DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
RT::Authen::ExternalAuth(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation
NAME
RT::Authen::ExternalAuth - RT Authentication using External Sources
DESCRIPTION
This module provides the ability to authenticate RT users against one
or more external data sources at once. It will also allow information
about that user to be loaded from the same, or any other available,
source as well as allowing multple redundant servers for each method.
The extension currently supports authentication and information from
LDAP via the Net::LDAP module, and from any data source that an
installed DBI driver is available for.
It is also possible to use cookies set by an alternate application for
Single Sign-On (SSO) with that application. For example, you may
integrate RT with your own website login system so that once users log
in to your website, they will be automagically logged in to RT when
they access it.
INSTALLATION
"perl Makefile.PL"
"make"
"make install"
May need root permissions
Edit your /opt/rt4/etc/RT_SiteConfig.pm
If you are using RT 4.2 or greater, add this line:
Plugin('RT::Authen::ExternalAuth');
For RT 4.0, add this line:
Set(@Plugins, qw(RT::Authen::ExternalAuth) );
or add "RT::Authen::ExternalAuth" to your existing @Plugins line.
See "CONFIGURATION" for additional configuration to add to your
RT_SiteConfig.pm file.
UPGRADING
If you are upgrading from an earlier version of this extension, you
must remove the following files manually:
/opt/rt4/local/plugins/RT-Authen-ExternalAuth/lib/RT/User_Vendor.pm
/opt/rt4/local/lib/RT/User_Vendor.pm
/opt/rt4/local/lib/RT/Authen/External_Auth.pm
Otherwise you will most likely encounter an error about modifying a
read only value and be unable to start RT.
You may not have all of these files. It depends what versions you are
upgrading between.
If you are using a vendor packaged RT, your local directories are
likely to be somewhere under /usr/local instead of in /opt/rt4 so you
will need to visit Configuration -> Tools -> System Configuration to
find your plugin root.
CONFIGURATION
RT::Authen::ExternalAuth provides a lot of flexibility with many
configuration options. The following desc these configuration options,
and provides a complete example.
$ExternalAuthPriority
The order in which the services defined in "$ExternalSettings"
should be used to authenticate users. Once the user has been
authenticated by one service, the rest are skipped.
You should remove services you don't use. For example, if you're
only using "My_LDAP", remove "My_MySQL" and "My_SSO_Cookie".
Set($ExternalAuthPriority, [ 'My_LDAP',
'My_MySQL',
'My_SSO_Cookie'
]
);
$ExternalInfoPriority
When multiple auth services are available, this value defines the
order in which the services defined in "$ExternalSettings" should
be used to get information about users. This includes "RealName",
telephone numbers etc, but also whether or not the user should be
considered disabled.
Once a user record is found, no more services are checked.
You CANNOT use a SSO cookie to retrieve information.
You should remove services you don't use, but you must define at
least one service.
Set($ExternalInfoPriority, [ 'My_LDAP',
'My_MySQL',
]
);
$AutoCreateNonExternalUsers
If this is set to 1, then users should be autocreated by RT as
internal users if they fail to authenticate from an external
service. This is useful if you have users outside your organization
who might interface with RT, perhaps by sending email to a support
email address.
$ExternalSettings
These are the full settings for each external service as a hash of
hashes. Note that you may have as many external services as you
wish. They will be checked in the order specified in
"$ExternalAuthPriority" and "$ExternalInfoPriority" directives
above.
The outer structure is a key with the authentication option (name
of external source). The value is a hash reference with
configuration keys and values, for example:
Set($ExternalSettings, {
My_LDAP => {
type => 'ldap',
... other options ...
},
My_MySQL => {
type => 'db',
... other options ...
},
... other sources ...
} );
As shown above, each description should have 'type' defined. The
following types are supported:
ldap
Authenticate against and sync information with LDAP servers.
See RT::Authen::ExternalAuth::LDAP for details.
db Authenticate against and sync information with external RDBMS,
supported by Perl's DBI interface. See
RT::Authen::ExternalAuth::DBI for details.
cookie
Authenticate by cookie. See
RT::Authen::ExternalAuth::DBI::Cookie for details.
See the modules noted above for configuration options specific to
each type. The following apply to all types.
attr_match_list
The list of RT attributes that uniquely identify a user. These
values are used, in order, to find users in the selected
authentication source. Each value specified here must have a
mapping in the "attr_map" section below. You can remove values
you don't expect to match, but we recommend using "Name" and
"EmailAddress" at a minimum. For example:
'attr_match_list' => [
'Name',
'EmailAddress',
],
You should not use items that can map to multiple users (such
as a "RealName" or building name).
attr_map
Mapping of RT attributes on to attributes in the external
source. Valid keys are attributes of an RT::User
<http://bestpractical.com/rt/docs/latest/RT/User.html>. The
values are attributes from your authentication source. For
example, an LDAP mapping might look like:
'attr_map' => {
'Name' => 'sAMAccountName',
'EmailAddress' => 'mail',
'Organization' => 'physicalDeliveryOfficeName',
'RealName' => 'cn',
...
},
Example
# Use the below LDAP source for both authentication, as well as user
# information
Set( $ExternalAuthPriority, ["My_LDAP"] );
Set( $ExternalInfoPriority, ["My_LDAP"] );
# Users created from LDAP should be Privileged; this is a core RT
# option. Additionally, this is the 4.2 name for the option; for RT
# 4.0, is it named $AutoCreate See the core RT documentation at
# http://docs.bestpractical.com/RT_Config#UserAutocreateDefaultsOnLogin
# for for further details.
Set( $UserAutocreateDefaultsOnLogin, { Privileged => 1 } );
# Users should still be autocreated by RT as internal users if they
# fail to exist in an external service; this is so requestors (who
# are not in LDAP) can still be created when they email in.
Set($AutoCreateNonExternalUsers, 1);
# Minimal LDAP configuration; see RT::Authen::ExternalAuth::LDAP for
# further details and examples
Set($ExternalSettings, {
'My_LDAP' => {
'type' => 'ldap',
'server' => 'ldap.example.com',
# By not passing 'user' and 'pass' we are using an anonymous
# bind, which some servers to not allow
'base' => 'ou=Staff,dc=example,dc=com',
'filter' => '(objectClass=inetOrgPerson)',
# Users are allowed to log in via email address or account
# name
'attr_match_list' => [
'Name',
'EmailAddress',
],
# Import the following properties of the user from LDAP upon
# login
'attr_map' => {
'Name' => 'sAMAccountName',
'EmailAddress' => 'mail',
'RealName' => 'cn',
'WorkPhone' => 'telephoneNumber',
'Address1' => 'streetAddress',
'City' => 'l',
'State' => 'st',
'Zip' => 'postalCode',
'Country' => 'co',
},
},
} );
AUTHORS
Best Practical Solutions, LLC <modules@bestpractical.com>
Originally by Mike Peachey (Jennic Ltd.) <zordrak@cpan.org>
BUGS
All bugs should be reported via email to
L<bug-RT-Authen-ExternalAuth@rt.cpan.org|mailto:bug-RT-Authen-ExternalAuth@rt.cpan.org>
or via the web at
L<rt.cpan.org|http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=RT-Authen-ExternalAuth>.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2008-2014 by Best Practical Solutions, LLC Copyright (c)
2008 by Jennic Ltd.
This is free software, licensed under:
The GNU General Public License, Version 2, June 1991
perl v5.20.3 2014-10-16 RT::Authen::ExternalAuth(3)