Vault
LDAP secrets engine
Note: This engine can use external X.509 certificates as part of TLS or signature validation. Verifying signatures against X.509 certificates that use SHA-1 is deprecated and is no longer usable without a workaround starting in Vault 1.12. See the deprecation FAQ for more information.
The LDAP secrets engine provides management of LDAP credentials as well as dynamic creation of credentials. It supports integration with implementations of the LDAP v3 protocol, including OpenLDAP, Active Directory, and IBM Resource Access Control Facility (RACF).
The secrets engine has three primary features:
Setup
Enable the LDAP secret engine:
$ vault secrets enable ldap
By default, the secrets engine will mount at the name of the engine. To enable the secrets engine at a different path, use the
-path
argument.Configure the credentials that Vault uses to communicate with LDAP to generate passwords:
$ vault write ldap/config \ binddn=$USERNAME \ bindpass=$PASSWORD \ url=ldaps://138.91.247.105
Note: it's recommended a dedicated entry management account be created specifically for Vault.
Rotate the root password so only Vault knows the credentials:
$ vault write -f ldap/rotate-root
Note: it's not possible to retrieve the generated password once rotated by Vault. It's recommended a dedicated entry management account be created specifically for Vault.
Schemas
The LDAP Secret Engine supports three different schemas:
OpenLDAP
By default, the LDAP Secret Engine assumes the entry password is stored in userPassword
.
There are many object classes that provide userPassword
including for example:
Resource access control facility (RACF)
For managing IBM's Resource Access Control Facility (RACF) security system, the secret
engine must be configured to use the schema racf
.
Generated passwords must be 8 characters or less to support RACF. The length of the password can be configured using a password policy:
$ vault write ldap/config \
binddn=$USERNAME \
bindpass=$PASSWORD \
url=ldaps://138.91.247.105 \
schema=racf \
password_policy=racf_password_policy
Active directory (AD)
For managing Active Directory instances, the secret engine must be configured to use the
schema ad
.
$ vault write ldap/config \
binddn=$USERNAME \
bindpass=$PASSWORD \
url=ldaps://138.91.247.105 \
schema=ad
Static credentials
Setup
Configure a static role that maps a name in Vault to an entry in LDAP. Password rotation settings will be managed by this role.
$ vault write ldap/static-role/hashicorp \ dn='uid=hashicorp,ou=users,dc=hashicorp,dc=com' \ username='hashicorp' \ rotation_period="24h"
Request credentials for the "hashicorp" role:
$ vault read ldap/static-cred/hashicorp
Password rotation
Passwords can be managed in two ways:
- automatic time based rotation
- manual rotation
Auto password rotation
Passwords will automatically be rotated based on the rotation_period
configured
in the static role (minimum of 5 seconds). When requesting credentials for a static
role, the response will include the time before the next rotation (ttl
).
Auto-rotation is currently only supported for static roles. The binddn
account used
by Vault should be rotated using the rotate-root
endpoint to generate a password
only Vault will know.
Manual rotation
Static roles can be manually rotated using the rotate-role
endpoint. When manually
rotated the rotation period will start over.
Deleting static roles
Passwords are not rotated upon deletion of a static role. The password should be manually rotated prior to deleting the role or revoking access to the static role.
Dynamic credentials
Setup
Dynamic credentials can be configured by calling the /role/:role_name
endpoint:
$ vault write ldap/role/dynamic-role \
creation_ldif=@/path/to/creation.ldif \
deletion_ldif=@/path/to/deletion.ldif \
rollback_ldif=@/path/to/rollback.ldif \
default_ttl=1h \
max_ttl=24h
Note: The rollback_ldif
argument is optional, but recommended. The statements within rollback_ldif
will be
executed if the creation fails for any reason. This ensures any entities are removed in the event of a failure.
