Regarding #2, you do have ppolicy_forward_updates enabled in your configuration, correct?


-Michael Proto


On Wed, Sep 18, 2013 at 1:02 PM, Chris Jacobs <Chris.Jacobs@apollogrp.edu> wrote:
Caveat with using ppolicy to sync pwdfailures, etc:

I've failed in my attempts to get both of the following to work at same time:
1) passwords are actually checked (vs anything submitted for password will work)
2) and getting ppolicy pwdfailures to replicate from slaves to the master

Obviously #1 trumps #2.

Perhaps I did something wrong (along with follow up users), but no-one offered any suggestions or pointers, or things are better now.

Just make sure you test bad passwords before you assume 'authentication is working'.

Caveat Emptor.
- chris

-----Original Message-----
From: openldap-technical-bounces@OpenLDAP.org [mailto:openldap-technical-bounces@OpenLDAP.org] On Behalf Of Quanah Gibson-Mount
Sent: Tuesday, September 17, 2013 5:53 PM
To: Paul B. Henson; openldap-technical@openldap.org
Subject: Re: auditing failed login attempts

--On Tuesday, September 17, 2013 5:25 PM -0700 "Paul B. Henson"
<henson@acm.org> wrote:

> Our security group is hassling us because we don't currently provide
> them an audit log of failed login attempts on our LDAP servers. For
> most of our other systems, we simply provide them a syslog feed with this information.
> However, openldap doesn't appear to have a logging level that provides
> detail about login attempts on a single line, but rather across many
> lines that would need to be correlated. It seems more like connection
> debugging logging as opposed to authentication logging.
>
> It looks like we might need to set up an accesslog overlay to log all
> of the attempted binds and then have a separate process that runs
> through that and generates the syslog feed to our ISO group's central
> logging server? That's a bit more overhead than I would like.
>
> Are there any other simpler ways of generating failed login logs?

slapo-auditlog?
slapo-accesslog?

Don't know if you use it, but your security team may like you to use
ppolicy:
<http://www.openldap.org/software/man.cgi?query=slapo-ppolicy&apropos=0&sektion=0&manpath=OpenLDAP+2.4-Release&format=html>

--Quanah

--

Quanah Gibson-Mount
Lead Engineer
Zimbra Software, LLC
--------------------
Zimbra ::  the leader in open source messaging and collaboration



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