Le 12/12/2011 21:07, Howard Chu a écrit :
rey sebastien wrote:
Le 12/12/2011 19:24, Howard Chu a écrit :
reyman wrote:
You have a self signed certificate,
Correct.
so you don't need to verify your certificate. When you activate the tls on ldap, you only need this two lines, and you don't need the line with certificate verification*olcTLSCACertificateFile : *
Wrong.
It true and false, with debian and openLdap compiled with GnuTLS (my case), i read this documentation : http://wiki.debian.org/LDAP/OpenLDAPSetup and they said :
Pure garbage.
Procedure:
You're going to need the gnutls certificate generator: certtool http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/manual/html_node/Invoking-certtool.html.
Run these two commands to generate a new self-signed key (into the current working directory):
certtool --generate-privkey --outfile ca-key.pem certtool --generate-self-signed --load-privkey ca-key.pem --outfile ca-cert.pem
Then, update your certificate locations in /etc/ldap/slapd.conf (TLSCertificateFile points to ca-cert.pem and TLSCertificateKeyFile points to ca-key.pem), *comment out TLSCACertificateFile*, and change *TLSVerifyClient to never.*
In /etc/ldap/ldap.conf, comment out TLS_CACERT and change TLS_REQCERT to never.
This is utterly bogus. Turning off these checks disables any spoofing detection; you might as well run without TLS at all.
IMHO i know this problem but i think this is better than nothing, and actually i have nothing. I wait for valid certificate... And sorry but your RTFM answer doesn't help me to resolve this problem with gnutls and debian, i take many hours to find a valid solution in my use case, and the manual doesn't help me particulary on this point.
OpenLdap is a great software, but documentation it's a little "cryptic" for beginner like me, so i think it's easy to be rude with beginner on many points.
Best regards, SR.
Since the certificate is self-signed, we can't have gnutls trying to verify it (hence the never), otherwise it will never run.
And RTFM is a little violent, i try to help with my little experience, i'm not an expert for sure.
RTFM is exactly the correct response.
Best regards, SR.
RTFM.
http://www.openldap.org/doc/admin24/tls.html
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 12:31 PM, Jayavant Patil <jayavant.patil82@gmail.com mailto:jayavant.patil82@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 4:19 PM, reyman <reyman64@gmail.com
mailto:reyman64@gmail.com> wrote:
With the option -ZZ i think, try this
|>ldapsearch -x -LLL -ZZ -d 150|
Yeah, It shows output containing ber_dump, ldap_write,ldap_read, tls_write, tls_read etc. But at the end is shows the following:
TLS certificate verification: Error, self signed certificate TLS: can't connect: error:14090086:SSL routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_ CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed (self signed certificate). ldap_start_tls: Connect error (-11) additional info: error:14090086:SSL routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed (self signed certificate)
Why it shows an error ? and how to resolve this?
and when I do ldapsearch with -ZZ option it gives error
$ldapsearch -x -v -D "cn=root,dc=abc,dc=com" -w cluster -b "ou=People,dc=abc,dc=com" "uid=ldap_6" -h n0 -ZZ ldap_initialize( ldap://n0 ) ldap_start_tls: Connect error (-11) additional info: error:14090086:SSL routines:SSL3_GET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE:certificate verify failed
On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 11:21 AM, Jayavant Patil
<jayavant.patil82@gmail.com mailto:jayavant.patil82@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
I am using openldap-2.4.19-4.x86_64 on fedora 12 machine. I
have enabled openldap SSL/TLS. How do I know >>(test) that I am using SSL/TLS connections instead of normal ldap:///?