This project provides an utility to manage SSH public keys stored in LDAP and also a script for OpenSSH server to load authorized keys from LDAP.
When you have dozen of servers it becomes difficult to manage your authorized keys. You have to
copy all your public keys to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
on every server you want to login to. And
what if you someday change your keys?
It’s a good practice to use some kind of a centralized user management, usually an LDAP server. There you have user’s login, uid, e-mail, … and password. What if we could also store public SSH keys on LDAP server? With this utility it’s easy as pie.
This utility depends on python-ldap which (unfortunately) requires Python 2.×.
It is available in most distributions as python-ldap
package; it should be installed before
ssh-ldap-pubkey
unless you want to compile it yourself.
Alternatively you can install python-ldap
from PyPI, which requires additional system
dependencies (OpenLDAP). Refer to Stack Overflow for
distribution-specific information.
Install from PyPI:
pip install ssh-ldap-pubkey
…or if you’re using Gentoo (good choice!), then you can use sys-auth/ssh-ldap-pubkey ebuild from the CVUT Overlay.
List SSH public keys stored in LDAP for the current user:
ssh-ldap-pubkey list
List SSH public keys stored in LDAP for the specified user:
ssh-ldap-pubkey list -u flynn
Add the specified SSH public key for the current user to LDAP:
ssh-ldap-pubkey add ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
Remove SSH public key(s) of the current user that matches the specified pattern:
ssh-ldap-pubkey del flynn@grid
Specify LDAP URI and base DN on command line instead of configuration file:
ssh-ldap-pubkey list -b ou=People,dc=encom,dc=com -H ldaps://encom.com -u flynn
As the LDAP manager, add SSH public key to LDAP for the specified user:
ssh-ldap-pubkey add -D cn=Manager,dc=encom,dc=com -u flynn ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
Show help for other options:
ssh-ldap-pubkey --help
Configuration is read from /etc/ldap.conf — file used by LDAP nameservice switch library and the LDAP PAM module. An example file is included in etc/ldap.conf. The following subset of parameters are used:
- uri ... URI of the LDAP server to connect to. The URI scheme may be ldap, or ldaps.
Default is
ldap://localhost
. - nss_base_passwd ... distinguished name (DN) of the search base.
- base ... distinguished name (DN) of the search base. Used when nss_base_passwd is not set.
- scope ... search scope; sub, one, or base (default is sub).
- pam_filter ... filter to use when searching for the user’s entry, additional to the login
attribute value assertion (
pam_login_attribute=<login>
). Default is objectclass=posixAccount. - pam_login_attribute ... the user ID attribute (default is uid).
- ldap_version ... LDAP version to use (default is 3).
- binddn ... distinguished name (DN) to bind when reading the user’s entry (default is to bind anonymously).
- bindpw ... credentials to bind with when reading the user’s entry (default is none).
- timelimit ... search time limit in seconds (default is 10).
- bind_timelimit ... bind/connect time limit in seconds (default is 10).
- tls_cacertdir ... path of the directory with CA certificates for LDAP server certificate verification.
The only required parameter is nss_base_passwd or base, others have sensitive defaults. You
might want to define uri parameter as well. These parameters can be also defined/overriden
with --bind
and --uri
options on command line.
For more information about these parameters refer to ldap.conf man page.
To configure OpenSSH server to fetch users’ authorized keys from LDAP server:
-
Make sure that you have installed ssh-ldap-pubkey and ssh-ldap-pubkey-wrapper in
/usr/bin
with ownerroot
and mode0755
. -
Add these two lines to /etc/ssh/sshd_config:
AuthorizedKeysCommand /usr/bin/ssh-ldap-pubkey-wrapper AuthorizedKeysCommandUser nobody
-
Restart sshd and check log file if there’s no problem.
Note: This method is supported by OpenSSH since version 6.2-p1 (or 5.3 onRedHat). If you have an older version and can’t upgrade, for whatever weird reason, use openssh-lpk patch instead.
Just add the openssh-lpk.schema to your LDAP server, or add an attribute named sshPublicKey
to any existing schema which is already defined in people entries. That’s all.
Note: Presumably, you’ve already setup your LDAP server for centralized unix users management, i.e. you have the NIS schema and users in LDAP.
This project is licensed under MIT license.