How To Join CentOS Linux To An Active Directory Domain


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How To Join CentOS Linux To An Active Directory Domain

Posted by Jarrod on December 28, 2016Leave a comment (29)Go to comments

Here we’ll show you how to add your Linux system to a Microsoft Windows Active Directory (AD) domain through the command line. This will allow us to SSH into the Linux server with user accounts in our AD domain, providing a central source of cross-platform authentication.

There are a number of ways to do this, however this is the easiest way that I’ve found to do it entirely through the command line.

In this example I am using CentOS 7 and Windows Server 2012 R2, however the version of Windows should not matter. We are assuming that our domain is already setup and configured, we’re simply joining our CentOS server to an existing domain.
Preparing CentOS

First we want to install all of the below packages in CentOS.yum install sssd realmd oddjob oddjob-mkhomedir adcli samba-common samba-common-tools krb5-workstation openldap-clients policycoreutils-python -y

The CentOS server will need to be able to resolve the Active Directory domain in order to successfully join it. In this instance my DNS server in /etc/resolv.conf is set to one of the Active Directory servers hosting the example.com domain that I wish to join.[root@centos7 ~]# cat /etc/resolv.conf search example.com nameserver 192.168.1.2

Join CentOS To Windows Domain

Now that we’ve got that out of the way we can actually join the domain, this can be done with the ‘realm join’ command as shown below. You will need to specify the username of a user in the domain that has privileges to join a computer to the domain.[root@centos7 ~]# realm join --user=administrator example.com Password for administrator:

Once you enter the password for your specific account, the /etc/sssd/sssd.conf and /etc/krb.conf files will be automatically configured. This is really great as editing these manually usually leads to all sorts of trivial problems when joining the domain. The /etc/krb5.keytab file is also created during this process.

If this fails, you can add -v to the end of the command for highly verbose output, which should give you more detailed information regarding the problem for further troubleshooting.

We can confirm that we’re in the realm (Linux terminology for the domain) by running the ‘realm list’ command, as shown below.[root@centos7 ~]# realm list example.com type: kerberos realm-name: EXAMPLE.COM domain-name: example.com configured: kerberos-member server-software: active-directory client-software: sssd required-package: oddjob required-package: oddjob-mkhomedir required-package: sssd required-package: adcli required-package: samba-common-tools login-formats: %U@example.com login-policy: allow-realm-logins

Once this has completed successfully, a computer object will be created in Active Directory in the default computers container as shown below.

To keep things neat I like to move this into some other organizational unit (OU) for Linux servers rather than leaving things in the default computers container, however this doesn’t really matter for this exercise.

Now that our Linux server is a member of the Active Directory domain we can perform some tests. By default if we want to specify any users in the domain, we need to specify the domain name. For example with the ‘id’ command below, we get nothing back for ‘administrator’, however ‘administrator@example.com’ shows the UID for the account as well as all the groups the account is a member of in the Active Directory domain.[root@centos7 ~]# id administrator id: administrator: no such user [root@centos7 ~]# id administrator@example.com uid=1829600500(administrator@example.com) gid=1829600513(domain users@example.com) groups=1829600513(domain users@example.com),1829600512(domain admins@example.com),1829600572(denied rodc password replication group@example.com),1829600519(enterprise admins@example.com),1829600518(schema admins@example.com),1829600520(group policy creator owners@example.com)

We can change this behaviour by modifying the /etc/sssd/sssd.conf file, the following lines need to change from:use_fully_qualified_names = True fallback_homedir = /home/%u@%d

To the below, which does not require the fully qualified domain name (FQDN) to be specified. This also modifies the user directory in /home from having the FQDN specified after the username.use_fully_qualified_names = False fallback_homedir = /home/%u

To apply these changes, restart sssd.[root@centos7 ~]# systemctl restart sssd

Now we should be able to find user accounts without specifying the domain, as shown below this now works where it did not previously.[root@centos7 ~]# id administrator uid=1829600500(administrator) gid=1829600513(domain users) groups=1829600513(domain users),1829600512(domain admins),1829600572(denied rodc password replication group),1829600520(group policy creator owners),1829600519(enterprise admins),1829600518(schema admins)

If this is still not correctly working for you, I suggest that you take a look at flushing your sssd cache.
Configuring SSH and Sudo Access

Now that we have successfully joined our CentOS server to the example.com domain, we can SSH in as any domain user from Active Directory with default settings.[root@centos7 ~]# ssh user1@localhost user1@localhost's password: Creating home directory for user1.

We can further restrict SSH access by modifying the /etc/ssh/sshd_config file and make use of things like AllowUsers or AllowGroups to only allow certain user or groups from AD to have access. See our guide to the sshd_config file for further information. Don’t forget to restart sshd if you make any changes to this file in order to apply them.

We can also modify our sudoers configuration to allow our user account from the domain the desired level of access. I usually create an Active Directory group called something like ‘sudoers’, put my user in it, then allow this group sudo access by creating a file in /etc/sudoers.d/ which allows root access to be centrally controlled by AD.

Below is an example of this, the ‘sudoers’ group will have full root access.[root@centos7 ~]# cat /etc/sudoers.d/sudoers %sudoers ALL=(ALL) ALL

This group only exists in Active Directory, our Linux server can see that user1 is a member of the sudoers group in Active Directory, and respects this group configuration and allows user1 root privileges as per the above configuration.

The username of Test Account is ‘user1’.

With this in place, our user1 account in the example.com Active Directory domain will now be able to use the sudo command to run commands with root privileges.[user1@centos7 ~]$ sudo su [sudo] password for user1: [root@centos7 user1]# [root@centos7 user1]# whoami root

That’s all there is to it, we can now SSH to a Linux server with a user account from our Active Directory domain and even grant specific users or groups from AD specific levels of access.
Leaving The Domain

If you want to reverse the process and remove yourself from the domain, simply run the ‘realm leave’ command followed by the domain name, as shown below.[root@centos7 ~]# realm leave example.com

This will complete without any further user input. It will delete the computer object that was created in Active Directory, remove the keytab file, and set the sssd.conf and krb5.conf files back to default.
Summary

We have demonstrated how you can easily add your CentOS Linux system to a Microsoft Windows Active Directory domain, and then grant SSH or sudo access based on the user or group from the domain.

If you have a large number of Linux servers and an existing Windows domain you can easily use this process to add your Linux servers to the Windows domain, allowing for centralised user authentication which is far easier to manage when compared to having local user accounts spread out on every Linux server.

Source: https://www.rootusers.com/how-to-join-centos-linux-to-an-active-directory-domain/

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