To generate credentials:
$ vault read ldap/creds/dynamic-role
Key Value
--- -----
lease_id ldap/creds/dynamic-role/HFgd6uKaDomVMvJpYbn9q4q5
lease_duration 1h
lease_renewable true
distinguished_names [cn=v_token_dynamic-role_FfH2i1c4dO_1611952635,ou=users,dc=learn,dc=example]
password xWMjkIFMerYttEbzfnBVZvhRQGmhpAA0yeTya8fdmDB3LXDzGrjNEPV2bCPE9CW6
username v_token_testrole_FfH2i1c4dO_1611952635
The distinguished_names
field is an array of DNs that are created from the creation_ldif
statements. If more than
one LDIF entry is included, the DN from each statement will be included in this field. Each entry in this field
corresponds to a single LDIF statement. No de-duplication occurs and order is maintained.
LDIF entries
User account management is provided through LDIF entries. The LDIF entries may be a base64-encoded version of the LDIF string. The string will be parsed and validated to ensure that it adheres to LDIF syntax. A good reference for proper LDIF syntax can be found here.
Some important things to remember when crafting your LDIF entries:
- There should not be any trailing spaces on any line, including empty lines
- Each
modify
block needs to be preceded with an empty line - Multiple modifications for a
dn
can be defined in a singlemodify
block. Each modification needs to close with a single dash (-
)
Active directory (AD)
Note
Windows Servers hosting Active Directory include a
lifetime period of an old password
configuration setting that lets clients
authenticate with old passwords for a specified amount of time.
For more information, refer to the [NTLM network authentication behavior](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/windows-server/windows-security new-setting-modifies-ntlm-network-authentication) guide by Microsoft.
For Active Directory, there are a few additional details that are important to remember:
To create a user programmatically in AD, you first add
a user object and then modify
that user to provide a
password and enable the account.
Passwords in AD are set using the
unicodePwd
field. This must be proceeded by two (2) colons (::
).When setting a password programmatically in AD, the following criteria must be met:
- The password must be enclosed in double quotes (
" "
) - The password must be in
UTF16LE
format - The password must be
base64
-encoded - Additional details can be found here
- The password must be enclosed in double quotes (
Once a user's password has been set, it can be enabled. AD uses the
userAccountControl
field for this purpose:- To enable the account, set
userAccountControl
to512
- You will likely also want to disable AD's password expiration for this dynamic user account. The
userAccountControl
value for this is:65536
userAccountControl
flags are cumulative, so to set both of the above two flags, add up the two values (512 + 65536 = 66048
): setuserAccountControl
to66048
- See here
for details on
userAccountControl
flags
- To enable the account, set
sAMAccountName
is a common field when working with AD users. It is used to provide compatibility with legacy
Windows NT systems and has a limit of 20 characters. Keep this in mind when defining your username_template
.
See here for additional details.
Since the default username_template
is longer than 20 characters which follows the template of v_{{.DisplayName}}_{{.RoleName}}_{{random 10}}_{{unix_time}}
, we recommend customising the username_template
on the role configuration to generate accounts with names less than 20 characters. Please refer to the username templating document for more information.
With regard to adding dynamic users to groups, AD doesn't let you directly modify a user's memberOf
attribute.
The member
attribute of a group and memberOf
attribute of a user are
linked attributes. Linked attributes are
forward link/back link pairs, with the forward link able to be modified. In the case of AD group membership, the
group's member
attribute is the forward link. In order to add a newly-created dynamic user to a group, we also
need to issue a modify
request to the desired group and update the group membership with the new user.
Active directory LDIF example
The various *_ldif
parameters are templates that use the go template
language. A complete LDIF example for creating an Active Directory user account is provided here for reference:
dn: CN={{.Username}},OU=HashiVault,DC=adtesting,DC=lab
changetype: add
objectClass: top
objectClass: person
objectClass: organizationalPerson
objectClass: user
userPrincipalName: {{.Username}}@adtesting.lab
sAMAccountName: {{.Username}}
dn: CN={{.Username}},OU=HashiVault,DC=adtesting,DC=lab
changetype: modify
replace: unicodePwd
unicodePwd::{{ printf "%q" .Password | utf16le | base64 }}
-
replace: userAccountControl
userAccountControl: 66048
-
dn: CN=test-group,OU=HashiVault,DC=adtesting,DC=lab
changetype: modify
add: member
member: CN={{.Username}},OU=HashiVault,DC=adtesting,DC=lab
-
Service account Check-Out
Service account check-out provides a library of service accounts that can be checked out by a person or by machines. Vault will automatically rotate the password each time a service account is checked in. Service accounts can be voluntarily checked in, or Vault will check them in when their lending period (or, "ttl", in Vault's language) ends.
