Re: [GENERAL] pg_ident mapping Kerberos Usernames - Mailing list pgsql-general
From | techmail+pgsql@dangertoaster.com |
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Subject | Re: [GENERAL] pg_ident mapping Kerberos Usernames |
Date | |
Msg-id | f3e1dddc-4e1d-0472-ec3b-9a6b29eac736@dangertoaster.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Re: [GENERAL] pg_ident mapping Kerberos Usernames (Magnus Hagander <magnus@hagander.net>) |
Responses |
Re: [GENERAL] pg_ident mapping Kerberos Usernames
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List | pgsql-general |
On 09/10/2017 02:39 AM, Magnus Hagander wrote: > On Sat, Sep 9, 2017 at 6:44 PM, <techmail+pgsql@dangertoaster.com > <mailto:techmail+pgsql@dangertoaster.com>> wrote: > > Hi, > > I'm trying to get pg_ident to map "user1" and "user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD" to "user1" in postgres, or > vice versa. I'm not picky about which way works. > > Kerberos authentication works. I've gotten "user1" to login successfully with a Kerberos ticket, > but I'm not able to get "user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD" to match. > > Environment: > * PostgreSQL 9.6 from PostgreSQL repos > * CentOS 7 > * FreeIPA for Kerberos, LDAP, etc. > * Realm A.DOMAIN.TLD > * "user1" database exists > * "user1" role exists > * Logging into CentOS usernames are configured to drop the domain, so they appear as "user1" > rather then "user1@a.domain.tld". > > > pg_hba.conf: > > local all postgres peer > host all all 127.0.0.1/32 <http://127.0.0.1/32> md5 > host all all ::1/128 md5 > host all all 192.168.1.0/24 <http://192.168.1.0/24> gss include_realm=1 > map=testnet krb_realm=A.DOMAIN.TLD #This is on one line. Thunderbird is truncating lines. > > > pg_ident.conf: > > testnet /^([0-9A-Za-z_-]+)@A\.DOMAIN\.TLD$ \1 > testnet /^([0-9A-Za-z_-]+)$ \1 > > > Regex that works for both in regexr.com <http://regexr.com>: > > /^([0-9A-Za-z-_]+)(@A\.DOMAIN\.TLD)?$/gm > > > Command and lines from pg_log: > > $ psql -h db0 # Logged in as user1 with Kerberos ticket > > < 2017-09-09 19:50:49.376 CDT - 192.168.1.201 [unknown] > LOG: connection received: > host=192.168.1.201 port=44918 > < 2017-09-09 19:50:49.398 CDT - 192.168.1.201 user1 > LOG: connection authorized: user=user1 > database=user1 > < 2017-09-09 19:50:50.912 CDT - 192.168.1.201 user1 > LOG: disconnection: session time: > 0:00:01.537 user=user1 database=user1 host=192.168.1.201 port=44918 > > $ psql -h db0 -U user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD # Logged in as user1 with Kerberos ticket > > < 2017-09-09 19:50:54.959 CDT - 192.168.1.201 [unknown] > LOG: connection received: > host=192.168.1.201 port=44920 > < 2017-09-09 19:50:55.023 CDT - 192.168.1.201 user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD > LOG: no match in usermap > "testnet" for user "user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD" authenticated as "user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD" > < 2017-09-09 19:50:55.023 CDT - 192.168.1.201 user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD > FATAL: GSSAPI authentication > failed for user "user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD" > < 2017-09-09 19:50:55.023 CDT - 192.168.1.201 user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD > DETAIL: Connection matched > pg_hba.conf line 87: "host all > all 192.168.1.0/24 <http://192.168.1.0/24> gss include_realm=1 map=testnet > krb_realm=A.DOMAIN.TLD" > > > Is this something that is possible, or is it something where I need to pick one way to do it? > > > This looks like you are trying to connect with the actual username user1¡A.DOMAIN.TLD. pg_ident only > sets what you are allowed to log in as, not what it will attempt. > > If you are using psql, you are probably doing something like "psql -h myserver". You need to add the > user, so "psql -h myserver -U user1", to instruct it of which username to actually use for the login. > > -- > Magnus Hagander > Me: https://www.hagander.net/ <http://www.hagander.net/> > Work: https://www.redpill-linpro.com/ <http://www.redpill-linpro.com/> Hi Magnus, Yes, the system username is "user1", per the default ipa-client-install SSSD setup, and the map is working for that. Without the map, I have to specify the full Kerberos username, user@DOMAIN.TLD, in the psql command. Works with map: $ psql -h db0 #Implied -U user1 -d user1 $ psql -h db0 -U user1 -d user1 Does not work with map: $ psql -h db0 -U user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD -d user1 Works without map (provided I have a role created): $ psql -h db0 -U user1@A.DOMAIN.TLD -d user1 Does not work without map: $ psql -h db0 #Implied -U user1 -d user1 $ psql -h db0 -U user1 -d user1 I can get one style or the other to work, but I just can't get both to work a the same time. If this is something that can't be done, I understand, but it looks like it should be possible per the documentation. Thanks, Ryan -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general
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