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Configure PAM

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      Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) provide an authentication framework that allows multiple, low-level authentication schemes to be used by a single API. The Enterprise Edition of Couchbase Server, running on Linux, supports administrator-authentication through PAM’s Linux password-module.

      PAM Features

      Used with the Enterprise Edition of Couchbase Server, the PAM Linux password-module provides:

      • External authentication: Administrator-accounts defined on Linux systems, in the /etc/shadow directory, can be accessed for authentication-purposes by Couchbase Server.

      • Password policy-management: Linux password-management can be used across different Couchbase Server-nodes; to synchronize, maintain, and expire administrator-passwords.

      Version Requirements

      Use of the PAM Linux password-module requires all cluster-nodes to be Linux-based, running the Enterprise Edition of Couchbase Server, version 4.6 or above. Additionally, the saslauthd library version must be 2.1.x or above.

      Set Up Linux-Password Authentication

      The following sequence shows how the PAM Linux password-module can be used to validate usernames and passwords, when administrators log into Couchbase Server. Supervisor access, via sudo, is required to perform most of the steps; and an editor is required, to allow you to edit configuration files.

      Note that for PAM to be fully configured, the following procedure must be performed on each node in the cluster.

      Proceed as follows:

      1. Bring up a terminal, and install the saslauthd library for your Linux distribution:

        • CentOS/RHEL

          yum install cyrus-sasl
        • Ubuntu/Debian

          apt-get install sasl2-bin
      2. Ensure that the Couchbase Cluster is running. Then, enable external authentication on the cluster, using the Couchbase CLI setting-ldap command: specifying server IP-address and port number, username, and password:

        /opt/couchbase/couchbase-cli setting-ldap \
        -c 10.144.210.101 -u Administrator -p password \
        --authentication-enabled 1

        Note that --authentication-enabled 1 enables external authentication, and --authentication-enabled 0 disables. See setting-ldap for further information. When successfully executed, the command provides the following notification: SUCCESS: saslauthd settings modified.

      3. Add the couchbase user to the sasl group, to allow access to saslauthd:

        usermod -aG sasl couchbase
      4. In the saslauthd configuration file, verify that saslauthd is set up to use PAM, by using the grep command, and examining the output, using one of the following procedures:

        • CentOS/RHEL

          grep "MECH" /etc/sysconfig/saslauthd
          MECH=pam

          If output to the above command does not confirm that MECH is set to pam, bring up the configuration file /etc/default/saslauthd in an editor, and manually set the MECH parameter to pam.

        • Ubuntu/Debian

          grep 'MECHANISMS' /etc/default/saslauthd
          MECHANISMS="pam"

          If output to the above command does not confirm that MECHANISMS is set to pam, bring up the configuration file /etc/default/saslauthd in an editor, and manually set the MECHANISMS parameter to pam.

      5. If you are running Centos 7.x or 8.x, or are running RHEL 8.x, add the following lines to the file /etc/pam.d/passwd:

        auth       include    system-auth
        account    include    system-auth
      6. Set up PAM to authenticate the Couchbase service, by copying /etc/pam.d/passwd to /etc/pam.d/couchbase.

        cp /etc/pam.d/passwd /etc/pam.d/couchbase
      7. Create a Linux user on the current system, and give them a password. For example, use the username linuxuser (this user is the administrator who will be authenticated by PAM). Enter the following commands, to create the user and to commence definition of their password, respectively:

        useradd linuxuser
        passwd linuxuser

        The passwd command returns the prompt Enter new UNIX password:. Duly enter and then verify your chosen password.

      8. Access Couchbase Web Console (if on the same node, at localhost:8091), and log in. Then, access the Security tab, on the upper, horizontal control-bar. This brings up the Security view:

        ldapAndGroupsTabs
      9. Left-click on the ADD USER button, situated near the right. This brings up the Add New User dialog. Select the External radio-button, in the Authentication Domain panel at the upper left. Then, enter the name of the new user you are creating. (Note that at this point, if Native LDAP has also been configured for the cluster, the notification not found appears above the username-field: however, this can be ignored.) Next, specify a suitable role, such as Cluster Admin.

        The panel now appears as follows:

        manageUserNewSubsequent2

        Then, left-click on Add User. The newly defined user now appears in the Security view.

        linuxUser
      10. In the terminal, restart the SASL service, to allow PAM authentication to take effect.

        $ service saslauthd restart

        When this command is successful, the output confirms that the daemon has been started. If the command fails, bring up the file /etc/default/saslauthd in an editor, and locate the line that contains the START variable. If this line reads START=no, change it to START=yes. Then, save the file, exit, and rerun the command.

      11. Restart the Couchbase-Server service, to allow external authentication through PAM to take effect.

        $ service couchbase-server restart
      12. In the browser, on the same node, access localhost:8091. When the Couchbase Web Console login-interface appears, enter the username and password you previously created:

        couchbaseLogin

        Left-click on the Sign In button. The user you created is now logged into Couchbase Server, as an administrator.

      Troubleshooting

      If login does not succeed, bring up the file /etc/default/saslauthd in an editor, and ensure it contains the line START=yes. If the line reads START=no, change it to START=yes. Also confirm that the MECH (for CentOS/RHEL) or MECHANISM (for Ubuntu/Debian) parameter is set to pam. Save the file, and exit. Then, restart both saslauthd and couchbase-server, as described above. Finally, re-attempt login.