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Visus.DirectoryAuthentication

Visus.DirectoryAuthentication

Visus.DirectoryAuthentication implements LDAP authentication using System.DirectorySerices.Protocols, which is a platform-independent implementation of LDAP services since .NET 5.

Usage

  1. Make sure the prerequisites are installed
  2. Add the LDAP services
  3. Configure the LDAP server
  4. Authenticate a user
  5. Customising LDAP mappings
  6. Searching users

Make sure the prerequisites are installed

System.DirectorySerices.Protocols requires native LDAP libraries for P/Invoke being installed. This should be the case for all Windows platforms by default, but on Linux, libldap must be installed. Please note that P/Invoke requires the name of the library being hard-coded, which might be a problem. There are basically two ways for you to resolve this, which is installing the expected version or by creating a symlink that pretends the current version is the expected one.

Add the LDAP services

The authentication functionality is added in ConfigureServices in your Startup class via the following statements:

using Visus.DirectoryAuthentication;
// ...

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services) {
    // ...

    // Add LDAP authentication with default LdapUser object.
    services.AddLdapAuthentication(o => {
        this.Configuration.GetSection("LdapOptions").Bind(o);
    });

    // ...
}

Or using the new "minimal hosting model":

using Visus.DirectoryAuthentication;
// ...

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
// ...

// Add LDAP authentication with default LdapUser object.
builder.Services.AddLdapAuthentication(o => {
    this.Configuration.GetSection(LdapOptions.Section).Bind(o);
});
// ...

The above code uses the default LdapUser and LdapGroup objects from the library, which provides the most commonly used user claims. If you need additional claims or differently mapped claims, you can create your own user class either by inheriting from LdapUserBase and customising its behaviour. The configuration would look like the following in this case:

using Visus.DirectoryAuthentication;
// ...

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
// ...

// Add LDAP authentication with default LdapUser object.
builder.Services.AddLdapAuthentication<MyUser, MyGroup>(o => {
    this.Configuration.GetSection(LdapOptions.Section).Bind(o);
});
// ...

Configure the LDAP server

The configuration section can have any name of your choice as long as it can be bound to LdapOptions. The following example illustrates a fairly minimal configuration for an Active Directory using SSL, but no certificate validation (this is what you would use for development purposes):

{
    "LdapOptions": {
        "Servers": [ "dc.your-domain.de" ],
        "Port": 636,
        "IsSsl": true,
        "IsNoCertificateCheck": true
        "SearchBases": { "DC=your-domain,DC=de": "Subtree" },
        "Schema": "Active Directory",
        "IsRecursiveGroupMembership": true,
    }
}

While you can fully customise the properties and claims the library loads for users and groups (see below), there are certain things that must be provided for the library being able to retrieve the group hierarchy. This is controlled via the Schema property in the JSON above. The schema selects the LdapMapping the library uses to select users and determine group membership. We provide several built-in schemas for frequently used LDAP servers in LdapOptionsBase, namely "Active Directory" for Active Directory Domain Services, "IDMU" for Active Directory with Identity Management for Unix installed and "RFC 2307" for this RFC, which is the schema typically used be OpenLDAP servers.

The built-in schemas are hard-coded in the library like this:

new LdapMapping() {
    GroupsAttribute = "memberOf",
    GroupsFilter = "(objectClass=group)",
    PrimaryGroupAttribute = "primaryGroupID",
    PrimaryGroupIdentityAttribute = "objectSid",
    UserFilter = "(|(sAMAccountName={0})(userPrincipalName={0}))",
    UsersFilter = "(&(objectClass=user)(objectClass=person)(!(objectClass=computer)))"
}

You can, however, provide your own mapping in the JSON configuration like this:

{
    "Mapping": {
        "GroupsAttribute": "memberOf",
        "GroupsFilter": "(objectClass=group)",
        "PrimaryGroupAttribute": "primaryGroupID",
        "PrimaryGroupIdentityAttribute:" "objectSid",
        "UserFilter": "(|(sAMAccountName={0})(userPrincipalName={0}))",
        "UsersFilter": "(&(objectClass=user)(objectClass=person)(!(objectClass=computer)))"
    }
}

