SASL is a "glue" between LDAP and Kerberos, that translates an identity established through Kerberos AuthN to an LDAP Distinguished Name (among other possible uses). When communications between Kerberos and LDAP happen, SASL also provides encryption.
I have setup Kerberos, SASL, OpenLDAP and SSSD all on Fedora and it all works. I dont have to muck with SSL/TLS and the different implementations with their specific nuances.
Though you dont know much about Kerberos, its not too difficult to implement. You seem to have the aptitude to do so. Might just be a matter of reading up on how to.
On Sep 29, 2017 10:00 AM, "Robert Heller" heller@deepsoft.com wrote:
At Fri, 29 Sep 2017 07:52:34 -0400 brendan kearney bpk678@gmail.com wrote:
Late ti the thread, so forgive the stupid question, but why arent you
using
SASL and forgoing all the OpenSSL vs MozNSS kerfuffle? If you have
OpenLDAP
and SSSD going on, surely Kerberos is something you are able to setup.
Does SASL replace TLS/SSL? I thought SASL had to do with password hashing and not anything to do with the connection protocol. I know basicly nothing about Kerberos.
On Sep 29, 2017 2:20 AM, "Michael Wandel" m.wandel@t-online.de wrote:
On 28.09.2017 21:41, Robert Heller wrote:
Will these spit out useful error messages? If I just get "TLS
Negotiation
failure" it is not going to be helpful.
You can make it a little bit more verbose with the option "-d -1"
It is only a suggestion, but can you test the parameter
TLS_REQCERT allow
in your /etc/openldap/ldap.conf
This ist not a good option for production systems, but it seems you
come
in trouble with your certificates.
You have to set your
TLS_CACERT xor TLS_CACERTDIR
correctly in your /etc/openldap/slapd.conf to work stressless with your ssl/tls.
best regards Michael
At Thu, 28 Sep 2017 12:29:19 -0700 Quanah Gibson-Mount <
quanah@symas.com>
wrote:
--On Thursday, September 28, 2017 3:34 PM -0400 Robert Heller heller@deepsoft.com wrote:
Slapd is reporting TLS Negotiation failure when SSSD tries to
connect
to
it. For both port 389 (ldap:///) and 636 (ldaps:///). So I guess something is wrong with slapd's TLS configuration -- it is
failing to
do
TLS Negotiation, either it is just not doing it or it is doing it
wrong
(somehow). Unless SSSD is not configured properly.
You need to start with the following:
> ldapwhoami -x -ZZ -H ldap://myhost:389 -D binddn -w
to test startTLS
and
ldapwhoami -x -H ldaps://myhost:636 -D binddn -w
to test without startTLS
If you can get those to work, then you can move on to SSSD.
--Quanah
--
Quanah Gibson-Mount Product Architect Symas Corporation Packaged, certified, and supported LDAP solutions powered by
OpenLDAP:
-- Michael Wandel Braakstraße 43 33647 Bielefeld
-- Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933 Deepwoods Software -- Custom Software Services http://www.deepsoft.com/ -- Linux Administration Services heller@deepsoft.com -- Webhosting Services