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How to set up basic workstation authentication

Note:
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In this section we’ll look at configuring a Linux system as a Kerberos client. This will allow access to any “Kerber-ised” services once a user has successfully logged into the system.

Note that Kerberos alone is not enough for a user to exist in a Linux system. We cannot just point the system at a Kerberos server and expect all the Kerberos principals to be able to log in on the Linux system, simply because these users do not exist locally.

Kerberos only provides authentication: it doesn’t know about user groups, Linux UIDs and GIDs, home directories, etc. Normally, another network source is used for this information, such as an LDAP or Windows server, and, in the old days, NIS was used for that as well.

Set up a Linux system as a Kerberos client

If you have local users matching the principals in a Kerberos realm, and just want to switch the authentication from local to remote using Kerberos, you can follow this section. This is not a very usual scenario, but serves to highlight the separation between user authentication and user information (full name, UID, GID, home directory, groups, etc). If you just want to be able to grab tickets and use them, it’s enough to install krb5-user and run kinit.

We are going to use sssd with a trick so that it will fetch the user information from the local system files, instead of a remote source which is the more common case.

Install the required packages

To install the packages enter the following in a terminal prompt:

$ sudo apt install krb5-user sssd-krb5

You will be prompted for the addresses of your KDCs and admin servers. If you have followed our how to install a Kerberos server and how to set up a secondary KDC guides, the KDCs will be (space separated):

kdc01.example.com kdc02.example.com`

And the admin server will be:

kdc01.example.com

Remember that kdc02 is a read-only copy of the primary KDC, so it doesn’t run an admin server.

Note:
If you have added the appropriate SRV records to DNS, none of those prompts will need answering.

Configure Kerberos

If you missed the questions earlier, you can reconfigure the package to fill them in again:

sudo dpkg-reconfigure krb5-config

You can test the Kerberos configuration by requesting a ticket using the kinit utility. For example:

$ kinit ubuntu
Password for ubuntu@EXAMPLE.COM:

Note that kinit doesn’t need the principal to exist as a local user in the system. In fact, you can kinit any principal you want. If you don’t specify one, then the tool will use the username of whoever is running kinit.

Configure sssd

The only remaining configuration now is for sssd. Create the file /etc/sssd/sssd.conf with the following content:

    [sssd]
    config_file_version = 2
    services = pam
    domains = example.com

    [pam]

    [domain/example.com]
    id_provider = proxy
    proxy_lib_name = files
    auth_provider = krb5
    krb5_server = kdc01.example.com,kdc02.example.com
    krb5_kpasswd = kdc01.example.com
    krb5_realm = EXAMPLE.COM

The above configuration will use Kerberos for authentication (auth_provider), but will use the local system users for user and group information (id_provider).

Adjust the permissions of the config file and start sssd:

$ sudo chown root:root /etc/sssd/sssd.conf
$ sudo chmod 0600 /etc/sssd/sssd.conf
$ sudo systemctl start sssd

Just by having installed sssd and its dependencies, PAM will already have been configured to use sssd, with a fallback to local user authentication. To try it out, if this is a workstation, simply switch users (in the GUI), or open a login terminal (Ctrl-Alt-number), or spawn a login shell with sudo login, and try logging in using the name of a Kerberos principal. Remember that this user must already exist on the local system:

$ sudo login
focal-krb5-client login: ubuntu
Password:
Welcome to Ubuntu Focal Fossa (development branch) (GNU/Linux 5.4.0-21-generic x86_64)

(...)

Last login: Thu Apr  9 21:23:50 UTC 2020 from 10.20.20.1 on pts/0
$ klist
Ticket cache: FILE:/tmp/krb5cc_1000_NlfnSX
Default principal: ubuntu@EXAMPLE.COM

Valid starting     Expires            Service principal
04/09/20 21:36:12  04/10/20 07:36:12  krbtgt/EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM
    renew until 04/10/20 21:36:12

You will have a Kerberos ticket already right after login.

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