-based search as described in Sample Configuration for User-Based Search.
Sample Configuration for User-Based Search¶
The user principal used for authorization by brokers is the principal generated during
authentication. For example, with Kerberos authentication using GSSAPI, the
default principal is the short name from the Kerberos principal. In some LDAP
environments, this principal may not appear in the member
attribute of group
entries. In such cases, you can search in user mode to extract the principal
and group principals from LDAP user entries. This search mode provides the
flexibility required for most LDAP environments because group principals are
easily adapted to the format used in the user entry of your LDAP server.
For example, consider an LDAP server with a user entry containing the following attributes:
objectClass: user
distinguishedName: CN=Joe Bloggs,CN=Users,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
sAMAccountName: joe
memberOf: CN=Kafka Developers,CN=Users,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
If the user principal used by Kafka is User:joe
, then you can configure
group-based search to map User:joe
to the group Group:Kafka Developers
using the following configuration:
ldap.search.mode=USERS
ldap.user.search.base=DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM
ldap.user.object.class=user
ldap.user.name.attribute=sAMAccountName
ldap.user.memberof.attribute=memberOf
ldap.user.memberof.attribute.pattern=CN=(.*),CN=Users,.*
For LDAP servers with a large number of users where only a small subset access Kafka, you can configure filters to limit the size of search results as described in Configuring LDAP Filters to Limit Search Results.
Configuring LDAP Filters to Limit Search Results¶
If you have a large number of users in the LDAP server, it is likely that only a subset require access to Confluent Platform. In such instances, you can configure filters to reduce the size of search results because brokers only require group mapping for the small subset of users who connect to the Confluent Platform. LDAP filters are particularly useful for user mode searches where you wish to avoid having brokers process every user defined in the LDAP server.
You can configure a simple filter by adding all users accessing Confluent Platform to a group. For example, the following configuration filters out users belonging to the Kafka group:
ldap.user.search.filter=(memberOf=CN=Kafka,CN=Users,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM)
You can also configure a simple filter that processes users belonging to a set of
groups when the users of the Confluent Platform already belong to a small set of
groups. For example, the following filter processes users belonging to the
groups Administrators
and Kafka Developers
:
ldap.user.search.filter=(|(memberOf=CN=Administrators,CN=Users,DC=EXAMPLE,DC=COM)(memberOf=CN=Kafka Developers,CN=Users,DC=example,DC=com))
If your LDAP server already has other attributes that match users or groups connecting to Confluent Platform, you can filter based on those. You can use any valid LDAP search filter to limit search results in both user and group search modes.
Using Persistent LDAP Search¶
By default, the mapping of users to groups obtained from LDAP is refreshed periodically
with a refresh interval that you can configure using ldap.refresh.interval.ms
.
If your LDAP server supports persistent search, you can set the refresh interval to zero
to initiate a persistent LDAP search in the LDAP Authorizer. LDAP updates are processed
as soon as notifications are received, enabling any changes to be used for authorization
immediately. Note that persistent search requires a connection to be kept open between
each broker and the LDAP server and may add load to your LDAP server.
ldap.refresh.interval.ms=0
LDAP Authorizer Configuration Options¶
Confluent License¶
ldap.authorizer.license
Confluent issues a license key to each subscriber. The license key is a short snippet of text that you can copy and paste. Without the license key, you can use Confluent security plugins for a 30-day trial period. If you are a subscriber and don’t have a license key, contact Confluent Support at support@confluent.io.
- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: high
LDAP Search Configuration¶
ldap.refresh.interval.ms
(ldap.authorizer.refresh.interval.ms
)LDAP group cache refresh interval in milliseconds. If set to zero, then persistent LDAP search is used.
- Type: int
- Default: 60000
- Importance: medium
ldap.search.page.size
(ldap.authorizer.search.page.size
)Page size for LDAP search if persistent search is disabled (in other words, when the refresh interval is greater than zero). Paging is disabled by default.
- Type: int
- Default: 0
- Importance: medium
ldap.search.mode
(ldap.authorizer.search.mode
)LDAP search mode that indicates if the user-to-group mapping is retrieved by searching for group or user entries. Valid values are USERS and GROUPS.
- Type: string
- Default: GROUPS
- Valid Values: [GROUPS, USERS]
- Importance: medium
LDAP search by groups¶
ldap.group.search.base
(ldap.authorizer.group.search.base
)LDAP search base for group-based search.
- Type: string
- Default: ou=groups
- Importance: high
ldap.group.search.filter
(ldap.authorizer.group.search.filter
)LDAP search filter for group-based search.
- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: medium
ldap.group.search.scope
(ldap.authorizer.group.search.scope
)LDAP search scope for group-based search. Valid values are 0 (OBJECT), 1 (ONELEVEL) and 2 (SUBTREE).
- Type: int
- Default: 1
- Importance: medium
ldap.group.object.class
(ldap.authorizer.group.object.class
)LDAP object class for groups.
