Was this page helpful?
Caution
You're viewing documentation for a previous version of ScyllaDB Enterprise. Switch to the latest stable version.
Note
This feature is only available with Scylla Enterprise. If you are using Scylla Open Source, this feature will not be available.
Scylla Enterprise customers can manage and authorize users’ privileges via an LDAP server. LDAP is an open, vendor-neutral, industry-standard protocol for accessing and maintaining distributed user access control over a standard IP network. If your users are already stored in an LDAP directory, you can now use the same LDAP server to regulate their roles in Scylla.
Added in version Scylla: Enterprise 2021.1.2
Scylla can use LDAP to manage which roles a user has. This behavior is triggered by setting the role_manager
entry in scylla.yaml to com.scylladb.auth.LDAPRoleManager.
When this role manager is chosen, Scylla forbids GRANT
and REVOKE
role statements (CQL commands) as all users get their roles from the contents in the LDAP directory.
Note
Scylla still allows GRANT
and REVOKE
permission statements, such as GRANT permission ON resource TO role
, which are handled by the authorizer, not role manager.
This allows permissions to be granted to and revoked from LDAP-managed roles. In addition, if you have nested Scylla roles, LDAP authorization does not allow them. A role cannot be a member of another role.
In LDAP only login users can be members of a role.
When LDAP Authorization is enabled and a Scylla user authenticates to Scylla, a query is sent to the LDAP server, whose response sets the user’s roles for that login session. The user keeps the granted roles until logout; any subsequent changes to the LDAP directory are only effective at the user’s next login to Scylla.
The precise form of the LDAP query is configured by Scylla administrator in the scylla.yaml configuration file.
This configuration takes the form of a query template which is defined in the scylla.yaml configuration file using the parameter ldap_url_template
.
The value of ldap_url_template
parameter should contain a valid LDAP URL (e.g., as returned by the ldapurl utility from OpenLDAP) representing an LDAP query that returns entries for all the user’s roles.
Scylla will replace the text {USER}
in the URL with the user’s Scylla username before querying LDAP.
Before you begin On your LDAP server, create LDAP directory entries for Scylla users and roles.
Workflow
Ensure Scylla has the same users and roles as listed in the LDAP directory.
Make Scylla reload the configuration (SIGHUP or restart)
Use this example to create a query that will retrieve from your LDAP server the information you need to create a template.
For example, this template URL will query LDAP server at localhost:5000
for all entries under base_dn
that list the user’s username as one of their uniqueMember
attribute values:
ldap://localhost:5000/base_dn?cn?sub?(uniqueMember={USER})
After Scylla queries LDAP and obtains the resulting entries, it looks for a particular attribute in each entry and uses that attribute’s value as a Scylla role this user will have.
The name of this attribute can be configured in scylla.yaml by setting the ldap_attr_role
parameter there.
When the LDAP query returns multiple entries, multiple roles will be granted to the user. Each role must already exist in Scylla, created via the CREATE ROLE CQL command beforehand.
For example, if the LDAP query returns the following results:
# extended LDIF
#
# LDAPv3
# role1, example.com
dn: cn=role1,dc=example,dc=com
objectClass: groupOfUniqueNames
cn: role1
scyllaName: sn1
uniqueMember: uid=jsmith,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
uniqueMember: uid=cassandra,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
# role2, example.com
dn: cn=role2,dc=example,dc=com
objectClass: groupOfUniqueNames
cn: role2
scyllaName: sn2
uniqueMember: uid=cassandra,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
# role3, example.com
dn: cn=role3,dc=example,dc=com
objectClass: groupOfUniqueNames
cn: role3
uniqueMember: uid=jdoe,ou=People,dc=example,dc=com
If ldap_attr_role
is set to cn, then the resulting role set will be { role1, role2, role3 } (assuming, of course, that these roles already exist in Scylla).
However, if ldap_attr_role
is set to scyllaName, then the resulting role set will be { sn1, sn2 }.
If an LDAP entry does not have the ldap_attr_role
attribute, it is simply ignored.
Before Scylla attempts to query the LDAP server, it first performs an LDAP bind operation, to gain access to the directory information.
Scylla executes a simple bind with credentials configured in scylla.yaml.
The parameters ldap_bind_dn
and ldap_bind_passwd
must contain, respectively, the distinguished name and password that Scylla uses to perform the simple bind.
Enables Scylla to use LDAP Authorization. LDAP will manage the roles, not Scylla. See Note above
Open the scylla.yaml file in an editor. The file is located in /etc/scylla/scylla.yaml by default.
Edit the role_manager
section. Change the entry to com.scylladb.auth.LDAPRoleManager
. If this section does not exist, add it to the file.
Configure the parameters according to your organization’s IT and Security Policy.
role_manager: "com.scylladb.auth.LDAPRoleManager"
ldap_url_template: "ldap://localhost:123/dc=example,dc=com?cn?sub?(uniqueMember=uid={USER},ou=People,dc=example,dc=com)"
ldap_attr_role: "cn"
ldap_bind_dn: "cn=root,dc=example,dc=com"
ldap_bind_passwd: "secret"
Restart the scylla-server service or kill the scylla process.
sudo systemctl restart scylla-server
docker exec -it some-scylla supervisorctl restart scylla
(without restarting some-scylla container)
Open the scylla.yaml file in an editor. The file is located in /etc/scylla/scylla.yaml by default.
Comment out or delete the role_manager section.
Restart the scylla-server service or kill the scylla process.
sudo systemctl restart scylla-server
docker exec -it some-scylla supervisorctl restart scylla
(without restarting some-scylla container)
Before configuring Scylla, it is a good idea to validate the query template by manually ensuring that the LDAP server returns the correct entries when queried. This can be accomplished by using an LDAP search tool such as ldapsearch.
If manual querying does not yield correct results, then Scylla cannot see correct results, either. Try to adjust ldapsearch parameters until it returns the correct role entries for one user.
Once that works as expected, you can use the ldapurl utility to transform the parameters into a URL providing a basis for the ldap_url_template.
Tip
Always provide an explicit -s
flag to both ldapsearch
and ldapurl
; the default -s
value differs among the two tools.
Remember to replace the specific user name with {USER}
in the URL template.
You can turn on debug logging in the LDAP role manager by passing the following argument to the Scylla executable: --logger-log-level ldap_role_manager=debug
.
This will make Scylla log useful additional details about the LDAP responses it receives.
If ldapsearch yields expected results but Scylla queries do not, first check the host and port parts of the URL template and make sure both ldapsearch and Scylla are actually querying the same LDAP server. Then check the LDAP logs and see if there are any subtle differences between the logged queries of ldapsearch and Scylla.
Was this page helpful?