> -----Original Message----- > From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx > [mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Sean O'Connell > Sent: Monday, September 05, 2005 2:37 PM > To: CentOS mailing list > Subject: RE: LDAP/iptables > > Eddie- > > It doesn't look like the slapd is opening up a TCP port. It > only appears to have opened unix sockets. Running lsof on > working slapd, I see the following in addition to stuff you reported: > > slapd 2511 ldap 6u IPv6 7136316 TCP > *:ldap (LISTEN) > slapd 2511 ldap 7u IPv4 7136317 TCP > *:ldap (LISTEN) > slapd 2511 ldap 8u IPv6 7136320 TCP > *:ldaps (LISTEN) > slapd 2511 ldap 9u IPv4 7136321 TCP > *:ldaps (LISTEN) > > I think there might be an issue with your slapd.conf. > Sean, I really appreciate your help with this! Here's my slapd.conf: # # See slapd.conf(5) for details on configuration options. # This file should NOT be world readable. # include /etc/openldap/schema/core.schema include /etc/openldap/schema/cosine.schema include /etc/openldap/schema/inetorgperson.schema include /etc/openldap/schema/nis.schema # Allow LDAPv2 client connections. This is NOT the default. allow bind_v2 # Do not enable referrals until AFTER you have a working directory # service AND an understanding of referrals. #referral ldap://root.openldap.org pidfile /var/run/slapd.pid argsfile /var/run/slapd.args # Load dynamic backend modules: # modulepath /usr/sbin/openldap # moduleload back_bdb.la # moduleload back_ldap.la # moduleload back_ldbm.la # moduleload back_passwd.la # moduleload back_shell.la # The next three lines allow use of TLS for encrypting connections using a # dummy test certificate which you can generate by changing to # /usr/share/ssl/certs, running "make slapd.pem", and fixing permissions on # slapd.pem so that the ldap user or group can read it. Your client software # may balk at self-signed certificates, however. # TLSCACertificateFile /usr/share/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt # TLSCertificateFile /usr/share/ssl/certs/slapd.pem # TLSCertificateKeyFile /usr/share/ssl/certs/slapd.pem # Sample security restrictions # Require integrity protection (prevent hijacking) # Require 112-bit (3DES or better) encryption for updates # Require 63-bit encryption for simple bind # security ssf=1 update_ssf=112 simple_bind=64 # Sample access control policy: # Root DSE: allow anyone to read it # Subschema (sub)entry DSE: allow anyone to read it # Other DSEs: # Allow self write access # Allow authenticated users read access # Allow anonymous users to authenticate # Directives needed to implement policy: # access to dn.base="" by * read # access to dn.base="cn=Subschema" by * read # access to * # by self write # by users read # by anonymous auth # # if no access controls are present, the default policy # allows anyone and everyone to read anything but restricts # updates to rootdn. (e.g., "access to * by * read") # # rootdn can always read and write EVERYTHING! ####################################################################### # ldbm and/or bdb database definitions ####################################################################### database bdb suffix "dc=palmettodomains,dc=com" #rootdn "cn=Manager,dc=palmetodomains,dc=com" rootdn "uid=root,cn=palmettodomains.com,cn=digest-md5,cn=auth" # Cleartext passwords, especially for the rootdn, should # be avoided. See slappasswd(8) and slapd.conf(5) for details. # Use of strong authentication encouraged. # rootpw secret # rootpw "{SHA}xqFH8zno0DblfNcUXu2A/6U3txQ=" # The database directory MUST exist prior to running slapd AND # should only be accessible by the slapd and slap tools. # Mode 700 recommended. directory /var/lib/ldap # Indices to maintain for this database index objectClass eq,pres index ou,cn,mail,surname,givenname eq,pres,sub index uidNumber,gidNumber,loginShell eq,pres index uid,memberUid eq,pres,sub index nisMapName,nisMapEntry eq,pres,sub # Replicas of this database #replogfile /var/lib/ldap/openldap-master-replog #replica host=ldap-1.example.com:389 starttls=critical # bindmethod=sasl saslmech=GSSAPI # authcId=host/ldap-master.example.com@xxxxxxxxxxx sasl-regexp uid=(.*),cn=palmettodomains,cn=DIGEST-MD5,cn=auth uid=$1 It's pretty much the default config. Anything jump out at you? What should be in ldap.conf? Everything is commented out by default. Thanks!! > -- > Sean > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >