I've been going around in circles with this for days and I'm
stuck. I'm trying to run up a new AD environment with only Samba 4.8.3
servers that we'll authenticate user server access against via SSSD/LDAP
using a simple bind. All of our servers are either CentOS 6 or 7.
I've
created a test environment with a single Samba AD 4.8.3 server as the
AD server, a Windows 7 client to run RSAT and a CentOS 6 and CentOS 7
server to test user authentication. The Samba server is up and running
and I can manage the directory via RSAT. I've set up the CentOS 6
server and can successfully authenticate user logins on this via using
SSSD/LDAP to the AD. However, the issue I have is with the CentOS 7
server. I've basically copied the SSSD config from the CentOS 6 server
so everything is the same. However, when I start SSSD on the CentOS 7
server, it binds successfully and does an initial searchRequest which it
gets a result from but after doing the subsequent searchRequests on
Configuration, ForestDnsZones and DomainDnsZones I just see a RST from
the server and the whole process starts over again. Over the third
failure, SSSD fails to start and stops trying.
Comparing
packet captures on the AD server when starting SSSD on both servers,
the initial ROOT search request and response are identical as is the
bind request and response. However, the first wholeSubtree search
request is where things start looking different. On the CentOS 6
server, it shows a filter in the request of:
Filter: (&(&(cn=smtp)(ipServiceProtocol=dccp))(objectclass=ipService))
and there are 4 attributes in the request - objectClass, cn, ipServicePort, ipServiceProtocol
Whereas on the CentOS 7 server, the filter looks like this:
with 13 attributes - objectClass, cn, and a bunch of sudo attributes.
The
response from the Samba server to each of these is nearly identical.
Both servers then send searchRequests for Configuration, ForestDnsZones
and DomainDnsZones but with the same filter differences above. This is
the point of failure for the CentOS 7 server. The other server gets a
successful response from the Samba server, but the CentOS 7 server just
gets an ACK. When I up the debug level on SSSD on the CentOS 7 server, I
see a few different errors but I'm not sure which of these show cause
or effect. Examples...
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:34 2018) [sssd[be[
AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [common_parse_search_base] (0x0100): Search base added: [SUDO][dc=ad,dc=company,dc=
com][SUBTREE][]
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:34 2018) [sssd[be[AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [common_parse_search_base] (0x0100): Search base added: [AUTOFS][dc=ad,dc=company,dc=com][SUBTREE][]
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:34 2018) [sssd[be[
AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [dp_client_register] (0x0100): Cancel DP ID timeout [0x55941e9a6860]
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:34 2018) [sssd[be[
AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [dp_find_method] (0x0100): Target [subdomains] is not initialized
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:34 2018) [sssd[be[
AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [dp_req_reply_gen_error] (0x0080): DP Request [Subdomains #0]: Finished. Target is not supported with this configuration.
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[
AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [fo_resolve_service_send] (0x0100): Trying to resolve service 'LDAP'
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[
AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [set_server_common_status] (0x0100): Marking server '192.168.192.50' as 'resolving name'
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[
AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [set_server_common_status] (0x0100): Marking server '192.168.192.50' as 'name resolved'
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[
AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [sdap_get_server_opts_from_
rootdse] (0x0100): Setting AD compatibility level to [4]
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [sdap_cli_auth_step] (0x0100): expire timeout is 900
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [simple_bind_send] (0x0100): Executing simple bind as: sssd@ad.company.com
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [fo_set_port_status] (0x0100): Marking port 389 of server '192.168.192.50' as 'working'
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [set_server_common_status] (0x0100): Marking server '192.168.192.50' as 'working'
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [be_run_online_cb] (0x0080): Going online. Running callbacks.
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [be_ptask_enable] (0x0080): Task [SUDO Smart Refresh]: already enabled
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd[be[AD.COMPANY.COM]]] [sdap_process_result] (0x0040): ldap_result error: [Can't contact LDAP server]
sssd_be: io.c:224: ber_flush2: Assertion `( (sb)->sb_opts.lbo_valid == 0x3 )' failed.
(Thu Jul 19 23:40:44 2018) [sssd] [svc_child_info] (0x0040): Child [1570] terminated with signal [6]
I get the feeling that the issue is around sudo somehow, but I don't believe I have sudo enabled in my sssd.
Here's my sssd.conf from the CentOS 7 server:
[sssd]
config_file_version = 2
reconnection_retries = 3
sbus_timeout = 30
services = nss, pam
domains =
AD.COMPANY.COM[nss]
filter_groups = root,bin,daemon,sys,adm,tty,
disk,lp,mem,kmem,wheel,mail,uucp,man,games,gopher,video,dip,ftp,lock,audio,nobody,users,floppy,vcsa,utmp,utempter,rpc,cdrom,tape,dialout,rpcuser,nfsnobody,sshd,cgred,screen,saslauth,apache,mailnull,smmsp,mysql
filter_users = root,bin,daemon,adm,lp,sync,shutdown,halt,mail,uucp,operator,games,gopher,ftp,nobody,vcsa,rpc,rpcuser,nfsnobody,sshd,saslauth,apache,mailnull,smmsp,mysql,apache
reconnection_retries = 3
#entry_cache_timeout = 300
entry_cache_nowait_percentage = 75
[domain/AD.COMPANY.COM]
enumerate = false
cache_credentials = true
id_provider = ldap
#auth_provider = ldap
ldap_schema = rfc2307bis
ldap_user_principal = userPrincipalName
ldap_user_fullname = displayName
ldap_user_name = sAMAccountName
ldap_user_object_class = user
ldap_user_home_directory = unixHomeDirectory
ldap_user_shell = loginShell
ldap_group_object_class = group
ldap_force_upper_case_realm = True
ldap_uri = ldap://192.168.192.50
ldap_search_base = dc=ad,dc=company,dc=com
ldap_id_use_start_tls = false
ldap_tls_reqcert = never
ldap_tls_cacert = /etc/sssd/ca.company.com.crt
access_provider = ldap
ldap_access_filter = memberOf=cn=ServerAdmins,ou=Groups,dc=ad,dc=company,dc=com
ldap_default_authtok_type = password
ldap_default_bind_dn = sssd@ad.company.com
ldap_default_authtok = Password1
[pam]
I
tried adding the sudo roles schema to active directory to see if it
would resolve the sssd not starting issue, but while I was able to
successfully import the schema via ldifde and create the sudoers OU in
the root, but when it came to adding the sudoRole object via ADSIEdit, I
got an Operation Failed error - "An invalid directory pathname was
passed". So, I'm not sure if adding this will resolve the issue or not.
There
was no sudoers entry in nsswitch.conf so I tried specifically adding
the following line to explicitly omit sss in case it has become a
default setting:
sudoers: files
But that made no difference.
I've
tried all of the above twice from scratch to be sure and I got the same
results both times. I can successfully query the directory via the
same ldapsearch command from both CentOS servers. I don't know if I'm
completely barking up the wrong tree. I'm just going around in circles
now and I can't think of anything new to try. Oh, and here's my
smb.conf...
# Global parameters
[global]
bind interfaces only = Yes
dns forwarder = 192.168.192.1
interfaces = lo eth0
netbios name = TUG-SAMBA
realm =
AD.COMPANY.COM server role = active directory domain controller
workgroup = COMPANY
idmap_ldb:use rfc2307 = yes
dsdb:schema update allowed = yes
ldap server require strong auth = no
[netlogon]
path = /var/lib/samba/sysvol/
ad.company.com/scripts read only = No
[sysvol]
path = /var/lib/samba/sysvol
read only = No