The properties of a mapping are:

  • DistinguishedNameAttribute: The attribute to get the distinguished name of a user or group. This defaults to "distinguishedName" and there should be no need to modify it.
  • GroupsAttribute: The attribute where (non-primary) groups are stored. The mapper uses this information to assign groups to user objects.
  • GroupsFilter: The LDAP filter that allows for selecting all groups. This property is required if you want to use ILdapSearchService.
  • PrimaryGroupAttribute: The attribute where the SID or GID of the primary group is stored in a user's entry.
  • PrimaryGroupIdentityAttribute: The attribute where the SID or GID is stored within the entry of the primary group.
  • UserFilter: The LDAP filter that allows the library to select the user by the user name that is input into the login field. This should cover all inputs that allow the user to bind to the LDAP server. For instance, Active Directory does not only allow for binding via the user name (sAMAccountName), but also via user@domain (userPrincipalName), so both ways need to be specified in the UserFilter. Technically, users could also bind via the distinguished name, but this is typcially not relevant for real-world scenarios, so our built-in mapping does not include this. If you fail to specify the correct filter here, users might be able to authenticate (bind to the LDAP server), but the authentication in the library will fail because the user object cannot be retrieved.
  • UsersFilter: The LDAP filter that allows for selecting all users. Please note that for both, Active Directory and OpenLDAP, users are people and machines, so you want to filter on people only here. This property is required if you want to use ILdapSearchService.

Authenticate a user

There are two methods for authenticating a user, the one returning the user object you registered, the other directly returns a ClaimsPrincipal. These two methods can be used in controllers to implement cookie-based or JWT-based authorisation. An example for a cookie-based login method using user and group objects looks like:

// Inject ILdapAuthenticationService to _authService field in constructor.
public MyLoginController(ILdapAuthenticationService<LdapUser> authService,
        ILogger<MyLoginController> logger) {
    this._authService = authService;
    this._logger = logger;
}

[HttpPost]
[AllowAnonymous]
public async Task<ActionResult<ILdapUser>> Login([FromForm] string username, [FromForm] string password) {
    try {
        (var retval, var claims) = await this._authService.LoginUserAsync(username, password, null);
        var identity = new ClaimsIdentity(claims, "LDAP");
        var principal = new ClaimsPrincipal(identity);
        await this.HttpContext.SignInAsync(CookieAuthenticationDefaults.AuthenticationScheme, princial);
        return this.Ok(retval);
    } catch (DirectoryOperationException ex) {
        // For LDAP errors, it might be helpful to have the error message from
        // the server.
        this._logger.LogError(ex, ex.Response.ErrorMessage);
        return this.Unauthorized();
    } catch {
        return this.Unauthorized();
    }
}

Customising LDAP mappings

Customising the user object

The built-in LdapUser object provides a reasonable mapping of attributes in an Active Directory to user claims. There are two ways you can customise this behaviour: the first is by inheriting from LdapUser and adding additional properties that are mapped to LDAP attributes (in contrast to version 1.x of the library, it is not possible to change existing mappings of LdapUser), or you can provide a completely new class where all attributes are mapped according to your needs.

An example for addition additional information to the existing LdapUser might be the retrieval of the profile picture for display on the website:

public sealed class MyUser : LdapUser {

    /// <summary>
    /// Gets or sets the base64-encoded profile picture of the user.
    /// </summary>
    [LdapAttribute("Active Directory", "thumbnailPhoto", Converter = typeof(BinaryConverter))]
    public string? ProfilePicture { get; set; }
}

If you create a fully customised user, make sure to annotate properties with special meanings accordingly to allow the mapper to understand your class (alternatively, you could also provide your own ILdapMapper). These attributes are:

  • [AccountName]: Marks the (Windows) account name and enables the ILdapSearchService to search users by their account name.
  • [DistinguishedName]: Marks the distinguished name and enables the ILdapSearchService to search users by their distinguished name.
  • [Identity]: Marks the identity (SID or UID/GID) and enables the ILdapSearchService to search users by their ID.
  • [GroupMemberships]: Marks an IEnumerable<TGroup> as the property that receives the groups a user belongs to.

