Paul Raines
2019-Jan-03 22:46 UTC
[Samba] Users created in last few years cannot login after 4.7 -> 4.8 + winbind
TLDR: after upgrading our CentOS 7.5 servers using Samba 4.7.x with security = ads and no winbind to CentOS 7.6 with Samba 4.8.x with security = ads + winbind all users accounts created in the last few years can no longer login. Explaining this requires a fairly long back story Our corporate is primarily a Windows shop while our own research department primarly uses Linux. For over a decade we used our own account/group/file namespace in our Linux infrastructure totally separate from corporate. A couple years ago for new security hardening purposes corporate has dictated all logins need to be based off their AD server so they can manage/monitor/enforce password changes, access, etc. The issue was we had petabytes of data using our accounts which had in most cases both different names and underlying user ids. For example, my Linux username is raines with ID 5829 and my corparte/AD username is per2 with ID 2040470. And groups have no relation whatsoever. Simply reconfiguring our Linux servers to do straight LDAP or winbind/nss to corporate AD was not possible without a wholesale painful re-ID-ing of files and breakage of lots of apps that hard code usernames in settings. For all non-Samba resources (login, web, LDAP-based apps, ...) I could solve this issue using LDAP SASL passthru. In this scheme you set the user LDAP record the userPassword field to be something like userPassword:: {SASL}per2 and any authentication to the LDAP server for user 'raines' is passed through to the AD server as authentication for user 'per2'. The issue was this did not work for Samba. The solution I came up with was to create a "username map = /etc/samba/users.map" with lines like raines = MYDOMAIN\per2 aea32 = MYDOMAIN\aea32 and then have in smb.conf workgroup = MYDOMAIN security = ads passdb backend = tdbsam realm = MYDOMAIN.ORG dedicated keytab file = /etc/krb5.keytab kerberos method = secrets and keytab preferred master = no encrypt passwords = yes socket options = TCP_NODELAY IPTOS_LOWDELAY SO_RCVBUF=65536 SO_SNDBUF=65536 SO_KEEPALIVE idmap config *:backend = tdb idmap config *:range = 100-999999 idmap config MYDOMAIN:backend = ad idmap config MYDOMAIN:schema_mode = rfc2307 idmap config MYDOMAIN:range = 1000000-9999999 username map = /etc/samba/users.map username map cache time = 60 winbind nss info = rfc2307 winbind trusted domains only = no winbind use default domain = yes winbind enum users = yes winbind enum groups = yes winbind nested groups = yes winbind refresh tickets = yes allow trusted domains = yes server signing = auto client signing = auto client ntlmv2 auth = yes ntlm auth = yes lanman auth = no max protocol = SMB2 map acl inherit = yes nt acl support = yes map archive = no create mode = 0770 directory mode = 0770 [posters] comment = poster volume path = /home/posters valid users = +webgp public = no writable = yes printable = no create mask = 664 force create mode = 664 directory mask = 2775 force directory mode = 2775 but I would NOT run winbind. When I did run winbind I found the behavior I find now with 4.8.x + winbind, that many accounts could not login. Since I did not need winbind and it worked without I just didn't run it and didn't investigate further. Also worth noting since this dictated policy all new accounts we create on the Linux side have matching usernames and underlying UID to AD. Groups are still totally independent. Now with the 4.8.x upgrade in CentOS 7.6 I have to run winbind. (Actually curiously some users still COULD login with 4.8.x and no winbind running. I have no idea how but it worked but it was a very small subset of very old users) And now with 4.8.x and winbind running I have the situation where recently created users are unable to login. Curiously it does not coincide exactly with the username/UID matching change over. Users created in approximately the first year of that change over CAN login.