GSSAPI is an authentication protocol that is commonly implemented with Kerberos on Unix or Active Directory on Windows. This document describes GSSAPI authentication in MaxScale. The authentication module name in MaxScale is GSSAPIAuth.
For Unix systems, the usual GSSAPI implementation is Kerberos. This is a short guide on how to set up Kerberos for MaxScale.
The first step is to configure MariaDB to use GSSAPI authentication. The MariaDB documentation for the GSSAPI Authentication Plugin is a good example on how to set it up.
The next step is to copy the keytab file from the server where MariaDB is
installed to the server where MaxScale is located. The keytab file must be
placed in the configured default location which almost always is
/etc/krb5.keytab
. Alternatively, the keytab filepath can be given as an
authenticator option.
The location of the keytab file can be changed with the KRB5_KTNAME environment variable: https://web.mit.edu/kerberos/krb5-latest/doc/basic/keytab_def.html
To take GSSAPI authentication into use, add the following to the listener.
authenticator=GSSAPIAuth
authenticator_options=principal_name=mariadb/[email protected]
The principal name should be the same as on the MariaDB servers.
- Type: string
- Mandatory: No
- Dynamic: No
- Default:
mariadb/localhost.localdomain
The service principal name to send to the client. This parameter is a string parameter which is used by the client to request the token.
This parameter must be the same as the principal name that the backend MariaDB server uses.
- Type: path
- Mandatory: No
- Dynamic: No
- Default: Kerberos Default
Keytab file location. This should be an absolute path to the file containing the
keytab. If not defined, Kerberos will search from a default location, usually
/etc/krb5.keytab
. This path is set to an environment variable. This means that
multiple listeners with GSSAPIAuth will override each other. If using multiple
GSSAPI authenticators, either do not set this option or use the same value for
all listeners.
[email protected],gssapi_keytab_path=/home/user/mymariadb.keytab
Read the Authentication Modules document for more details on how authentication modules work in MaxScale.
The GSSAPI plugin authentication starts when the database server sends the
service principal name in the AuthSwitchRequest packet. The principal name will
usually be in the form [email protected]
.
The client searches its local cache for a token for the service or may request it from the GSSAPI server. If found, the client sends the token to the database server. The database server verifies the authenticity of the token using its keytab file and sends the final OK packet to the client.
The GSSAPI authenticator modules require the GSSAPI development libraries (krb5-devel on CentOS 7).