A very minimal user object for an Active Directory could look like:

public sealed class MinimalUser {
    [LdapAttribute(Schema.ActiveDirectory, "sAMAccountName")]
    [Claim(ClaimTypes.Name)]
    [AccountName]
    public string AccountName { get; set; } = null!;

    [LdapAttribute(Schema.ActiveDirectory, "distinguishedName")]
    [DistinguishedName]
    public string DistinguishedName { get; set; } = null!;

    [LdapAttribute(Schema.ActiveDirectory, "objectSid", Converter = typeof(SidConverter))]
    [Claim(ClaimTypes.Sid)]
    [Identity]
    public string Identity { get; set; } = null!;

In version 2.1 of the library, the ILdapAttributeMappingBuilder allows for customising the lookup tables used by the LDAP mapper without building a custom mapper altogether. This enables users to (i) change how the default LdapUser and LdapGroup are mapped and (ii) build mappings for third-party types that cannot be annotated. Let's assume you want ot change LdapUser to use the account name as its identity rather than the SID/UID. This could be achieved like this:

builder.Services.AddLdapAuthentication(o => {
    this.Configuration.GetSection(LdapOptions.Section).Bind(o);
}, (b, _) => {
    // Map all properties except for Identity to annotated LDAP attributes.
    b.MapProperty(nameof(LdapUser.AccountName))
        .StoringAccountName()
        .ToAnnotatedAttribute();
    b.MapProperty(nameof(LdapUser.ChristianName))
        .ToAnnotatedAttribute();
    b.MapProperty(nameof(LdapUser.DisplayName))
        .ToAnnotatedAttribute();
    b.MapProperty(nameof(LdapUser.DistinguishedName))
        .StoringDistingushedName()
        .ToAnnotatedAttribute();
    b.MapProperty(nameof(LdapUser.EmailAddress))
        .ToAnnotatedAttribute();
    b.MapProperty(nameof(LdapUser.Groups))
        .StoringGroupMemberships();
    b.MapProperty(nameof(LdapUser.Surname))
        .ToAnnotatedAttribute();

    // Change the identity to the account name.
    b.MapProperty(nameof(LdapUser.Identity))
        .StoringIdentity()
        .ToAttribute("sAMAccountName");
});

Customising the group object

In a similar way you can provide your own replacement of LdapUser, you can also provide a replacement for LdapGroup, which contains the information to create group-based claims. Like for the user, you can rely on LdapMapper and annotations via attributes or customise the assignment of LDAP attributes to properties in a custom mapper.

Your own LDAP group object should be annotated with the same attributes described above for the user to allow the default mapper to reflect on them. Groups support an additional attribute:

  • [PrimaryGroupFlag]: Marks a bool property which will be set true by the mapper if the group was retrieved from the primary group attribute of a user rather than from the list of group memberships.

Customising claims

If you do not need additional information from the directory than what is provided by LdapUser and LdapGroup, but you want to customise the System.Security.Claims.Claims generated, you should consider providing a custom IClaimsBuilder to make these claims from the information provided by the user object. The ILdapAuthenticationService uses this class to obtain the claims for a user in the LoginUser method that returns a user object and its claims. Have a look at the default ClaimsBuilderBase in Visus.Ldap.Core for inspiration on how to do this. The default builder uses the Claim attribute to translate properties to claims.

Note that if you login a System.Security.Claims.ClaimPrincipal directly, the ILdapAuthentication will use IClaimsMapper instead of IClaimsBuilder to map LDAP entries directly to claims without the intermediate step of making a user object. As for the IClaimsBuilder, you can replace the default ClaimsMapperBase from Visus.Ldap.Core with your own one. Starting with version 2.1 of the library it is also possible to customise the claims maps using a IClaimsMapBuilder in a callback passed to AddLdapAuthentication.