- Type: string
- Default: groupOfNames
- Importance: medium
ldap.group.name.attribute
(ldap.authorizer.group.name.attribute
)Name of attribute that contains the name of the group in a group entry obtained using an LDAP search. A regex pattern may be specified to extract the group name used in ACLs from this attribute by configuring
ldap.group.name.attribute.pattern
.- Type: string
- Default: cn
- Importance: high
ldap.group.name.attribute.pattern
(ldap.authorizer.group.name.attribute.pattern
)A Java regular expression pattern that extracts the group name used in ACLs from the name of the group obtained from the LDAP attribute specified using
ldap.group.name.attribute
. By default the full value of the attribute is used.- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: low
ldap.group.member.attribute
(ldap.authorizer.group.member.attribute
)The name of the attribute that contains the members of the group in a group entry obtained using an LDAP search. A regex pattern may be specified to extract the user principals from this attribute by configuring
ldap.group.member.attribute.pattern
.- Type: string
- Default: member
- Importance: high
ldap.group.member.attribute.pattern
(ldap.authorizer.group.member.attribute.pattern
)A Java regular expression pattern that extracts the user principals of group members from group member entries obtained from the LDAP attribute specified using
ldap.group.member.attribute
. By default the full value of the attribute is used.- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: medium
ldap.group.dn.name.pattern
(ldap.authorizer.group.dn.name.pattern
)A Java regular expression pattern that extracts the group name from the distinguished name (DN) of the group when a group is renamed. This is used only when persistent search is enabled. By default the
ldap.group.name.attribute
is extracted from the DN.- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: low
ldap.user.dn.name.pattern
(ldap.authorizer.user.dn.name.pattern
)A Java regular expression pattern used to extract user name from the distinguished name (DN) of the user when user is renamed. This is used only when persistent search is enabled. By default
ldap.user.name.attribute
is extracted from the DN.- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: low
LDAP search by users¶
ldap.user.search.base
(ldap.authorizer.user.search.base
)The LDAP search base for a user-based search.
- Type: string
- Default: ou=users
- Importance: medium
ldap.user.search.filter
(ldap.authorizer.user.search.filter
)The LDAP search filter for a user-based search.
- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: medium
ldap.user.search.scope
(ldap.authorizer.user.search.scope
)The LDAP search scope for a user-based search. Valid values are 0 (OBJECT), 1 (ONELEVEL), and 2 (SUBTREE).
- Type: int
- Default: 1
- Importance: medium
ldap.user.object.class
(ldap.authorizer.user.object.class
)The LDAP object class for users.
- Type: string
- Default: person
- Importance: medium
ldap.user.name.attribute
(ldap.authorizer.user.name.attribute
)Name of attribute that contains the user principal in a user entry obtained using an LDAP search. A regex pattern may be specified to extract the user principal from this attribute by configuring
ldap.user.name.attribute.pattern
.- Type: string
- Default: uid
- Importance: medium
ldap.user.name.attribute.pattern
(ldap.authorizer.user.name.attribute.pattern
)A Java regular expression pattern used to extract the user principal from the name of the user obtained from the LDAP attribute specified using
ldap.user.name.attribute
. By default the full value of the attribute is used.- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: medium
ldap.user.memberof.attribute
(ldap.authorizer.user.memberof.attribute
)The name of the attribute that contains the groups in a user entry obtained using an LDAP search. A regex pattern may be specified to extract the group names used in ACLs from this attribute by configuring
ldap.user.memberof.attribute.pattern
.- Type: string
- Default: memberof
- Importance: medium
ldap.user.memberof.attribute.pattern
(ldap.authorizer.user.memberof.attribute.pattern
)A Java regular expression pattern used to extract the names of groups from user entries obtained from the LDAP attribute specified using
ldap.user.memberof.attribute
. By default the full value of the attribute is used.- Type: string
- Default: “”
- Importance: medium
Error Handling Configuration¶
ldap.retry.backoff.ms
(ldap.authorizer.retry.backoff.ms
)Initial retry backoff in milliseconds. Exponential backoff is used if
ldap.retry.backoff.max.ms
is set to a higher value.- Type: int
- Default: 100
- Importance: medium
ldap.retry.backoff.max.ms
(ldap.authorizer.retry.backoff.max.ms
)Maximum retry backoff in milliseconds. Exponential backoff is used if
ldap.retry.backoff.ms
is set to a lower value.- Type: int
- Default: 1000
- Importance: medium
ldap.retry.timeout.ms
(ldap.authorizer.retry.timeout.ms
)Timeout for LDAP search retries after which the LDAP Authorizer is marked as failed. All requests are denied access if a successful cache refresh cannot be performed within this time.
