If you're using Microsoft Active Directory (MSAD), the tips on this page may help you. MSAD can be accessed via LDAP so the instructions in Changing to the LDAP Security DAO are applicable and should be consulted first.
Binding
MSAD allows you to uniquely specify users in two ways, in addition to the standard DN. If you're not having luck with the standard DN, give one of the two below a try. Each of the examples below is shown in the context of the userDn
property of the Spring Security contextSource
bean.
Note: The examples in this Binding section show the
contextSource
bean. Be aware that you may need to use the same notation (i.e. Kerberos or Windows domain) in your user DN patterns (in theauthenticator
bean).
Kerberos notation
Example: pentahoadmin@mycompany.com
# backslash before colon to escape it contextSource.providerUrl=ldap\://mycompany\:389 contextSource.userDn=pentahoadmin@mycompany.com contextSource.password=secret
Windows domain notation
Example: MYCOMPANY\pentahoadmin
# backslash before colon to escape it contextSource.providerUrl=ldap\://mycompany\:389 # backslash before backslash to escape it contextSource.userDn=MYCOMPANY\\pentahoadmin contextSource.password=secret
Referrals
If more than one Active Directory instance is serving directory information, it may be necessary to enable referral following. This is done by modifying the contextSource
bean. Basically you create a map (via the <map>
element) and set that as the extraEnvVars
property value. The map below has a single entry. The key part of the entry below matches the REFERRAL
constant defined in the Context class. The value part in the entry is one of the following: follow
, ignore
, or throw
. (These values are also defined in the javadoc for the REFERRAL constant.
<bean id="contextSource" class="org.springframework.security.ldap.DefaultSpringSecurityContextSource"> <constructor-arg value="${contextSource.providerUrl}"/> <property name="userDn" value="${contextSource.userDn}"/> <property name="password" value="${contextSource.password}"/> <property name="baseEnvironmentProperties"> <map> <entry> <key> <value>java.naming.referral</value> </key> <value>follow</value> </entry> </map> </property> </bean>
User DN Patterns vs. User Searches
In the LdapAuthenticator
implementations provided by Spring Security (e.g. BindAuthenticator
), you must either specify a userDnPatterns
, or a userSearch
, or both. If you're using the Kerberos or Windows domain notation, you should use userDnPatterns
exclusively in your LdapAuthenticator
.
Note: The reason that
userDnPatterns
is suggested when using Kerberos or Windows domain notation is that theLdapUserSearch
implementations do not give the control over the DN thatuserDnPatterns
does. (TheLdapUserSearch
implementations try to derive the DN in the standard format, which may or may not work in Active Directory.)
User DN Patterns
<bean id="authenticator" class="org.springframework.security.providers.ldap.authenticator.BindAuthenticator"> <constructor-arg> <ref local="contextSource" /> </constructor-arg> <property name="userDnPatterns"> <list> <value>{0}@mycompany.com</value> <!-- and/or --> <value>domain\{0}</value> </list> </property> </bean>
User Searches
The sAMAccountName
attribute should be used as the username in user searches. The searchSubtree
property (which influences the SearchControls) should most likely be true. Otherwise, it searches the specified base plus one level down.
# backslash before opening and closing braces to escape them userSearch.searchFilter=(sAMAccountName=\{0\})
<bean id="userSearch" class="org.springframework.security.ldap.search.FilterBasedLdapUserSearch"> <constructor-arg index="0" value="${userSearch.searchBase}" /> <constructor-arg index="1" value="${userSearch.searchFilter}" /> <constructor-arg index="2"> <ref local="contextSource" /> </constructor-arg> <property name="searchSubtree" value="true" /> </bean>
Group names in the security configuration
Depending on your Active Directory configuration, you also need to change the group names of authorized users in pentaho-solutions/system/pentaho.xml
and pentaho-solutions/system/applicationContext-spring-security.xml
.
References
SEC-130: Support for Active Directory logins
How to login with a Windows Domain accounthttp://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/javax/naming/Context.html
Javadoc for javax.naming.Context
http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/javax/naming/Context.htmlInstalling Pentaho BI Suite 3.6GA with Active Directory as LDAP