LDAPAccountManager/lam/docs/manual-sources/appendix-security.xml

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd">
<appendix id="a_security">
<title>Security</title>
<section id="a_configPasswords">
<title>LAM configuration passwords</title>
<para>LAM supports a two level authorization system for its configuration.
Therefore, there are two types of configuration passwords:</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para><emphasis role="bold">master configuration password:</emphasis>
needed to change general settings, create/delete server profiles and
self service profiles</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para><emphasis role="bold">server profile password:</emphasis> used
to change the settings of a server profile (e.g. LDAP server and
account types to manage)</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>The master configuration password can be used to reset a server
profile password. Each server profile has its own profile password.</para>
<para>Both password types are stored as hash values in the configuration
files for enhanced security.</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Use of SSL</title>
<para>The data which is transfered between you and LAM is very sensitive.
Please always use SSL encrypted connections between LAM and your browser
to protect yourself against network sniffers.</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>LDAP with SSL and TLS</title>
<para>SSL will be used if you use ldaps://servername in your configuration
profile. TLS can be activated with the "Activate TLS" option.</para>
<para>If your LDAP server uses a SSL certificate of a well-know
certificate authority (CA) then you probably need no changes. If you use a
custom CA in your company then there are two ways to setup the CA
certificates.</para>
<section>
<title>Setup SSL certificates in LAM general settings</title>
<para>This is much easier than system level setup and will only affect
LAM. There might be some cases where other web applications on the same
web server are influenced.</para>
<para>See <link linkend="conf_sslCert">here</link> for details.</para>
</section>
<section id="ssl_certSystem">
<title>Setup SSL certificates on system level</title>
<para>This will make the CA certificates available also to other
applications on your system (e.g. other web applications).</para>
<para>You will need to setup ldap.conf to trust your server certificate.
Some installations use /etc/ldap.conf and some use /etc/ldap/ldap.conf.
It is a good idea to symlink /etc/ldap.conf to /etc/ldap/ldap.conf.
Specify the server CA certificate with the following option:</para>
<programlisting>TLS_CACERT /etc/ldap/ca/myCA/cacert.pem</programlisting>
<para>This needs to be the public part of the signing certificate
authority. See "man ldap.conf" for additional options.</para>
<literallayout>
</literallayout>
<para>You may also need to specify the CA certificate in your Apache
configuration by using the option "LDAPTrustedGlobalCert":</para>
<programlisting>LDAPTrustedGlobalCert CA_BASE64 /etc/ldap/ca/myCA/cacert.pem</programlisting>
</section>
</section>
<section id="selinux">
<title>Selinux</title>
<para>In case your server has selinux installed you might need to extend
the selinux ruleset. E.g. your webserver might not be allowed to write in
/var/lib.</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">Read selinux status</emphasis></para>
<para>The following command will tell you if selinux is running in
Enforcing or Permissive mode.</para>
<para>Enforcing: access that does not match rules is denied</para>
<para>Permissive: access that does not match rules is granted but logged
to audit.log</para>
<programlisting>getenforce</programlisting>
<para><emphasis role="bold">Set selinux to Permissive
mode</emphasis></para>
<para>This will just log any access violations. You will need this to get
a list of missing rights.</para>
<programlisting>setenforce Permissive</programlisting>
<para>Now do any actions inside LAM that you need for your daily work
(e.g. edit server profiles, manage LDAP entries, ...).</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">Extend selinux rules</emphasis></para>
<para>Selinux now has logged any violations to audit.log. You can use this
now to extend your ruleset and enable enforcing later.</para>
<para>The following example is for httpd. You can also adapt it to e.g.
nginx.</para>
<programlisting># build additional selinux rules from audit.log
grep httpd /var/log/audit/audit.log | audit2allow -m httpdlocal -o httpdlocal.te
</programlisting>
<para>The httpdlocal.te might look like this:</para>
<programlisting>module httpdlocal 1.0;
require {
type httpd_t;
type var_lib_t;
class file { setattr write };
}
#============= httpd_t ==============
#!!!! WARNING 'httpd_t' is not allowed to write or create to var_lib_t. Change the label to httpd_var_lib_t.
