Mercurial > prosody-modules
annotate mod_lib_ldap/README.md @ 1322:bf6796061037
Merge
author | Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se> |
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date | Wed, 26 Feb 2014 20:17:13 +0100 |
parents | 0b72b8fe4591 |
children | 9da03e45c6be |
rev | line source |
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809 | 1 # LDAP plugin suite for Prosody |
2 | |
3 The LDAP plugin suite includes an authentication plugin (mod\_auth\_ldap2) and storage plugin | |
4 (mod\_storage\_ldap) to query against an LDAP server. It also provides a plugin library (mod\_lib\_ldap) | |
5 for accessing an LDAP server to make writing other LDAP-based plugins easier in the future. | |
6 | |
7 # LDAP Authentication | |
8 | |
9 **NOTE**: LDAP authentication currently only works with plaintext auth! If this isn't ok | |
10 with you, don't use it! (Or better yet, fix it =) ) | |
11 | |
12 With that note in mind, you need to set 'allow\_unencrypted\_plain\_auth' to true in your configuration if | |
13 you want to use LDAP authentication. | |
14 | |
862
675945ea2ed6
Change hoelzro's mod_auth_ldap to mod_auth_ldap2
Rob Hoelz <rob@hoelz.ro>
parents:
809
diff
changeset
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15 To enable LDAP authentication, set 'authentication' to 'ldap2' in your configuration file. |
809 | 16 See also http://prosody.im/doc/authentication. |
17 | |
18 # LDAP Storage | |
19 | |
20 LDAP storage is currently read-only, and it only supports rosters and vCards. | |
21 | |
22 To enable LDAP storage, set 'storage' to 'ldap' in your configuration file. | |
23 See also http://prosody.im/doc/storage. | |
24 | |
25 # LDAP Configuration | |
26 | |
27 All of the LDAP-specific configuration for the plugin set goes into an 'ldap' section | |
28 in the configuration. You must set the 'hostname' field in the 'ldap' section to | |
29 your LDAP server's location (a custom port is also accepted, so I guess it's not strictly | |
30 a hostname). The 'bind\_dn' and 'bind\_password' are optional if you want to bind as | |
31 a specific DN. There should be an example configuration included with this README, so | |
32 feel free to consult that. | |
33 | |
34 ## The user section | |
35 | |
36 The user section must contain the following keys: | |
37 | |
38 * basedn - The base DN against which to base your LDAP queries for users. | |
39 * filter - An LDAP filter expression that matches users. | |
40 * usernamefield - The name of the attribute in an LDAP entry that contains the username. | |
41 * namefield - The name of the attribute in an LDAP entry that contains the user's real name. | |
42 | |
43 ## The groups section | |
44 | |
45 The LDAP plugin suite has support for grouping (ala mod\_groups), which can be enabled via the groups | |
46 section in the ldap section of the configuration file. Currently, you must have at least one group. | |
47 The groups section must contain the following keys: | |
48 | |
49 * basedn - The base DN against which to base your LDAP queries for groups. | |
50 * memberfield - The name of the attribute in an LDAP entry that contains a list of a group's members. The contents of this field | |
51 must match usernamefield in the user section. | |
52 * namefield - The name of the attribute in an LDAP entry that contains the group's name. | |
53 | |
54 The groups section must contain at least one entry in its array section. Each entry must be a table, with the following keys: | |
55 | |
56 * name - The name of the group that will be presented in the roster. | |
57 * $namefield (whatever namefield is set to is the name) - An attribute pair to match this group against. | |
58 * admin (optional) - whether or not this group's members are admins. | |
59 | |
60 ## The vcard\_format section | |
61 | |
62 The vcard\_format section is used to generate a vCard given an LDAP entry. See http://xmpp.org/extensions/xep-0054.html for | |
63 more information. The JABBERID field is automatically populated. | |
64 | |
65 The key/value pairs in this table fall into three categories: | |
66 | |
67 ### Simple pairs | |
68 | |
69 Some values in the vcard\_format table are simple key-value pairs, where the key corresponds to a vCard | |
70 entry, and the value corresponds to the attribute name in the LDAP entry for the user. The fields that | |
71 be configured this way are: | |
72 | |
73 * displayname - corresponds to FN | |
74 * nickname - corresponds to NICKNAME | |
75 * birthday - corresponds to BDAY | |
76 * mailer - corresponds to MAILER | |
77 * timezone - corresponds to TZ | |
78 * title - corresponds to TITLE | |
79 * role - corresponds to ROLE | |
80 * note - corresponds to NOTE | |
81 * rev - corresponds to REV | |
82 * sortstring - corresponds to SORT-STRING | |
83 * uid - corresponds to UID | |
84 * url - corresponds to URL | |
85 * description - corresponds to DESC | |
86 | |
87 ### Single-level fields | |
88 | |
89 These pairs have a table as their values, and the table itself has a series of key value pairs that are translated | |
90 similarly to simple pairs. The fields that are configured this way are: | |
91 | |
92 * name - corresponds to N | |
93 * family - corresponds to FAMILY | |
94 * given - corresponds toGIVEN | |
95 * middle - corresponds toMIDDLE | |
96 * prefix - corresponds toPREFIX | |
97 * suffix - corresponds toSUFFIX | |
98 * photo - corresponds to PHOTO | |
99 * type - corresponds to TYPE | |
100 * binval - corresponds to BINVAL | |
101 * extval - corresponds to EXTVAL | |
102 * geo - corresponds to GEO | |
103 * lat - corresponds to LAT | |
104 * lon - corresponds to LON | |
105 * logo - corresponds to LOGO | |
106 * type - corresponds to TYPE | |
107 * binval - corresponds to BINVAL | |
108 * extval - corresponds to EXTVAL | |
109 * org - corresponds to ORG | |
110 * orgname - corresponds to ORGNAME | |
111 * orgunit - corresponds to ORGUNIT | |
112 * sound - corresponds to SOUND | |
113 * phonetic - corresponds to PHONETIC | |
114 * binval - corresponds to BINVAL | |
115 * extval - corresponds to EXTVAL | |
116 * key - corresponds to KEY | |
117 * type - corresponds to TYPE | |
118 * cred - corresponds to CRED | |
119 | |
120 ### Multi-level fields | |
121 | |
122 These pairs have a table as their values, and each table itself has tables as its values. The nested tables have | |
123 the same key-value pairs you're used to, the only difference being that values may have a boolean as their type, which | |
124 converts them into an empty XML tag. I recommend looking at the example configuration for clarification. | |
125 | |
126 * address - ADR | |
127 * telephone - TEL | |
128 * email - EMAIL | |
129 | |
130 ### Unsupported vCard fields | |
131 | |
132 * LABEL | |
133 * AGENT | |
134 * CATEGORIES | |
135 * PRODID | |
136 * CLASS | |
137 | |
138 ### Example Configuration | |
139 | |
140 You can find an example configuration in the dev directory underneath the | |
141 directory that this file is located in. | |
142 | |
143 # Missing Features | |
144 | |
145 This set of plugins is missing a few features, some of which are really just ideas: | |
146 | |
147 * Implement non-plaintext authentication. | |
148 * Use proper LDAP binding (LuaLDAP must be patched with http://prosody.im/patches/lualdap.patch, though) | |
149 * Non-hardcoded LDAP groups (derive groups from LDAP queries) | |
150 * LDAP-based MUCs (like a private MUC per group, or something) | |
151 * This suite of plugins was developed with a POSIX-style setup in mind; YMMV. Patches to work with other setups are welcome! | |
1224 | 152 * Add ability for users to change their vCard/passwords/etc from within Prosody |