Difference between revisions of "Creating Pool Accounts With LDAP"

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== The LDAP directory structure  ==
 
== The LDAP directory structure  ==
The list of valid users of the NDPF is kept in a central LDAP directory, currently hosted on <tt>hooimijt.nikhef.nl</tt>, now on <tt>teugel.nikhef.nl</tt>. This directory contains both the "local" users as well as all poolaccounts and all automount map entries. The structure of the directory is:
+
The list of valid users of the NDPF is kept in a central LDAP directory, currently hosted on <tt>teugel.nikhef.nl</tt>. This directory contains both the "local" users as well as all poolaccounts and all automount map entries. The structure of the directory is:
  
 
  + dc=farmnet,dc=nikhef,dc=nl
 
  + dc=farmnet,dc=nikhef,dc=nl
Line 22: Line 22:
 
       + ou=auto.sedata2
 
       + ou=auto.sedata2
  
The <tt>ou=Poolaccounts</tt> entry contains the hierarchy of pool account groups. Per pool account group, there is a separa <tt>ou</tt>, which contains the actual list of pool accounts. Each account is named by its <tt>uid</tt>, and is of objectClass "posixAccount". For each account named here, there should be a corresponding entry in the <tt>ou=pool,ou=auto.home,ou=automount</tt> branch of the tree as well (of objectClass "automount").
+
The <tt>ou=Poolaccounts</tt> entry contains the hierarchy of pool account groups. Per pool account group, there is a separate <tt>ou</tt>, which contains the actual list of pool accounts. Each account is named by its <tt>uid</tt>, and is of objectClass "posixAccount". For each account named here, there should be a corresponding entry in the <tt>ou=pool,ou=auto.home,ou=automount</tt> branch of the tree as well (of objectClass "automount").
  
 
== Creating accounts for a new VO ==
 
== Creating accounts for a new VO ==

Revision as of 13:02, 4 December 2008

The LDAP directory structure

The list of valid users of the NDPF is kept in a central LDAP directory, currently hosted on teugel.nikhef.nl. This directory contains both the "local" users as well as all poolaccounts and all automount map entries. The structure of the directory is:

+ dc=farmnet,dc=nikhef,dc=nl
  |
  + ou=Managers
  + ou=LocalGroups (contains all groups!)
  + ou=LocalUsers
  + ou=Poolaccounts
    |
    + ou=dteam
    + ou=ops
    ...
  + ou=automount
    |
    + ou=auto.home
    + ou=lcgprod
      |
      + ou=auto.sedata
      + ou=auto.share
      + ou=auto.stage
      + ou=auto.sedata2

The ou=Poolaccounts entry contains the hierarchy of pool account groups. Per pool account group, there is a separate ou, which contains the actual list of pool accounts. Each account is named by its uid, and is of objectClass "posixAccount". For each account named here, there should be a corresponding entry in the ou=pool,ou=auto.home,ou=automount branch of the tree as well (of objectClass "automount").

Creating accounts for a new VO

To use the scripts, login on the fileserver "hooimijt.nikhef.nl", and make sure that /export/perm/adm/bin is in your path (it contains all the relevant scripts), or go there. Also, make sure you know your LDAP manager password.

You need to:

  1. add the accounts to the LDAP directory
  2. create the homedirectories for these users on hooimijt
  3. add the inodes to the gridmapdir

(and of course add the VO itself to the proper Quattor profiles for the selected facilities, but this is outside the scope of this page).

Note: do not forget to create inodes in the gridmapdir on the DPM and the LFC hosts.

Generating the LDIF

Adding users to the directory needs two commands (or one pipe). The gen_poolacc_ldif script generates ldif files, that need to be piped in to "ldapadd" to be inserted in the directory.

Its use is best explained by an example:

./gen_poolacc_ldif -c --vo atlas -g 2002 -b 43000 -n 200

will spit out lots of ldif, like

dn: uid=atlas000, ou=PoolAccounts, dc=farmnet,dc=nikhef,dc=nl
objectclass: top
objectclass: posixAccount
cn: PoolAccount 0 of atlas
uid: atlas000
uidNumber: 43000
gidNumber: 2002
homeDirectory: /home/atlas000
...

The -c option (for "create") additionally generates the organizationalUnit definitions inside the poolaccounts tree under which the new uids will be created. If you are extending an existing set of poolaccounts, this options must be omitted. But, if you leave it in by accident, the ldapadd command below will trigger an error and terminate without damage being done (and, conversely, omitting -c on initial creation will also trigger an error).