>From the log files for a user where things work I will see lines likecheck_ntlm_password: authentication for user [per2] -> [per2] -> [raines] succeeded pdb_getsampwnam (TDB): error fetching database. Key: USER_raines Adding homes service for user 'raines' using home directory: '/homes/11/raines' For a user where things do NOT work I see check_ntlm_password: authentication for user [aea32] -> [aea32] -> [aea32] succeeded sid_to_gid(S-1-5-21-8915387-943144406-1916815836-513) failed Failed to generate session_info (user and group token) for session setup: NT_STATUS_NO_SUCH_USER NT error packet at ../source3/smbd/sesssetup.c(263) cmd=115 (SMBsesssetupX) NT_STATUS_LOGON_FAILURE If I run 'strings -a /var/lib/samba/group_mapping.tdb' I see TDB file &MEMBEROF/S-1-5-21-8915387-943144406-1916815836-513 S-1-5-32-545 &UNIXGROUP/S-1-5-32-545 Users &MEMBEROF/S-1-5-21-8915387-943144406-1916815836-512 S-1-5-32-544 &UNIXGROUP/S-1-5-32-544 Administrators TDB file &UNIXGROUP/S-1-5-32-545 Users &MEMBEROF/S-1-5-21-8915387-943144406-1916815836-512 S-1-5-32-544 &UNIXGROUP/S-1-5-32-544 Administrators Also I see # wbinfo --domain=MYDOMAIN --sid-to-name=S-1-5-21-8915387-943144406-1916815836-513 MYDOMAIN\Domain Users 2 When I downgrade back to 4.7.x with NO winbind everything works again for everybody as it did before. I have tried rejoining the domain. I have tried wiping out everything in /var/lib/samba. Any clues as to what is going on? To make things more confusing, there is one 4.8.x + winbind server where new users CAN login fine. I have tried recreating its setup exactly on a different server but it behaves like the others denying all accounts created in last few years. P.S. It might be related to this thread but maybe not https://lists.samba.org/archive/samba/2018-November/219719.html P.S.S. Thought I had a solution Changing my 'idmap config' stanza to simply be the two lines idmap config *:backend = tdb idmap config *:range = 100-9999999 covering the entire range. This worked on one server for one new user who could not login before. But it did not work for that same user on another server. And when a second user who previously was unable to login tried it failed on both servers. The error message changes slightly in the log: check_ntlm_password: authentication for user [aea32] -> [aea32] -> [aea32] succeeded [2019/01/03 15:55:56.770349, 1] ../source3/auth/token_util.c:561(add_local_groups) SID S-1-5-21-8915387-943144406-1916815836-1333656 -> getpwuid(100) failed [2019/01/03 15:55:56.770401, 1] ../source3/smbd/sesssetup.c:260(reply_sesssetup_and_X_spnego) Failed to generate session_info (user and group token) for session setup: NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY [2019/01/03 15:55:56.770488, 3] ../source3/smbd/error.c:82(error_packet_set) NT error packet at ../source3/smbd/sesssetup.c(263) cmd=115 (SMBsesssetupX) NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY I tried 'idmap config *:backend = nss' and randomly it worked on one server but failed on another with check_ntlm_password: authentication for user [nmr27] -> [nmr27] -> [nmr27] succeeded [2019/01/03 17:28:28.480615, 1] ../source3/auth/token_util.c:561(add_local_groups) SID S-1-5-21-8915387-943144406-1916815836-949594 -> getpwuid(1000000) failed [2019/01/03 17:28:28.480673, 3] ../source3/auth/token_util.c:400(create_local_nt_token_from_info3) Failed to add local groups [2019/01/03 17:28:28.480738, 3] ../source3/smbd/smb2_server.c:3171(smbd_smb2_request_error_ex) smbd_smb2_request_error_ex: smbd_smb2_request_error_ex: idx[1] status[NT_STATUS_UNSUCCESSFUL] || at ../source3/smbd/smb2_sesssetup.c:137 A lot of this just seems to be totally random.
