90 lines
2.8 KiB
Plaintext
90 lines
2.8 KiB
Plaintext
[services]
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description = Local Service Configuration
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activeServices = nss, dp, pam
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[services/nss]
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description = NSS Responder Configuration
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# the following prevents sssd for searching for the root user/group in
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# all domains (you can add here a comma separated list of system accounts are
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# always going to be /etc/passwd users, or that you want to filter out)
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filterGroups = root
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filterUsers = root
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[services/dp]
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description = Data Provider Configuration
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[services/pam]
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description = PAM Responder Configuration
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[services/monitor]
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description = Service Monitor Configuration
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#if a backend is particularly slow you can raise this timeout here
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sbusTimeout = 30
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[domains]
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description = Domains served by SSSD
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; domains = LOCAL,LDAP
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# SSSD will not start if you don't configure any domain.
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# Add new domains condifgurations as [domains/<NAME>] sections.
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# Then add the list of domains (in the order you want them to be
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# queried in the 'domains" attribute above and uncomment it
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# Example LOCAL domain that proxies to /etc/passwd and /etc/group files
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# This configuration is meant mostly as a migration path to be able to store
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# additional information about users while still keeping /etc/passwd
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# authoritative.
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; [domains/LOCAL]
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; description = LOCAL migration domain
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; enumerate = 3
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; minId = 500
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; magicPrivateGroups = FALSE
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; legacy = TRUE
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;
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; provider = proxy
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; libName = files
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; libPath = libnss_files.so.2
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# optionally a file named sssdproxylocal can be place in pam.d configured to
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# check pam_unix only and pam_sss can be used in the normal pam stack
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; auth-module = proxy
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; pam-target = sssdproxylocal
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# Example LOCAL domain that stores all users natively in the SSSD internal
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# directory. These local users and groups are not visibile in /etc/passwd, it
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# now contains only root and system accounts.
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; [domains/LOCAL]
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; description = LOCAL Users domain
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; enumerate = 3
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; minId = 500
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; maxId = 999
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; legacy = FALSE
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; magicPrivateGroups = TRUE
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# Example LDAP domain that uses the proxy backend and the standard nss_ldap
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# and pam_ldap modules (Useful until we have good working native ldap backends).
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# For this to work the /etc/ldap.conf file needs to be correctly configured just
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# like you would do when using nss_ldap in nsswitch.conf, but instead of setting
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# passwd: files ldap, set passwd: files, sss instead there.
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# Also consider using the following setting in /etc/ldap.conf to avoid needless
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# delays if the ldap server is offline:
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# timelimit 10
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# bind_timelimit 5
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# nss_reconnect_maxsleeptime 2
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# nss_reconnect_sleeptime 1
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; [domains/LDAP]
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; description = Proxy request to our LDAP server
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; enumerate = 0
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; minId = 1000
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; legacy = TRUE
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;
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; provider = proxy
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; libName = ldap
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; libPath = libnss_ldap.so.2
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;
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#if a backend is particularly slow you can raise this timeout here
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; timeout = 60
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