| Lemonldap-NG-Portal documentation | Contained in the Lemonldap-NG-Portal distribution. |
exportedHeaders parameter in Lemonldap::NG::Portal
documentation),globalStorage
parameter (completed with globalglobalStorageOptions) and used by
lemonldap::NG::Portal to store authenticated user parameters,localStorage parameter
(completed with localStorageOptions and used to share authenticated users
between Apache's threads or processus and of course between virtual hosts,getProtectedSites.REMOTE_USER to search the user in
the LDAP server. This can be used to authenticate users by Kerberos."dmdName=groups,dc=example,dc=com".Lemonldap::NG::Portal - The authentication portal part of Lemonldap::NG Web-SSO system.
use Lemonldap::NG::Portal::SharedConf;
my $portal = new Lemonldap::NG::Portal::SharedConf (
configStorage => {
type => 'DBI',
dbiChain => "dbi:mysql:database=lmSessions;host=1.2.3.4",
dbiUser => "lemon",
dbiPassword => "pass",
},
# Activate SOAP service
Soap => 1
);
if($portal->process()) {
# Write here the menu with CGI methods. This page is displayed ONLY IF
# the user was not redirected here by a Lemonldap::NG::Handler,
# else, the process sub redirect the user to the initial requested URI.
print $portal->header('text/html; charset=utf8'); # DON'T FORGET THIS (see L<CGI(3)>)
print "...";
# or redirect the user to the menu
print $portal->redirect( -uri => 'https://portal/menu');
# You can also add a "Logout" link:
print "<a href=\"$ENV{SCRIPT_NAME}?logout=1\">";
}
else {
# Write here the html form used to authenticate with CGI methods.
# $portal->error returns the error message if authentication failed
# You can force the language in error like this :
# print $portal->error('fr')
# Warning: by defaut, input names are "user" and "password"
print $portal->header('text/html; charset=utf8'); # DON'T FORGET THIS (see L<CGI(3)>)
print "<html> ...";
print '<form method="POST">';
# In your form, the following value is required for redirection
print '<input type="hidden" name="url" value="'.$portal->param('url').'">';
# Next, login and password
print 'Login : <input name="user"><br>';
print 'Password : <input name="password" type="password" autocomplete="off"><br>';
print '<input type=submit value="OK">';
print '</form>';
}
SOAP mode authentication (client) :
#!/usr/bin/perl -l
use SOAP::Lite;
use Data::Dumper;
my $soap =
SOAP::Lite->proxy('http://auth.example.com/')
->uri('urn:/Lemonldap::NG::Common::CGI::SOAPService');
my $r = $soap->getCookies( 'user', 'password' );
# Catch SOAP errors
if ( $r->fault ) {
print STDERR "SOAP Error: " . $r->fault->{faultstring};
}
else {
my $res = $r->result();
# If authentication failed, display error
if ( $res->{error} ) {
print STDERR "Error: " . $soap->error( 'fr', $res->{error} )->result();
}
# print session-ID
else {
print "Cookie: lemonldap=" . $res->{cookies}->{lemonldap};
}
}
Lemonldap::NG is a modular Web-SSO based on Apache::Session modules. It simplifies the build of a protected area with a few changes in the application.
It manages both authentication and authorization and provides headers for accounting. So you can have a full AAA protection for your web space as described below.
The portal part inherits from CGI so yo can use it both with Apache 1 and 2 and use all CGI features.
If a user isn't authenticated and attempts to connect to an area protected by a Lemonldap::NG compatible handler, he is redirected to a portal. The portal authenticates user with a ldap bind by default, but you can also use another authentication sheme like using x509 user certificates (see Lemonldap::NG::Portal::AuthSSL for more).
Lemonldap::NG use session cookies generated by Apache::Session so as secure as a
128-bit random cookie. You may use the securedCookie options of
Lemonldap::NG::Portal to avoid session hijacking if all your protected sites
use https.
You have to manage life of sessions by yourself since Lemonldap::NG knows nothing
about the Apache::Session module you've choosed, but it's very easy using a
simple cron script because Lemonldap::NG::Portal stores the start time in the
_utime field.
The purgeCentralCache provided in example/ directory can help you to do it.
By default, a session stay 10 minutes in the Handler local storage, so in the
worth case, a user is authorized 10 minutes after he lost his rights.
Authorization is controled only by handlers because the portal knows nothing about the way the user will choose. When configuring your Web-SSO, you have to:
exportedHeaders parameter in Lemonldap::NG::Portal
documentation),Exported variables (in Lemonldap::NG::Portal, will be stored in configuration database):
exportedVars => {
cn => "cn",
departmentUID => "departmentUID",
login => "uid",
},
User groups (stored in configuration database with Lemonldap::NG::Manager):
groups => {
group1 => '{ $departmentUID eq "unit1" or $login = "xavier.guimard" }',
...
