Dieter Klünter wrote:
Am Sun, 26 Feb 2012 12:39:26 +0100 schrieb Daniel Pocockdaniel@pocock.com.au:
On 26/02/12 12:15, Dieter Klünter wrote:
Am Sun, 26 Feb 2012 11:49:14 +0100 schrieb Daniel Pocockdaniel@pocock.com.au:
Is there some way to ensure that a client who connects on port 389 can do nothing without StartTLS?
Or is it necessary to just disable port 389 and only listen for ldaps:/// ?
read on TLS OPTIONS in man ldap.conf(5) and man slapd.conf(5)
Thanks for the fast reply
I'm not keen to rely on ldap.conf (client side config) - I want to enforce a preference for TLS from the server side, to avoid a situation where some application might be configured non-TLS by mistake.
I've looked at the TLS options and I have TLS running fine already. I notice the TLSCipherSuite option sets the cipher level within TLS, but it doesn't appear to guarantee that TLS is used.
From man slapd.conf
TLSVerifyClient<level> demand | hard | true These keywords are all equivalent, for compatibility reasons. The client certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided, or a bad certificate is provided, the session is immediately terminated.
To make an analogy, in postfix, I require `plain' authentication: but the client is not allowed to try to authenticate until it has done StartTLS, because I never want a client to try sending a password over a channel that is not encrypted.
Postfix is a LDAP client, thus all client configurations apply according to man ldap.conf(5).
Dieter, no.
Josh Miller's post was correct. http://www.openldap.org/lists/openldap-technical/201202/msg00414.html