The service account check-out functionality works with various schemas, including OpenLDAP, Active Directory, and RACF. In the following usage example, the secrets engine is configured to manage a library of service accounts in an Active Directory instance.
First we'll need to enable the LDAP secrets engine and tell it how to securely connect to an AD server.
$ vault secrets enable ldap
Success! Enabled the ad secrets engine at: ldap/
$ vault write ldap/config \
binddn=$USERNAME \
bindpass=$PASSWORD \
url=ldaps://138.91.247.105 \
userdn='dc=example,dc=com'
Our next step is to designate a set of service accounts for check-out.
$ vault write ldap/library/accounting-team \
service_account_names=fizz@example.com,buzz@example.com \
ttl=10h \
max_ttl=20h \
disable_check_in_enforcement=false
In this example, the service account names of fizz@example.com
and buzz@example.com
have
already been created on the remote AD server. They've been set aside solely for Vault to handle.
The ttl
is how long each check-out will last before Vault checks in a service account,
rotating its password during check-in. The max_ttl
is the maximum amount of time it can live
if it's renewed. These default to 24h
, and both use duration format strings.
Also by default, a service account must be checked in by the same Vault entity or client token that
checked it out. However, if this behavior causes problems, set disable_check_in_enforcement=true
.
When a library of service accounts has been created, view their status at any time to see if they're available or checked out.
$ vault read ldap/library/accounting-team/status
Key Value
--- -----
buzz@example.com map[available:true]
fizz@example.com map[available:true]
To check out any service account that's available, simply execute:
$ vault write -f ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out
Key Value
--- -----
lease_id ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out/EpuS8cX7uEsDzOwW9kkKOyGW
lease_duration 10h
lease_renewable true
password ?@09AZKh03hBORZPJcTDgLfntlHqxLy29tcQjPVThzuwWAx/Twx4a2ZcRQRqrZ1w
service_account_name fizz@example.com
If the default ttl
for the check-out is higher than needed, set the check-out to last
for a shorter time by using:
$ vault write ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out ttl=30m
Key Value
--- -----
lease_id ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out/gMonJ2jB6kYs6d3Vw37WFDCY
lease_duration 30m
lease_renewable true
password ?@09AZerLLuJfEMbRqP+3yfQYDSq6laP48TCJRBJaJu/kDKLsq9WxL9szVAvL/E1
service_account_name buzz@example.com
This can be a nice way to say, "Although I can have a check-out for 24 hours, if I haven't checked it in after 30 minutes, I forgot or I'm a dead instance, so you can just check it back in."
If no service accounts are available for check-out, Vault will return a 400 Bad Request.
$ vault write -f ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out
Error writing data to ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out: Error making API request.
URL: POST http://localhost:8200/v1/ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out
Code: 400. Errors:
* No service accounts available for check-out.
To extend a check-out, renew its lease.
$ vault lease renew ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out/0C2wmeaDmsToVFc0zDiX9cMq
Key Value
--- -----
lease_id ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out/0C2wmeaDmsToVFc0zDiX9cMq
lease_duration 10h
lease_renewable true
Renewing a check-out means its current password will live longer, since passwords are rotated
anytime a password is checked in either by a caller, or by Vault because the check-out ttl
ends.
To check a service account back in for others to use, call:
$ vault write -f ldap/library/accounting-team/check-in
Key Value
--- -----
check_ins [fizz@example.com]
Most of the time this will just work, but if multiple service accounts are checked out by the same caller, Vault will need to know which one(s) to check in.
$ vault write ldap/library/accounting-team/check-in service_account_names=fizz@example.com
Key Value
--- -----
check_ins [fizz@example.com]
To perform a check-in, Vault verifies that the caller should be able to check in a given service account. To do this, Vault looks for either the same entity ID used to check out the service account, or the same client token.