The LDIF output must be added to the directory with the ldapadd command:

ldapadd -H ldaps://hooimijt.nikhef.nl/ -W -x -D "cn=My Name,ou=managers,dc=farmnet,dc=nikhef,dc=nl" 

Valid managers are "David Groep", "Jeff Templon@nikhef.nl", "Davide Salomoni", "Ronald Starink" and "backup" (the last one can only read, though). The two commands can be combined in a single pipe.

In due course, the new accounts will appear on the farm, and you can check their presence with the "id" and "ls" commands:

id -a atlas000
ls -l /home/atlas000/

There may be a slight delay if the system you are trying this on is running nscd, or is looking at a slave LDAP server (trog or karnton instead of hooimijt).

The number of digits appended to the vo name is three (3) by default, but can be changed with the -l option. And, of course, the "voname" specified here is completely unrelated to the VO name in the information system or used in the GlueAccessControlBaseRules.

Extending an existing poolaccount range

You can also extend an existing range, by specifying a "start" value to gen_poolacc_ldif, but remember: the "base" value must remain the same. So, to generate an additional 100 atlas accounts, the command would be

./gen_poolacc_ldif --vo atlas -g 2002 -b 43000 -n 300 -s 200

to start at 200 and ensure that there are 300 accounts in total.

Generating the home directories

Once the accounts have been added to the directory, you can create the home directories on schuur. This must be done as root, and on schuur itself. The command to use is make_poolacc_dir, which takes one argument: the uid prefix to select on. By default, it will generate a shell script that tries to (re)create the homedirectories for all poolaccounts, so beware.

Note: at the moment, the script make_poolacc_dir is found at schuur in /root/bin.

To generate the home directories for the "phicos" VO, use:

./make_poolacc_dir --uid=phicos > /tmp/schapen
sh /tmp/schapen

To so the same for the additional 100 atlas accounts created from "atlas200" to "atlas299", use:

./make_poolacc_dir --uid=atlas2 > /tmp/lam
sh /tmp/lam

The current version of make_poolacc_dir ensures that the .ssh directory contains an empty "authorized_keys" file and is immutable ("chattr =i .ssh").

Creating the inodes

Creating the inodes is done with populate_gridmapdir. Run this script as root on hooimijt. The populate_gridmapdir script is even more trivial than the other two: it extracts all uid's from the ou=Poolaccounts,dc=farmnet,dc=nikhef,dc=nl tree and prepends it with "/export/perm/share/gridmapdir":

./populate_gridmapdir

results in

/export/perm/share/gridmapdir/alice000
/export/perm/share/gridmapdir/alice001
/export/perm/share/gridmapdir/alice002
/export/perm/share/gridmapdir/alice003
/export/perm/share/gridmapdir/alice004
...

To filter out the new ones, use grep, and pipe the results through xargs so as to touch the files:

./populate_gridmapdir | grep atlas2 | xargs touch

will do the job for the 100 additional atlas accounts, for instance.

Repairing an empty gridmapdir

For this you need the backup file that's generated nightly by the poolmaplog script from cron. The file format is simple:

uid   subjectDN_in_lowercase
...

btu for use in the gridmapdir the special chars (so painstackingly converted to readable format by poolmaplog) must be concerted back. This is the task of the repair-pool script. As far as I know, these are the special characters:

% / <space> = ( ) - . @

the repair-pool script will translate these to URL-escaped characters (ie. "=" becomes "%3D" -- note that we must thus convert any %-signs first!)

The script will automatically relink the poolaccounts to the proper DN for those accounts that were in use (i.e. has a DN assigned to them). You should only attempt repair if the pooldir is empty!

./repair-pool < /export/perm/share/gridmapdir/.poolmap.20050816

and watch the results.

Migrating the poolaccounts in the LDAP directory

When the poolaccounts are migrated to a new system (schuur.nikhef.nl), the LDAP directory needs to be updated to reflect the new location. To this end, a new script is now available on hooimijt:/export/perm/adm/bin:

./migrate_poolacc_dir_ldap [--uid=uidpattern]

which generates LDIF output with the directory updates. You can apply the LDIF modification with the command

ldapmodify -x -W -D "cn=Your Name,ou=Managers,dc=farmnet,dc=nikhef,dc=nl" -H ldap://trog.nikhef.nl/ -f ldif_file

The default is to expect the poolaccount home to be on

schuur.nikhef.nl:/project/share/pool/prefix/loginname

It will look for appropriately named poolaccounts under ou=pool,ou=auto.home,ou=automount,dc=farmnet,dc=nikhef,dc=nl

PS: also the gen_poolacc_dir script has been changed to use the new poolaccount homedirectory format. The output of this gen_poolacc_dir scfipt is a shell script to be executed on the physical filesystem-hosting node.