Chris,
Again thanks so much for the response.
What I don't understand is which component is responsible for requesting the password expiration information ? It must all of pwdGraceAuthNLimit, pwdMaxAge and pwdChangedTime in order to calculate the information needed to determine which warning to display and when to display it.
It had been suggested that we test with ldapwhoami -e ppolicy. This wasn't something that was obvious to me as the man page for ldapwhoami doesn't show a -e option.
Or perhaps this is an extension of the ldapsearch or similar commands to include extended parameters.....again something not obvious unless you are familiar with the code.
In any case, when used with -x (since I am not using sasl) and -D uid=ldapuser,dc=....-W, only then do I see the warnings down to the second that the password will expire and if it has expired and pwdGraceAuthNLimit is greater than 0, do I see the grace period warning, when testing with ssh.
A strings on ldapwhoami shows these warnings coming from ldapwhoami itself. I have seen no other such strings in ssh, sshd, telnet, telnetd or any other of the pam modules so that tells me if this can be done through a pam module, perhaps some qualifier needs to be included in the system-auth or other file in order to trigger this response or we simply need a later version of some utility or library modules ?
I should also note that I am using only that software is provided with the Red Hat distribution. I work for a support organization and can only use the Red Hat provided kits. So I'd like to get this working with these restrictions.
Any help greatly appreciated
Al
-----Original Message----- From: openldap-technical-bounces@OpenLDAP.org [mailto:openldap-technical-bounces@OpenLDAP.org] On Behalf Of Chris Jacobs Sent: Thursday, July 08, 2010 3:04 PM To: Licause, Al; Buchan Milne; openldap-technical@openldap.org Subject: RE: Expired password allowed in via pwdGraceAuthNLimit w/o warning to user
What I've done in my implementation is to enable password expiration warnings - with the warning age being set to just a few seconds less than the password expiration period.
For example, when I login I see: $ ssh <host> <user>@<host>'s password: Your LDAP password will expire in 182 days. Last login: Thu Jul 8 18:17:24 2010 from <ip> [<user>@<host> ~]$
Granted, I still won't see a warning on the last day... but that's been reported previously and a fairly small issue. Really, I think that and your issue are both PAM issues; not OpenLDAP.
- chris
-----Original Message----- From: openldap-technical-bounces@OpenLDAP.org [mailto:openldap-technical-bounces@OpenLDAP.org] On Behalf Of Licause, Al Sent: Thursday, July 08, 2010 11:55 AM To: Buchan Milne; openldap-technical@openldap.org Subject: RE: Expired password allowed in via pwdGraceAuthNLimit w/o warning to user
From the previous post, we can see the expiration messages and grace period messages when using ldapwhoami with -e ppolicy.
If I look for those expiration messages, I see they are coming from the executable ldapwhoami.
I find some expiration messages in sshd, but nothing with grace period messages other than "Invalid login grace time" and nothing from telnetd which is not all that surprising given it's age.
Can I assume from this that we need a newer sshd component in order to see these grace period messages ?
Al
-----Original Message----- From: Buchan Milne [mailto:bgmilne@staff.telkomsa.net] Sent: Monday, July 05, 2010 4:56 AM To: openldap-technical@openldap.org Cc: Licause, Al Subject: Re: Expired password allowed in via pwdGraceAuthNLimit w/o warning to user
I did not reply to your off-list mails, primarily because I was out of the office (at a data centre) all of Friday, and without internet access over the weekend. You could have sent those replies to your original thread to the list ...
On Friday, 2 July 2010 20:09:15 Licause, Al wrote:
I have installed and configured the ppolicy overlay software on a Red Hat V5.4 server along with the openldap server software and the following components:
openldap-servers-2.3.43-3.el5 python-ldap-2.2.0-2.1 openldap-devel-2.3.43-3.el5 checkpassword-ldap-0.01-1.2.el5.rf mozldap-6.0.5-1.el5 openldap-2.3.43-3.el5 openldap-debuginfo-2.3.43-3.el5 openldap-servers-overlays-2.3.43-3.el5 nss_ldap-253-22.el5_4 openldap-clients-2.3.43-3.el5
PROBLEM:
I have notice that when an ldap users' password expires, and pwdGraceAuthNLimit is set to a non-zero value...in my case it is set to 1 for testing purposes, the user is allowed to login one time. The next login forces a password change.
On the first login, allowed via pwdGraceAuthNLimit, there is no announcement sent to the user telling them that the password has expired.
You should actually get a prompt to change your password immediately.
BTW, if your PAM setup was correct, you should have seen warnings about expiry before this.
Did you bother testing with a guaranteed-to-work tool, such as (with appropriate values to -D option) 'ldapwhoami -e ppolicy' ?
Nor that they will have to change their password on the next login. I have to wonder if there is also a missing announcement that might tell the user how many more logins they are permitted given the value of pwdGraceAuthNLimit
It was suggested that the problem may be in the pam configuration.