},
Area protection (stored in configuration database with Lemonldap::NG::Manager):
locationRules => {
www1.domain.com => {
'^/protected/.*$' => '$groups =~ /\bgroup1\b/',
default => 'accept',
},
www2.domain.com => {
'^/site/.*$' => '$uid eq "xavier.guimard" or $groups =~ /\bgroup2\b/',
'^/(js|css)' => 'accept',
default => 'deny',
},
},
You can use Perl expressions as complicated as you want and you can use all the exported LDAP attributes (and create your own attributes: see examples in Lemonldap::NG::Portal distribution) both in groups evaluations and area protections (you just have to call them with a "$").
You have to be careful when choosing your expressions:
groups are evaluated each time a user is redirected to the portal,locationRules are evaluated for each request.It is also recommended to use the groups mechanism to avoid having to
evaluate a long expression at each HTTP request:
locationRules => {
www1.domain.com => {
'^/protected/.*$' => '$groups =~ /\bgroup1\b/',
},
},
You can also use ldap filters in groups parameter, or Perl expression or
mixed expressions. Perl expressions has to be enclosed with {}:
group1 => '(|(uid=xavier.guimard)(ou=unit1))'group1 => '{$uid eq "xavier.guimard" or $ou eq "unit1"}'group1 => '(|(uid=xavier.guimard){$ou eq "unit1"})'It is also recommended to use Perl expressions to avoid requiering the LDAP server more than 2 times per authentication.
Lemonldap::NG::Portal doesn't log anything by default, but it's easy to overload
log method for normal portal access or using error method to know what
was wrong if process method has failed.
Because an handler knows nothing about the protected application, it can't do
more than logging URL. As Apache does this fine, Lemonldap::NG::Handler gives it
the name to used in logs. The whatToTrace parameters indicates which
variable Apache has to use ($uid by default).
The real accounting has to be done by the application itself which knows the result of SQL transaction for example.
Lemonldap::NG can export http headers either using a proxy or protecting directly
the application. By default, the User-Auth field is used but you can change
it using the exportedHeaders parameters (stored in the configuration
database). This parameters contains an associative array:
$<varname>.Example:
exportedHeaders => {
www1.domain.com => {
'Auth-User' => '$uid',
'Unit' => '$ou',
},
www2.domain.com => {
'Authorization' => '"Basic ".encode_base64($employeeNumber.":dummy")',
},
}
Lemonldap::NG use 3 levels of cache for authenticated users:
globalStorage
parameter (completed with globalglobalStorageOptions) and used by
lemonldap::NG::Portal to store authenticated user parameters,localStorage parameter
(completed with localStorageOptions and used to share authenticated users
between Apache's threads or processus and of course between virtual hosts,So the number of request to the central storage is limited to 1 per user each 10 minutes.
Lemonldap::NG is very fast, but you can increase performance using a Cache::Cache module that does not use disk access.
Lemonldap::NG provides a single logout system: you can use it by adding a link to the portal with "logout=1" parameter (See Synopsis) and/or by configuring Handler to intercept some URL directly in the manager interface and/or in Apache configuration file (See Lemonldap::NG::Handler). The logout system:
By default, when a user tries to connect to the portal with a valid cookie,
the portal proposes a new authentication. This behaviour can be change easily
by changing existingSession sub :
use Lemonldap::NG::Portal::SharedConf qw(:all);
my $portal = Lemonldap::NG::Portal::SharedConf->new ( {
existingSession => sub {PE_DONE},
configStorage => ...
...
});
All options here can be set both in the manager interface and in the constructor ($portal->new()). Local arguments have the precedence on arguments set by the manager.
getProtectedSites.
REMOTE_USER to search the user in
the LDAP server. This can be used to authenticate users by Kerberos.Those options can not be set using the manager but have to be passed to the constructor (new()).
"dmdName=groups,dc=example,dc=com".CAS authentication options :
Liberty-Alliance authentication options :
SSL authentication options :
Lemonldap::NG::Portal provides different modules:
Lemonldap::NG::Portal::SharedConf, Lemonldap::NG::Portal::Simple Lemonldap::NG::Handler, Lemonldap::NG::Manager, http://lemonldap-ng.org/
Xavier Guimard, <x.guimard@free.fr>
Use OW2 system to report bug or ask for features: http://jira.ow2.org
Lemonldap::NG is available at http://forge.objectweb.org/project/showfiles.php?group_id=274
Copyright (C) 2005, 2007, 2010 by Xavier Guimard <x.guimard@free.fr>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.10.0 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
| Lemonldap-NG-Portal documentation | Contained in the Lemonldap-NG-Portal distribution. |
## @file # Alias for Lemonldap::NG::SharedConf ## @class # Alias for Lemonldap::NG::SharedConf package Lemonldap::NG::Portal; our $VERSION = '1.0.6'; use Lemonldap::NG::Portal::SharedConf; use base 'Lemonldap::NG::Portal::SharedConf'; 1; __END__