#!!!! $ semanage fcontext -a -t httpd_var_lib_t /var/lib/ldap-account-manager/config/lam.conf
#!!!! $ restorecon -R -v /var/lib/ldap-account-manager/config/lam.conf
allow httpd_t var_lib_t:file { setattr write };
</programlisting>
<para>Now we can compile and install this rule:</para>
<programlisting># build module
checkmodule -M -m -o httpdlocal.mod httpdlocal.te
# package module
semodule_package -o httpdlocal.pp -m httpdlocal.mod
# install module
semodule -i httpdlocal.pp</programlisting>
<para>Now you can switch back to Enforcing mode:</para>
<programlisting>setenforce Enforcing</programlisting>
<para>LAM should now work as expected with active selinux.</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Chrooted servers</title>
<para>If your server is chrooted and you have no access to /dev/random or
/dev/urandom this can be a security risk. LAM stores your LDAP password
encrypted in the session. LAM uses rand() to generate the key if
/dev/random and /dev/urandom are not accessible. Therefore the key can be
easily guessed. An attaker needs read access to the session file (e.g. by
another Apache instance) to exploit this.</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Protection of your LDAP password and directory contents</title>
<para>You have to install the OpenSSL extension for PHP to enable
encryption.</para>
<para>Your LDAP password is stored encrypted in the session file. The key
and IV to decrypt it are stored in two cookies. We use OpenSSL/AES to
encrypt the password. All data that was read from LDAP and needs to be
stored in the session file is also encrypted.</para>
</section>
<section id="apache">
<title>Apache configuration</title>
<section>
<title>Sensitive directories</title>
<para>LAM includes several .htaccess files to protect your configuration
files and temporary data. Apache is often configured to not use
.htaccess files by default. Therefore, please check your Apache
configuration and change the override setting to:</para>
<para>AllowOverride All</para>
<para>If you are experienced in configuring Apache then you can also
copy the security settings from the .htaccess files to your main Apache
configuration.</para>
<para>If possible, you should not rely on .htaccess files but also move
the config and sess directory to a place outside of your WWW root. You
can put a symbolic link in the LAM directory so that LAM finds the
configuration/session files.</para>
<para>Security sensitive directories:</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">config: </emphasis>Contains your LAM
configuration and account profiles</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>LAM configuration passwords (SSHA hashed)</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>default values for new accounts</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>directory must be accessibly by Apache but needs not to be
accessible by the browser</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para><emphasis role="bold">sess:</emphasis> PHP session files</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>LAM admin password in clear text or OpenSSL encrypted</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>cached LDAP entries in clear text or OpenSSL encrypted</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>directory must be accessibly by Apache but needs not to be
accessible by the browser</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para><emphasis role="bold">tmp:</emphasis> temporary files</para>
<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
<para>PDF documents which may also include passwords</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>images of your users</para>
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>directory contents must be accessible by browser but directory
itself needs not to be browseable</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</section>
<section id="apache_http_auth">
<title>Use LDAP HTTP authentication for LAM</title>
<para>With HTTP authentication Apache will be responsible to ask for the
user name and password. Both will then be forwarded to LAM which will
use it to access LDAP. This approach gives you more flexibility to
restrict the number of users that may access LAM (e.g. by requiring
group memberships).</para>
<para>First of all you need to load additional Apache modules. These are
"<ulink
url="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_ldap.html">mod_ldap</ulink>"
and "<ulink type=""
url="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_authnz_ldap.html">mod_authnz_ldap</ulink>".</para>
<para>Next you can add a file called "lam_auth_ldap" to
/etc/apache/conf.d. This simple example restricts access to all URLs
beginning with "lam" to LDAP authentication.</para>
<programlisting>&lt;location /lam&gt;
AuthType Basic
AuthBasicProvider ldap
AuthName "LAM"
AuthLDAPURL "ldap://localhost:389/ou=People,dc=company,dc=com?uid"
Require valid-user
&lt;/location&gt;</programlisting>
<para>You can also require that your users belong to a certain Unix
group in LDAP:</para>
<programlisting>&lt;location /lam&gt;
AuthType Basic
AuthBasicProvider ldap
AuthName "LAM"
AuthLDAPURL "ldap://localhost:389/ou=People,dc=company,dc=com?uid"
Require valid-user
# force membership of lam-admins
AuthLDAPGroupAttribute memberUid
AuthLDAPGroupAttributeIsDN off
Require ldap-group cn=lam-admins,ou=group,dc=company,dc=com
&lt;/location&gt;</programlisting>
<para>Please see the <ulink
url="http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.2/mod/mod_authnz_ldap.html">Apache
documentation</ulink> for more details.</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>Self Service behind proxy in DMZ (LAM Pro)</title>
<para>In some cases you might want to make the self service accessible
via the internet. Here is an Apache config to forward only the required
