Hello my fellow openldap friends,
I've installed openldap 2.4 on debian lenny usinf the Debian packages slapd and ldap-utils. For Authentification I would like to use sasl simple-bind but if I try e.g:
ldapsearch -D "cn=admin,dc=lug-saar,dc=spc" -W -d 255 respectively
ldapsearch -D "cn=Manager,dc=lug-saar,dc=de" -W -d 255
I got: ldap_sasl_interactive_bind_s: Invalid credentials (49)
As I couldn't find the Error using google yet, but getting as more confused as more HOWTOS I read here is
my ldap.conf: --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- # # LDAP Defaults #
# See ldap.conf(5) for details # This file should be world readable but not world writable.
BASE dc=lug-saar,dc=de #URI ldap://ldap.lug-saar.de URI ldap://192.168.199.159 ldap_version 3 #SIZELIMIT 12 #TIMELIMIT 15 #DEREF never ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ my slapd.conf ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- # This is the main slapd configuration file. See slapd.conf(5) for more # info on the configuration options.
####################################################################### # Global Directives:
# Features to permit #allow bind_v2
# Schema and objectClass definitions include /etc/ldap/schema/core.schema include /etc/ldap/schema/cosine.schema include /etc/ldap/schema/nis.schema include /etc/ldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema
# Where the pid file is put. The init.d script # will not stop the server if you change this. pidfile /var/run/slapd/slapd.pid
# List of arguments that were passed to the server argsfile /var/run/slapd/slapd.args
# Read slapd.conf(5) for possible values loglevel none
# Where the dynamically loaded modules are stored modulepath /usr/lib/ldap moduleload back_hdb
# The maximum number of entries that is returned for a search operation sizelimit 500
# The tool-threads parameter sets the actual amount of cpu's that is used # for indexing. tool-threads 1
# Specific Backend Directives for hdb: # Backend specific directives apply to this backend until another # 'backend' directive occurs backend hdb
####################################################################### # Specific Backend Directives for 'other': # Backend specific directives apply to this backend until another # 'backend' directive occurs #backend <other>
####################################################################### # Specific Directives for database #1, of type hdb: # Database specific directives apply to this databasse until another # 'database' directive occurs database hdb
# The base of your directory in database #1 suffix "dc=lug-saar,dc=de"
# rootdn directive for specifying a superuser on the database. This is needed # for syncrepl. rootdn "cn=root,dc=lug-saar,dc=de" rootpw secret rootpw {SSHA}Jh+[3]GpYm86f7E0ierBIQJhnN/gKmx # Where the database file are physically stored for database #1 directory "/var/lib/ldap"
# The dbconfig settings are used to generate a DB_CONFIG file the first # time slapd starts. They do NOT override existing an existing DB_CONFIG # file. You should therefore change these settings in DB_CONFIG directly # or remove DB_CONFIG and restart slapd for changes to take effect.
# For the Debian package we use 2MB as default but be sure to update this # value if you have plenty of RAM dbconfig set_cachesize 0 2097152 0
# Sven Hartge reported that he had to set this value incredibly high # to get slapd running at all. See http://bugs.debian.org/303057 for more # information.
# Number of objects that can be locked at the same time. dbconfig set_lk_max_objects 1500 # Number of locks (both requested and granted) dbconfig set_lk_max_locks 1500 # Number of lockers dbconfig set_lk_max_lockers 1500
# Indexing options for database #1 index objectClass eq
# Save the time that the entry gets modified, for database #1 lastmod on
# Checkpoint the BerkeleyDB database periodically in case of system # failure and to speed slapd shutdown. checkpoint 512 30
# Where to store the replica logs for database #1 # replogfile /var/lib/ldap/replog
# The userPassword by default can be changed # by the entry owning it if they are authenticated. # Others should not be able to see it, except the # admin entry below # These access lines apply to database #1 only access to attrs=userPassword,shadowLastChange by dn="cn=root,dc=lug-saar,dc=de" write by anonymous auth by self write by * none
# Ensure read access to the base for things like # supportedSASLMechanisms. Without this you may # have problems with SASL not knowing what # mechanisms are available and the like. # Note that this is covered by the 'access to *' # ACL below too but if you change that as people # are wont to do you'll still need this if you # want SASL (and possible other things) to work # happily. access to dn.base="" by * read
# The admin dn has full write access, everyone else # can read everything. access to * by dn="cn=root,dc=lug-saar,dc=de" write by * read
# For Netscape Roaming support, each user gets a roaming # profile for which they have write access to #access to dn=".*,ou=Roaming,o=morsnet" # by dn="cn=root,dc=lug-saar,dc=de" write # by dnattr=owner write
####################################################################### # Specific Directives for database #2, of type 'other' (can be hdb too): # Database specific directives apply to this databasse until another # 'database' directive occurs #database <other>
# The base of your directory for database #2 #suffix "dc=debian,dc=org" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The schema and ldif files I put into /etc/ldap/schema
What did I do wrong? Thanks in advance.