I am using the following /etc/pam.d/system-auth file that is autogenerated by authconfig:
#%PAM-1.0 # This file is auto-generated. # User changes will be destroyed the next time authconfig is run. auth required pam_env.so auth sufficient pam_unix.so nullok try_first_pass auth requisite pam_succeed_if.so uid >= 500 quiet auth sufficient pam_ldap.so use_first_pass auth required pam_deny.so
account required pam_unix.so broken_shadow account sufficient pam_localuser.so account sufficient pam_succeed_if.so uid < 500 quiet account [default=bad success=ok user_unknown=ignore] pam_ldap.so account required pam_permit.so
This should be pam_deny.so, but is likely not the cause of your problems.
password requisite pam_cracklib.so try_first_pass retry=3 password sufficient pam_unix.so md5 shadow nis nullok try_first_pass use_authtok password sufficient pam_ldap.so use_authtok password required pam_deny.so
session optional pam_keyinit.so revoke session required pam_limits.so session optional pam_mkhomedir.so session [success=1 default=ignore] pam_succeed_if.so service in crond quiet use_uid session required pam_unix.so session optional pam_ldap.so
I am testing by logging into the client with ssh. I also have many of the pwd* values set fairly low for quick testing. This is the default policy in use:
dn: cn=Standard,ou=Policies,dc=mydomain,dc=com objectClass: top objectClass: device objectClass: pwdPolicy cn: Standard pwdAttribute: userPassword pwdLockoutDuration: 15 pwdInHistory: 6 pwdCheckQuality: 0 pwdMinLength: 5 pwdAllowUserChange: TRUE pwdMustChange: TRUE pwdMaxFailure: 3 pwdFailureCountInterval: 120 pwdSafeModify: FALSE pwdLockout: TRUE pwdReset: TRUE structuralObjectClass: device entryUUID: 421d8558-1a33-102f-8b9e-a5541f2aaf30 creatorsName: cn=Manager,dc=mydomain,dc=com createTimestamp: 20100702143843Z pwdMinAge: 0 pwdMaxAge: 300 pwdGraceAuthNLimit: 1 pwdExpireWarning: 86400 entryCSN: 20100702154010Z#000000#00#000000 modifiersName: cn=Manager,dc=mydomain,dc=com modifyTimestamp: 20100702154010Z
This is the test users profile:
dn: uid=ldap1,dc=mydomain,dc=com uid: ldap1 cn: ldap1 objectClass: account objectClass: posixAccount objectClass: top uidNumber: 10001 gidNumber: 150 homeDirectory: /home/ldap1 loginShell: /bin/csh gecos: ldap test user pwdPolicySubentry: cn=Standard,ou=Policies,dc=mydomain,dc=com structuralObjectClass: account entryUUID: 334312be-1a33-102f-8a83-a5541f2aaf30 creatorsName: cn=Manager,dc=mydomain,dc=com createTimestamp: 20100702143818Z pwdHistory: 20100702151010Z#1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40#38#{SSHA}BIxGPXPqBY+ 2yK6pY2i+6l7UbE/gaVhY pwdHistory: 20100702154253Z#1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40#38#{SSHA}q4inOFGO+0N c6T0q6FYiiMrPCTTUqQdr pwdHistory: 20100702183229Z#1.3.6.1.4.1.1466.115.121.1.40#38#{SSHA}3T0Cna8AGIg X69V7zsDxGiTx/q0ceBnc userPassword:: e1NTSEF9WkZ0ekJrUWVOQVJrMDhFbDJXd0VNaU1maWlGVURaT28= pwdChangedTime: 20100702183229Z pwdGraceUseTime: 20100702184519Z entryCSN: 20100702184519Z#000000#00#000000 modifiersName: cn=Manager,dc=mydomain,dc=com modifyTimestamp: 20100702184519Z
I have examined various log files and enabled debugging in system-auth (now removed to show the standard autogenerated content) for any clues. I have examined various pam modules and library files with strings to see if I could get an idea as to which module may be at fault.
I have to admit I am no pam expert and given the number of combinations and variations possible in the system-auth file alone, I don't feel comfortable modifying this file to any great extent.
I have omitted the slapd.conf and client ldap.conf files assuming that they are not at fault and don't have any obvious omissions which could cause a warning messages to be suppressed during login, but can supply them if required.
You need to supply the pam_ldap ldap.conf (/etc/ldap.conf on RH), specifically verify whether 'pam_lookup_policy' is set to 'yes'. Please see 'man pam_ldap'.
If the default system-auth file generated by the authconfig utility defeats a feature of the ldap or other system modules,
It doesn't "defeat" a feature, but the feature does need to be specifically enabled.
we need to report this to Red Hat and have the problem corrected.
Of course, then this entire discussion is more or less off-topic here ...
Regards, Buchan
This message is private and confidential. If you have received it in error, please notify the sender and remove it from your system.