Please be aware that, depending on your group hierarchy, a user might be member of a group via multiple paths. The library can recursively enumerate the whole group hierarchy, but it will not eliminate duplicates when doing so. In order to remove duplicate claims from the results of IClaimsBuilder and IClaimsMapper, we provide the Visus.Ldap.Claims.ClaimsEqualityComparer, which can be used with the Distinct LINQ method to remove duplicate claims.

Finally, if your users are member of many groups, the list of claims might get larger than it needs to be for your specific application. The claims builder and mapper therefore accept a Visus.Ldap.Claims.ClaimFilter callback, which allows you to select the claims you are interested in while they are collected.

Searching users

In some cases, you might want to search user entries without authenticating the user of your application. One of these cases might be restoring the user object from the claims stored in a cookie. A service account specified in LdapOptions.User with a password stored in LdapOptions.Password can be used in conjuction with a ILdapSearchService to implement such a behaviour.

Note

The LDAP search service has the credentials of the service account configured in the options, not of a user of your application. If you need to perform actions on behalf of a user, use ILdapConnectionService to obtain a connection as the user.

Warning

If you do not specifiy a User and Password of a service account in your LdapOptions, the search service will perform an anonymous bind. While this anonymous bind might succeed, depending on your server configuration, anonymous users typically do not have access to the information you are looking for, wherefore the results of your search options will be most likely empty or incomplete.

Assuming that you have the embedded the user SID in the claims of an authentication cookie, you then can restore the user object from the cookie as follows:

// Inject ILdapSearchService to _ldapSearchService field in constructor.
public MyLoginController(ILdapSearchService<LdapUser, LdapGroup> searchService) {
    this._searchService = searchService;
}

[HttpGet]
[Authorize]
public ActionResult<LdapUser> GetUser() {
    if (this.User != null) {
        // Determine the claim types we know that the authentication service has
        // stored the SID to.
        var claims = ClaimAttribute.GetClaims<LdapUser>(nameof(LdapUser.Identity));

        // Return the first valid SID that allows for reconstructing the user.
        foreach (var c in claims) {
            var sid = this.User.FindFirstValue(c);
            if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(sid)) {
                var retval = this._searchService.GetUserByIdentity(sid);

                if (retval != null) {
                    return this.Ok(retval);
                }
            }
        }
    }

    // If something went wrong, we assume that the (anonymous) user must not
    // access the user details.
    return this.Unauthorized();
}

You might also want to use the search service if your LDAP server requires users to bind using their distinguished name, but you do not want to force them to remember this name. In this case, you can perform a search for another attribute and retrieve the distinguished name of a matching entry. For example:

// Inject ILdapAuthenticationService and ILdapSearchService in constructor.
public MyLoginController(ILdapAuthenticationService<LdapUser> authService,
        ILdapSearchService<LdapUser, LdapGroup> searchService) {
    this._authService = authService;
    this._searchService = searchService;
}

[HttpPost]
[AllowAnonymous]
public async Task<ActionResult> Login([FromForm] string username,
        [FromForm] string password,
        [FromQuery] string? returnUrl) {
    try {
        // Retrieve the distinguished name for the user name in an RFC 2307
        // schema. If no unique user was found, the caller is unauthorised.
        var user = await this._searchService.GetUserByAccountNameAsync(username);
        if (user == null) {
            return this.Unauthorized();
        }

        // In this example, we directly retrieve a principal, because we do not
        // need the user object.
        var principal = await this._authService.LoginPrincipalAsync(user.DistinguishedName, password);
        await this.HttpContext.SignInAsync(CookieAuthenticationDefaults.AuthenticationScheme, principal);

        return this.Redirect(returnUrl ?? "/");
    } catch {
        return this.Unauthorized();
    }
}