Rowland Penny
2019-Jan-04 09:57 UTC
[Samba] Users created in last few years cannot login after 4.7 -> 4.8 + winbind
On Thu, 3 Jan 2019 17:46:51 -0500 (EST) Paul Raines via samba <samba at lists.samba.org> wrote:> TLDR: after upgrading our CentOS 7.5 servers using Samba 4.7.x with > security = ads and no winbind to CentOS 7.6 with Samba 4.8.x with > security = ads + winbind all users accounts created in the last few > years can no longer login. > > Explaining this requires a fairly long back story > > Our corporate is primarily a Windows shop while our own research > department primarly uses Linux. For over a decade we used our own > account/group/file namespace in our Linux infrastructure totally > separate from corporate. > > A couple years ago for new security hardening purposes corporate has > dictated all logins need to be based off their AD server so they > can manage/monitor/enforce password changes, access, etc.So go back to them, point out it isn't working and they need to extend AD by adding the IDMU ldif and create your users and groups in AD with the correct ID's ;-)> > The issue was we had petabytes of data using our accounts which had > in most cases both different names and underlying user ids. For > example, my Linux username is raines with ID 5829I take it this ID is the Unix users ID found in /etc/passwd>and my corparte/AD username is per2 with ID 2040470.And this is the users AD RID> And groups have no relation > whatsoever. Simply reconfiguring our Linux servers to do straight > LDAP or winbind/nss to corporate AD was not possible without a > wholesale painful re-ID-ing of files and breakage of lots of apps > that hard code usernames in settings.It wouldn't have been a problem if AD had been extended properly.> > For all non-Samba resources (login, web, LDAP-based apps, ...) I > could solve this issue using LDAP SASL passthru. In this scheme you > set the user LDAP record the userPassword field to be something like > > userPassword:: {SASL}per2 > > and any authentication to the LDAP server for user 'raines' is passed > through to the AD server as authentication for user 'per2'. > > The issue was this did not work for Samba. The solution I came up > with was to create a "username map = /etc/samba/users.map" with lines > like > > raines = MYDOMAIN\per2 > aea32 = MYDOMAIN\aea32That's one way of doing it, it isn't how I would have done it.> > and then have in smb.conf > > workgroup = MYDOMAIN > security = ads > passdb backend = tdbsam > realm = MYDOMAIN.ORG > > dedicated keytab file = /etc/krb5.keytab > kerberos method = secrets and keytab > preferred master = no > encrypt passwords = yes > > socket options = TCP_NODELAY IPTOS_LOWDELAY SO_RCVBUF=65536 > SO_SNDBUF=65536 SO_KEEPALIVE > > idmap config *:backend = tdb > idmap config *:range = 100-999999That is a foolish range, it interferes with the local system users. The '*' domain is for the Well Known Sids and anything outside the 'MYDOMAIN' domain.> idmap config MYDOMAIN:backend = ad > idmap config MYDOMAIN:schema_mode = rfc2307 > idmap config MYDOMAIN:range = 1000000-9999999Sorry, but this is wrong for your Samba version, see here: https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Setting_up_Samba_as_a_Domain_Member and here: https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Idmap_config_ad The range must reflect the uidNumber & gidNumber attributes in AD. Rowland
Paul Raines
2019-Jan-04 20:14 UTC
[Samba] Users created in last few years cannot login after 4.7 -> 4.8 + winbind
On Fri, 4 Jan 2019 4:57am, Rowland Penny wrote:> On Thu, 3 Jan 2019 17:46:51 -0500 (EST) > Paul Raines via samba <samba at lists.samba.org> wrote: > >> TLDR: after upgrading our CentOS 7.5 servers using Samba 4.7.x with >> security = ads and no winbind to CentOS 7.6 with Samba 4.8.x with >> security = ads + winbind all users accounts created in the last few >> years can no longer login. >> >> Explaining this requires a fairly long back story >> >> Our corporate is primarily a Windows shop while our own research >> department primarly uses Linux. For over a decade we used our own >> account/group/file namespace in our Linux infrastructure totally >> separate from corporate. >> >> A couple years ago for new security hardening purposes corporate has >> dictated all logins need to be based off their AD server so they >> can manage/monitor/enforce password changes, access, etc. > > So go back to them, point out it isn't working and they need to > extend AD by adding the IDMU ldif and create your users and groups in > AD with the correct ID's ;-)This is not an option for me. Corporate is not going to change anything on AD for me. And this would create the opposite problem were my users with resources on the corporate instrastructure will have things break if the IDs are changed.