Re: GSSAPI authentication - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Michael van der Kolff
Subject Re: GSSAPI authentication
Date
Msg-id CAFBbO2Stw8HpBQFQL-HgOwdGiEUZcNXh39cB8Kc=36tbkk_LDw@mail.gmail.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: GSSAPI authentication  (Michael van der Kolff <mvanderkolff@gmail.com>)
Responses SV: GSSAPI authentication  (Niels Jespersen <NJN@dst.dk>)
List pgsql-general
From the tiny bit I know about this, and a bit of googling, I arrived at https://stackoverflow.com/questions/13850252/cannot-get-kerberos-service-ticket-krbexception-server-not-found-in-kerberos-d.

It seems to suggest that either the KDC or your service account might have bad PTR records, and you might want to capture DNS traffic on the two hosts. Of course, I have no idea whether that is actually the issue.

I remember reading these docs ages ago - best of luck!

--Michael

On Mon, Jun 6, 2022 at 11:42 PM Michael van der Kolff <mvanderkolff@gmail.com> wrote:
Oh wait, I see.

On Mon, Jun 6, 2022 at 11:41 PM Michael van der Kolff <mvanderkolff@gmail.com> wrote:
The part that you're missing, I think, is that Kerberized services require a service account.

The SPN (service principal name) is the name that is used in Kerberos contexts for that service account. PostgreSQL uses postgres/${hostname}@${realm} by default - see https://www.postgresql.org/docs/14/gssapi-auth.html.

The important part to note here is that $hostname must match what is registered in the SPN for the user that you're using as the service account in AD. It might (I don't know) have to match what AD believes about the host from its PTR records for that domain as well.

--Michael

On Mon, Jun 6, 2022 at 11:33 PM Niels Jespersen <NJN@dst.dk> wrote:

Fra: Michael van der Kolff <mvanderkolff@gmail.com>
Sendt: 6. juni 2022 14:26
Til: Niels Jespersen <NJN@dst.dk>
Cc: pgsql-general list <pgsql-general@lists.postgresql.org>
Emne: Re: GSSAPI authentication

 

>This sounds like your PG service was unable to authenticate itself to AD.

> 

>There's probably a trick to that somewhere - AD doesn't really want to be a Kerberos server, it just happens to use it 😉

 

But it works fine when the same AD-user connects from Windows to the same postgres (Linux) server. Auth fails when the user initiates login from a Linux box (that otherwise uses Kerberized ressources just fine).

 

Niels

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