mirror of
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196 lines
5.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
196 lines
5.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
=================================================
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Common LDAP operation (for YunoHost but not only)
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=================================================
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Moulinette is deeply integrated with LDAP which is used for a series of things
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like:
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* storing users
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* storing domains (for users emails)
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* SSO
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This page document how to uses it on a programming side in YunoHost.
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Getting access to LDAP in a command
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===================================
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To get access to LDAP you need to authenticate against it, for that you need to
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declare you command with requiring authentication in the :ref:`actionsmap` this way:
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::
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configuration:
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authenticate: all
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Here is a complete example:
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::
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somecommand:
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category_help: ..
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actions:
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### somecommand_stuff()
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stuff:
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action_help: ...
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api: GET /...
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configuration:
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authenticate: all
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This will prompt the user for a password in CLI.
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If you only need to **read** LDAP (and not modify it, for example by listing
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domains), then you prevent the need for a password by using the
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:file:`ldap-anonymous` authenticator this way:
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::
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configuration:
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authenticate: all
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authenticator: ldap-anonymous
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Once you have declared your command like that, your python function will
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received the :file:`auth` object as first argument, it will be used to talk to
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LDAP, so you need to declare your function this way:
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::
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def somecommand_stuff(auth, ...):
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...
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Reading from LDAP
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=================
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Reading data from LDAP is done using the :file:`auth` object received as first
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argument of the python function. To see how to get this object read the
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previous section.
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The API looks like this:
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::
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auth.search(ldap_path, ldap_query)
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This will return a list of dictionary with strings as keys and list as values.
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You can also specify a list of attributes you want to access from LDAP using a list of string (on only one string apparently):
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::
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auth.search(ldap_path, ldap_query, ['first_attribute', 'another_attribute'])
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For example, if we request the user :file:`alice` with its :file:`homeDirectory`, this would look like this:
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::
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auth.search('ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org', '(&(objectclass=person)(uid=alice))', ['homeDirectory', 'another_attribute'])
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And as a result we will get:
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::
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[{'homeDirectory': ['/home/alice']}]
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Notice that even for a single result we get a **list** of result and that every
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value in the dictionary is also a **list** of values. This is not really convenient and it would be better to have a real ORM, but for now we are stuck with that.
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Apparently if we don't specify the list of attributes it seems that we get all attributes (need to be confirmed).
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Users LDAP schema
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-----------------
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According to :file:`ldapvi` this is the user schema (on YunoHost 2.7) and is
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located at :file:`uid=the_unix_username,ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org`:
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::
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uid: the_unix_username
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objectClass: mailAccount
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objectClass: inetOrgPerson
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objectClass: posixAccount
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loginShell: /bin/false
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uidNumber: 80833
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maildrop: the_unix_username # why?
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cn: first_name last_name
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displayName: first_name last_name
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mailuserquota: some_value
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gidNumber: 80833
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sn: last_name
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homeDirectory: /home/the_unix_username
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mail: the_unix_username@domain.com
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# if the user is the admin he will also have the following mails
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mail: root@domain.com
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mail: admin@domain.com
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mail: webmaster@domain.com
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mail: postmaster@domain.com
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givenName: first_name
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The admin user is a special case, is located at :file:`cn=admin,dc=yunohost,dc=org` and looks like this:
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::
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gidNumber: 1007
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cn: admin
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homeDirectory: /home/admin
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objectClass: organizationalRole
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objectClass: posixAccount
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objectClass: simpleSecurityObject
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loginShell: /bin/bash
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description: LDAP Administrator
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uidNumber: 1007
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uid: admin
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Reading users from LDAP
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-----------------------
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The user schema is located at this path: :file:`ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org`
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According to already existing code, the queries we uses are:
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* :file:`'(&(objectclass=person)(!(uid=root))(!(uid=nobody)))'` to get all users (not that I've never encountered users with :file:`root` or :file:`nobody` uid in the ldap database, those might be there for historical reason)
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* :file:`'(&(objectclass=person)(uid=%s))' % username` to access one user data
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This give us the 2 following python calls:
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::
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# all users
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auth.search('ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org', '(&(objectclass=person)(!(uid=root))(!(uid=nobody)))')
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# one user
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auth.search('ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org', '(&(objectclass=person)(uid=some_username))')
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Apparently we could also access one user using the following path (and not query): :file:`uid=user_username,ou=users,dc=yunohost,dc=org` but I haven't test it.
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If you want specific attributes look at the general documentation on how to read from LDAP a bit above of this section.
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Updating LDAP data
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==================
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Update a user from LDAP looks like a simplified version of searching. The syntax is the following one:
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::
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auth.update(exact_path_to_object, {'attribute_to_modify': 'new_value', 'another_attribute_to_modify': 'another_value', ...})
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For example this will update a user :file:`loginShell`:
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::
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auth.update('uid=some_username,ou=users', {'loginShell': '/bin/bash'})
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I don't know how this call behave if it fails and what it returns.
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Updating a user in LDAP
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-------------------------
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This is done this way:
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::
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auth.update('uid=some_username,ou=users', {'attribute': 'new_value', ...})
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Refer to the user schema to know which attributes you can modify.
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