> >> >> The issue was we had petabytes of data using our accounts which had >> in most cases both different names and underlying user ids. For >> example, my Linux username is raines with ID 5829 > > I take it this ID is the Unix users ID found in /etc/passwd >My LDAP server, but yes>> and my corparte/AD username is per2 with ID 2040470. > > And this is the users AD RIDuidNumber you get when searching account on AD via LDAP> >> And groups have no relation >> whatsoever. Simply reconfiguring our Linux servers to do straight >> LDAP or winbind/nss to corporate AD was not possible without a >> wholesale painful re-ID-ing of files and breakage of lots of apps >> that hard code usernames in settings. > > It wouldn't have been a problem if AD had been extended properly. >I really don't see how that was realistically possible. ANd I am positive the managers would not allow the UIDs in the range 5000-10000 I had use for my users. I have a handful of users from the early 2000s with UIDs in the 100-5000 range (predates me -- this is before distros started enforcing user creation >500). It most likely conflicts with system accounts they had created.>> >> For all non-Samba resources (login, web, LDAP-based apps, ...) I >> could solve this issue using LDAP SASL passthru. In this scheme you >> set the user LDAP record the userPassword field to be something like >> >> userPassword:: {SASL}per2 >> >> and any authentication to the LDAP server for user 'raines' is passed >> through to the AD server as authentication for user 'per2'. >> >> The issue was this did not work for Samba. The solution I came up >> with was to create a "username map = /etc/samba/users.map" with lines >> like >> >> raines = MYDOMAIN\per2 >> aea32 = MYDOMAIN\aea32 > > That's one way of doing it, it isn't how I would have done it. >Except for "extending AD" as above is there another way. All I want and need from corporate AD is password authentication. I don't want or need anything else, including user or group ids. I want Samba to get everything else (user id, group ids, shell, homedir, ...) from the local NIS backend (i.e. my LDAP server)>> >> and then have in smb.conf >> >> workgroup = MYDOMAIN >> security = ads >> passdb backend = tdbsam >> realm = MYDOMAIN.ORG >> >> dedicated keytab file = /etc/krb5.keytab >> kerberos method = secrets and keytab >> preferred master = no >> encrypt passwords = yes >> >> socket options = TCP_NODELAY IPTOS_LOWDELAY SO_RCVBUF=65536 >> SO_SNDBUF=65536 SO_KEEPALIVE >> >> idmap config *:backend = tdb >> idmap config *:range = 100-999999 > > That is a foolish range, it interferes with the local system users. > The '*' domain is for the Well Known Sids and anything outside the > 'MYDOMAIN' domain.Again, I am not using WINBIND for actual NIS in the system. It will not be in /etc/nsswitch.conf, pam, etc. I never used it before in Samba 4.7.x or before. I am only running it because it is now required to use security=ads for authentication. I DO want any login on the samba server of any system account to always fail.> >> idmap config MYDOMAIN:backend = ad >> idmap config MYDOMAIN:schema_mode = rfc2307 >> idmap config MYDOMAIN:range = 1000000-9999999 > > Sorry, but this is wrong for your Samba version, see here: > > https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Setting_up_Samba_as_a_Domain_Member > > and here: > > https://wiki.samba.org/index.php/Idmap_config_ad > > The range must reflect the uidNumber & gidNumber attributes in AD. >I have tried using the nss backend and the results are random. Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn't. It still always works for my "old" account. Just not for new accounts. Do you have any configuration suggestion? Is there a way to have winbind not fail a login just because it cannot map a SID to GID? Is there a way for me to force a mapping for S-1-5-21-8915387-943144406-1916815836-513? I tried wbinfo --set-gid-mapping but just got WBC_ERR_NOT_IMPLEMENTED I guess for now I will continue to run Samba 4.7.x as long as I can still get it to run
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