Le lun. 9 sept. 2019 à 18:25, Quanah Gibson-Mount quanah@symas.com a écrit :
--On Thursday, September 5, 2019 10:35 AM +0200 Manuela Mandache manuela3mandache@gmail.com wrote:
Le mer. 4 sept. 2019 à 16:00, Quanah Gibson-Mount quanah@symas.com a écrit :
--On Wednesday, September 4, 2019 1:56 PM +0200 Manuela Mandache manuela3mandache@gmail.com wrote:
olcAccess: {0}to * by dn.base="cn=admin,cn=config" manage by dn.base="cn=adm in,dc=example,dc=com" manage by * break olcAccess: {1}to dn.base="" by * read olcAccess: {2}to dn.base=cn=Subschema by * read olcAccess: {3}to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" attrs=userPassword by * auth olcAccess: {4}to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" attrs=entry by * read olcAccess: {5}to dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" attrs=cn,mail by * read olcAccess: {6}to * by anonymous none by * read
On what cn=config entry have you set these ACLs?
They're on olcDatabase={2}mdb,cn=config This is the DB containing the actual data of the directory, with olcSuffix: dc=example,dc=com
Given that, I would make the following notes:
a) rootDNs are never subject to ACLs, so the access for cn=admin,cn=config manage in {0} is suspect, as I would infer that is a rootdn.
b) ACL {1} is invalid for this database. It should be set in the dn: olcDatabase={-1}frontend,cn=config database
c) ACL {2} is invalid for this database. See solution listed in (b)
d) ACL {3} should only give auth access to anonymous, not *
e) ACLs 3-5 should be rewritten to drop the dn.subtree="dc=example,dc=com" bit entirely. You're already only setting ACLs for that database, no need to list that restriction. You can also combine ACLs 4 & 5.
olcAccess: {3} to attrs=userPassword by anonymous auth olcAccess: {4} to attrs=entry,cn,mail by * read olcAccess: {5} to * by anonymous none by * read
Hello Quanah,
Thank you for the detailed analysis of the ACLs - I wrote them based on very old inherited ones, but this is no excuse. Although I (believed I had) thoroughly RTFM, I feel like I only begin to really understand the way they must be defined. Well, back to the drawing board. Do poorly written ACLs have a strong impact on performance?
As for your question in general, I don't think you understand how ACLs work in relation to incoming search requests. The server did exactly what your ACLs said it should do: It provided no information when someone tried to search for data using an attribute that access is not granted to, and correctly returned 0 entries. It sounds as though you expected the connection to be dropped when the search was initiated because it was filtering off of sn.
No, I didn't think the connection would be dropped, but I thought no data which are never to be returned would be searched. E.g.: - there are three branches in the directory, ou=people,dc=example,dc=com, ou=dogs,dc=... and ou=carpets,...; - a user has read rights on ou=dogs and none on the two other branches; - this user makes a search with -b dc=example,dc=com and no filter. As far as I understand, the whole content is recovered, then the people and the carpets are dropped and only the dogs are returned. I expected the request to be parsed against the ACLs before performing the actual search in the directory, and so this search to be done only on ou=dogs.
Maybe this example is completely different from the one in my first post: It's true that I do not know how requests-and-ACLs actually work. Is there some documentation I could read on the topic?
Best regards,
Manuela
That is now how things work.
Regards, Quanah
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Quanah Gibson-Mount Product Architect Symas Corporation Packaged, certified, and supported LDAP solutions powered by OpenLDAP: http://www.symas.com