- Type: long
- Default: 3600000
- Importance: medium
SSL Configuration for LDAP connection¶
ldap.ssl.protocol
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.protocol
)The SSL protocol used to generate the SSLContext. The default setting is TLS, which is fine for most cases. Allowed values in recent JVMs are TLS, TLSv1.1, and TLSv1.2. SSL, SSLv2, and SSLv3 may be supported in older JVMs, but their usage is discouraged due to known security vulnerabilities.
- Type: string
- Default: TLS
- Importance: medium
ldap.ssl.provider
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.provider
)The name of the security provider used for SSL connections. The default value is the default security provider of the JVM.
- Type: string
- Default: null
- Importance: medium
ldap.ssl.enabled.protocols
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.enabled.protocols
)The list of protocols enabled for SSL connections.
- Type: list
- Default: TLSv1.2,TLSv1.1,TLSv1
- Importance: medium
ldap.ssl.keystore.type
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.keystore.type
)The file format of the key store file. This attribute is optional for the client.
- Type: string
- Default: JKS
- Importance: medium
ldap.ssl.truststore.type
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.truststore.type
)The file format of the trust store file.
- Type: string
- Default: JKS
- Importance: medium
ldap.ssl.key.password
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.key.password
)The password of the private key in the key store file. This attribute is optional for client.
- Type: password
- Default: null
- Importance: high
ldap.ssl.keystore.location
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.keystore.location
)The location of the key store file. This attribute is optional for the client and can be used for two-way authentication for client.
- Type: string
- Default: null
- Importance: high
ldap.ssl.keystore.password
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.keystore.password
)The store password for the key store file. This attribute is optional for the client and is only needed if
ssl.keystore.location
is configured.- Type: password
- Default: null
- Importance: high
ldap.ssl.truststore.location
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.truststore.location
)The location of the trust store file.
- Type: string
- Default: null
- Importance: high
ldap.ssl.truststore.password
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.truststore.password
)The password for the trust store file. If a password is not set, then access to the truststore is still available, but integrity checking is disabled.
- Type: password
- Default: null
- Importance: high
ldap.ssl.cipher.suites
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.cipher.suites
)A list of cipher suites. This is a named combination of authentication, encryption, MAC and key exchange algorithm used to negotiate the security settings for a network connection using TLS or SSL network protocol. By default all the available cipher suites are supported.
- Type: list
- Default: null
- Importance: low
ldap.ssl.keymanager.algorithm
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.keymanager.algorithm
)The algorithm used by the key manager factory for SSL connections. The default value is the key manager factory algorithm configured for the Java Virtual Machine.
- Type: string
- Default: SunX509
- Importance: low
ldap.ssl.secure.random.implementation
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.secure.random.implementation
)The SecureRandom PRNG implementation to use for SSL cryptography operations.
- Type: string
- Default: null
- Importance: low
ldap.ssl.trustmanager.algorithm
(ldap.authorizer.ssl.trustmanager.algorithm
)The algorithm used by trust manager factory for SSL connections. The default value is the trust manager factory algorithm configured for the Java Virtual Machine.
- Type: string
- Default: PKIX
- Importance: low
SASL Configuration for LDAP connection¶
ldap.sasl.jaas.config
(ldap.authorizer.sasl.jaas.config
)JAAS login context parameters for SASL connections in the format used by JAAS configuration files. JAAS configuration file format is described in the JAAS Login Configuration File documentation. The format for the value is:
loginModuleClass controlFlag (optionName=optionValue)*;
.- Type: password
- Default: null
- Importance: medium
ldap.sasl.login.callback.handler.class
(ldap.authorizer.sasl.login.callback.handler.class
)The fully qualified name of a SASL login callback handler class that implements the AuthenticateCallbackHandler interface.
- Type: class
- Default: null
- Importance: medium
ldap.sasl.login.class
(ldap.authorizer.sasl.login.class
)The fully qualified name of a class that implements the Login interface.
- Type: class
- Default: null
- Importance: medium
ldap.sasl.kerberos.kinit.cmd
(ldap.authorizer.sasl.kerberos.kinit.cmd
)The Kerberos kinit command path.
- Type: string
- Default: /usr/bin/kinit
- Importance: low
ldap.sasl.kerberos.min.time.before.relogin
(ldap.authorizer.sasl.kerberos.min.time.before.relogin
)The login thread sleep time between refresh attempts.
- Type: long
- Default: 60000
- Importance: low
ldap.sasl.kerberos.ticket.renew.jitter
(ldap.authorizer.sasl.kerberos.ticket.renew.jitter
)Percentage of random jitter added to the renewal time.
- Type: double
- Default: 0.05
- Importance: low
ldap.sasl.kerberos.ticket.renew.window.factor
(ldap.authorizer.sasl.kerberos.ticket.renew.window.factor
)The duration that the login thread will sleep until the specified window factor of time from last refresh to ticket’s expiry has been reached, at which time it will try to renew the ticket.
- Type: double
- Default: 0.8
- Importance: low