URLs via a proxy server (lamproxy.company.com) in your DMZ to the
internal LAM server (lam.company.com).</para>
<para><inlinemediaobject>
<imageobject>
<imagedata fileref="images/selfServiceProxy.png"/>
</imageobject>
</inlinemediaobject></para>
<para>This configuration allows your users to open
https://lamproxy.company.com which will then proxy the self service on
the internal server.</para>
<programlisting>&lt;VirtualHost lamproxy.company.com:443&gt;
ServerName lamproxy.company.com
ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/lam-proxy-error.log
CustomLog /var/log/apache2/lam-proxy-access.log combined
DocumentRoot /var/www/lam-proxy
&lt;Proxy *&gt;
Require all granted
&lt;/Proxy&gt;
SSLProxyEngine on
SSLEngine on
SSLCertificateFile /etc/apache2/ssl/apache.pem
ProxyPreserveHost On
ProxyRequests off
loglevel info
# redirect front page to self service login page
RewriteEngine on
RedirectMatch ^/$ /templates/selfService/selfServiceLogin.php?scope=user\&amp;name=lam
# proxy required URLs
ProxyPass /tmp https://lam.company.com/lam/tmp
ProxyPass /sess https://lam.company.com/lam/sess
ProxyPass /templates/lib https://lam.company.com/lam/templates/lib
ProxyPass /templates/selfService https://lam.company.com/lam/templates/selfService
ProxyPass /style https://lam.company.com/lam/style
ProxyPass /graphics https://lam.company.com/lam/graphics
ProxyPassReverse /tmp https://lam.company.com/lam/tmp
ProxyPassReverse /sess https://lam.company.com/lam/sess
ProxyPassReverse /templates/lib https://lam.company.com/lam/templates/lib
ProxyPassReverse /templates/selfService https://lam.company.com/lam/templates/selfService
ProxyPassReverse /style https://lam.company.com/lam/style
ProxyPassReverse /graphics https://lam.company.com/lam/graphics
&lt;/VirtualHost&gt;</programlisting>
</section>
</section>
<section id="nginx">
<title>Nginx configuration</title>
<para>There is no fully automatic setup of Nginx but LAM provides a
ready-to-use configuration file.</para>
<section>
<title>RPM based installations</title>
<para>The RPM package has dependencies on Apache. Therefore, Nginx is
not officially supported with this installation mode. Use tar.bz2 if you
are unsure.</para>
<para>However, the package also includes an Nginx configuration file.
Please include it in your server directive like this:</para>
<programlisting>server {
...
include /etc/ldap-account-manager/lam.nginx.conf;
...
}</programlisting>
<para>The included config file uses PHP 5. In case you run with PHP 7
please update the parameter "fastcgi_pass" to
"/var/run/php7-fpm.sock".</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>DEB based installations</title>
<para>The LAM installation package ships with an Nginx configuration
file. Please include it in your server directive like this:</para>
<programlisting>server {
...
include /etc/ldap-account-manager/nginx.conf;
...
}</programlisting>
<para>The included config file uses PHP 7.0. In case you run with PHP
7.1 or PHP 5 please update the parameter "fastcgi_pass" to
"/var/run/php/php7.1-fpm.sock".</para>
</section>
<section>
<title>tar.bz2 based installations</title>
<para>Please add the following configuration snippet to your server
directive.</para>
<para>You will need to change the alias location
("/usr/share/ldap-account-manager") and fastcgi_pass (e.g.
"/var/run/php5-fpm.sock" or "/var/run/php7-fpm.sock") to match your
installation.</para>
<programlisting>location /lam {
index index.html;
alias /usr/share/ldap-account-manager;
autoindex off;
location ~ \.php$ {
fastcgi_split_path_info ^(.+\.php)(/.+)$;
fastcgi_pass unix:/var/run/php5-fpm.sock;
fastcgi_index index.php;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME $request_filename;
include fastcgi_params;
}
location ~ /lam/(tmp/internal|sess|config|lib|help|locale) {
deny all;
return 403;
}
}
</programlisting>
</section>
</section>
<section id="a_webauthn">
<title>Webauthn/FIDO2</title>
<para>LAM allows to secure logins via <ulink
url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebAuthn">Webauthn/FIDO2</ulink>. This
means your users login with their LDAP password and an additional hardware
token (e.g. Yubico Security Key, Windows Hello and many more).</para>
<para>Webauthn/FIDO2 is a very strong 2-factor-authentication method as it
also checks the website domain. This prevents attacks via web
proxies.</para>
<para>To use this feature you need to activate the 2-factor authentication
in LAM.</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">LAM admin interface</emphasis></para>
<para>Please activate Webauthn/FIDO2 in your <link
linkend="conf_serverprofile_2fa">LAM server profile</link>. Then users
will be asked to authenticate via Webauthn/FIDO2 on each login.</para>
<para>If no device is registered for a user then LAM will ask for this
during login. Afterwards, users can manage their devices with the <link
linkend="tool_webauthn">Webauthn tool</link>.</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">LAM Self Service</emphasis></para>
<para>Please activate Webauthn/FIDO2 in your <link
linkend="selfservice_2fa">LAM self service profile</link>. Then users will
be asked to authenticate via Webauthn/FIDO2 on each login.</para>
<para>If no device is registered for a user then LAM will ask for this
during login. Afterwards, users can manage their devices with the <link
linkend="selfservice_fields">Webauthn field</link>.</para>
<para><emphasis role="bold">Global device management</emphasis></para>
<para>This is for cases where one of your users has no more access to his
device and cannot login anymore. In this case you can delete his device(s)
in the <link linkend="confmain_webauthn">LAM main
configuration</link>.</para>
<para>Note that devices can only be deleted. Registration of devices can
only be done by the user during login or on the management pages listed
above.</para>
</section>
</appendix>