If a caller is unable to check in a service account, or simply doesn't try,
Vault will check it back in automatically when the ttl
expires. However, if that is too long,
service accounts can be forcibly checked in by a highly privileged user through:
$ vault write -f ldap/library/manage/accounting-team/check-in
Key Value
--- -----
check_ins [fizz@example.com]
Or, alternatively, revoking the secret's lease has the same effect.
$ vault lease revoke ldap/library/accounting-team/check-out/PvBVG0m7pEg2940Cb3Jw3KpJ
All revocation operations queued successfully!
Password generation
This engine previously allowed configuration of the length of the password that is generated
when rotating credentials. This mechanism was deprecated in Vault 1.5 in favor of
password policies. This means the length
field should
no longer be used. The following password policy can be used to mirror the same behavior
that the length
field provides:
length=<length>
rule "charset" {
charset = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789"
}
LDAP password policy
The LDAP secret engine does not hash or encrypt passwords prior to modifying values in LDAP. This behavior can cause plaintext passwords to be stored in LDAP.
To avoid having plaintext passwords stored, the LDAP server should be configured with an LDAP password policy (ppolicy, not to be confused with a Vault password policy). A ppolicy can enforce rules such as hashing plaintext passwords by default.
The following is an example of an LDAP password policy to enforce hashing on the
data information tree (DIT) dc=hashicorp,dc=com
:
dn: cn=module{0},cn=config
changetype: modify
add: olcModuleLoad
olcModuleLoad: ppolicy
dn: olcOverlay={2}ppolicy,olcDatabase={1}mdb,cn=config
changetype: add
objectClass: olcPPolicyConfig
objectClass: olcOverlayConfig
olcOverlay: {2}ppolicy
olcPPolicyDefault: cn=default,ou=pwpolicies,dc=hashicorp,dc=com
olcPPolicyForwardUpdates: FALSE
olcPPolicyHashCleartext: TRUE
olcPPolicyUseLockout: TRUE
Hierarchical paths
The LDAP secrets engine lets you define role and set names that contain an arbitrary number of forward slashes. Names with forward slashes define hierarchical path structures.
For example, you can configure two static roles with the names org/secure
and org/platform/dev
:
$ vault write ldap/static-role/org/secure \
username="user1" \
rotation_period="1h"
Success! Data written to: ldap/static-role/org/secure
$ vault write ldap/static-role/org/platform/dev \
username="user2" \
rotation_period="1h"
Success! Data written to: ldap/static-role/org/platform/dev
Names with hierarchical paths let you use the Vault API to query the available roles at a specific path with arbitrary depth. Names that end with a forward slash indicate that sub-paths reside under that path.
For example, to list all direct children under the org/
path:
$ vault list ldap/static-role/org/
Keys
----
platform/
secure
The platform/
key also ends in a forward slash. To list the platform
sub-keys:
$ vault list ldap/static-role/org/platform
Keys
----
dev
You can read and rotate credentials using the same role name and the respective APIs. For example,
$ vault read ldap/static-cred/org/platform/dev
Key Value
--- -----
dn n/a
last_password a3sQ6OkmXKt2dtx22kAt36YLkkxLsg4RmhMZCLYCBCbvvv67ILROaOokdCaGPEAE
last_vault_rotation 2024-05-03T16:39:27.174164-05:00
password ECf7ZoxfDxGuJEYZrzgzTffSIDI4tx5TojBR9wuEGp8bqUXbl4Kr9eAgPjmizcvg
rotation_period 5m
ttl 4m58s
username user2
$ vault write -f ldap/rotate-role/org/platform/dev
Since Vault policies are also path-based, hierarchical names also let you define policies that map 1-1 to LDAP secrets engine roles and set paths.
The following Vault API endpoints support hierarchical path handling:
- Static roles
- Static role passwords
- Manually rotate static role password
- Dynamic roles
- Dynamic role passwords
- Library set management
- Library set status check
- Check-Out management
- Check-In management
Tutorial
Refer to the LDAP Secrets Engine tutorial to learn how to configure and use the LDAP secrets engine.
API
The LDAP secrets engine has a full HTTP API. Please see the LDAP secrets engine API docs for more details.