While the specific hosts that I used for this exercise were all RedHat-based, it should work for any UNIX platform that both NetBackup 6.0/6.5/7.0/7.1 and Likewise Open are installed onto.
I'm a big fan of leveraging centralized-authentication services wherever possible. It makes life in a multi-host environment - particularly where hosts can number from the dozens to the thousands - a lot easier when you only have to remember one or two passwords. It's even more valuable in modern security environments where policies require frequent password changes (or, if you've even been through the whole "we've had a security incident, all the passwords on all of the systems and applications need to be changed, immediately" exercise). Over the years, I've used things like NIS, NIS+, LDAP, Kerberos and Active Directory to do my centralized authentication. If your primary platforms are UNIX-based, NIS, NIS+, LDAP and Kerberos have traditionally been relatively straight-forward to set up and use.
I use the caveat of "relatively" because, particularly in the early implementations of each service, things weren't always dead-simple. Right now, we seem to be mid-way through the "easiness" life-cycle of using Active Directory as a centralized authentication source for UNIX operating systems and UNIX-hosted applications. Linux and OSX seem to be leading the charge in the OS space for ease of integration via native tools. There's also a number of third-party vendors out there who provide commercial and free solutions to do it for you, as well. In our enterprise, we chose LikeWise, because, at the time, it was the only free option that also worked reasonably-well with our large and complex Active Directory implementation. Unfortunately, not all of the makers of software that runs on the UNIX hosts seem to have been keeping up on the whole "AD-integration within UNIX operating environment" front.
My latest pain in the ass, in this arena, is Veritas NetBackup. While Symantec likes to tout the value of NetBackup Access Control (NBAC) in a multi-administrator - particularly one where different administrators may have radically different NetBackup skill sets or other differentiating factors - using it in a mixed-platform environment is kind of sucktackular to set up. While modern UNIX systems have the PAM framework to make writing an application's authentication framework relatively trivial, Symantec seems to still be stuck in the pre-PAM era. NBAC's group lookup components appear to still rely on direct consultation of a server's locally-maintained group files rather than just doing a call to the host OS's authentication frameworks.
When I discovered this problem, I opened a support case with Symantec. Unfortunately, their response was "set up a Windows-based authentication broker". My NetBackup environment is almost entirely RedHat-based (actually, unless/until we implement BareMetal Restore (BMR) or other backup modules that require specific OSes be added into the mix, it is entirely RedHat-based). The idea of having to build a Windows server just to act as an authentication broker struck me as a rather stupid way to go about things. It adds yet another server to my environment and, unless I cluster that server, it introduces a single point of failure into and otherwise fairly resilient NetBackup design. I'd designed my NetBackup environment with a virtualized master server (with DRS and SRM supporting it) and multiple media servers for both throughput and redundancy
We already use LikeWise Open to provide AD-base user and group management service for our Linux and Solaris hosts. When I first was running NetBackup through my engineering process, using the old Java auth.conf method for login management worked like a champ. The Java auth.conf-based systems just assumes that any users trying to access the Java UI are users that are managed through /etc/passwd. All you have to do is add the requisite user/rights entries into the auth.conf file and Java treats AD-provided users the same as it treats locally-managed users. Because of this, I suspected that I could work around Symantec's authorization coding lameness.
After a bit of playing around with NBAC, I discovered that, so long as the UNIX group I wanted to map rights to existed in /etc/group, NBAC would see it as a valid, mappable "UNIX PWD" group. I tested by seeing if it would at least let me map the UNIX "wheel" group to one of the NBAC privilege groups. Whereas, even if I could look up the group via getent, if it didn't exist in /etc/group, NBAC would tell me it was an invalid group. Having already verified that a group's presence in /etc/group allowed NBAC to use a group, I proceded to use getent to copy my NetBackup-related groups out of Active Directory and into my /etc/group file (all you have to do is a quick `getent [GROUPNAME] >> /etc/group` and you've populated your /etc/group file).
Unfortunately, I didn't quite have the full groups picture. When I logged in using my AD credentials, I didn't have any of the expected mapped-privileges. I remembered that I'd explicitly emptied the userids from the group entries I'd added to my /etc/group file (I'd actually sed'ed the getents to do it ...can't remembery why, at this point - probably just anticipating the issue of not including userids in the /etc/group file entries). So, I logged out of the Java UI and reran my getent's - this time leaving the userids in place. I logged back into the Java UI and this time I had my mapped privileges. Eureka.
Still I wasn't quite done. I knew that, if I was going to roll this solution into production, I'd have to cron-out a job to keep the getent file up-to date with the changing AD group memberships. I noticed, while nuking my group entry out of getent, that only my userid was on the group line and not every member of the group. Ultimately, tracked it down to LikeWise not doing full group enumeration by default. So, I was going to have to force LikeWise to enumerate the group's membership before running my getent's.
I proceded to dig around in /opt/likewise/bin for likely candidates for forcing the enumeration. After trying several lw*group* commands, I found that doing a `lw-find-group-by-name [ADGROUP]` did the trick. Once that was run, my getent's produced fully-populated entries in my /etc/group file. I was then able to map rights to various AD groups and wrote a cron script to take care keeping my /etc/group file in sync with Active Directory.
In other words, I was able to get NBAC to work with Active Directory in an all RedHat environment and no need to set up a Windows server just to be an authentication broker. Overall, I was able to create a much lighter-weight, portable solution.
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