Passport authentication strategy against LDAP / AD server. This module is a Passport strategy wrapper for ldapauth-fork.
This module lets you authenticate using LDAP or AD in your Node.js applications. By plugging into Passport, LDAP authentication can be integrated into any framework that supports Connect-style middleware.
npm install passport-ldapauth
Important note: LDAP client unbind does not work on Node 10. This may leave connections in weird state. See joyent/node-ldapjs#483 for more information.
var LdapStrategy = require('passport-ldapauth');
passport.use(new LdapStrategy({
server: {
url: 'ldap://localhost:389',
...
}
}));
-
server
: LDAP settings. These are passed directly to ldapauth-fork. See its documentation for all available options.url
: e.g.ldap://localhost:389
bindDN
: e.g.cn='root'
bindCredentials
: Password for bindDNsearchBase
: e.g.o=users,o=example.com
searchFilter
: LDAP search filter, e.g.(uid={{username}})
. Use literal{{username}}
to have the given username used in the search.searchAttributes
: Optional array of attributes to fetch from LDAP server, e.g.['displayName', 'mail']
. Defaults toundefined
, i.e. fetch all attributestlsOptions
: Optional object with options accepted by Node.js tls module.
-
usernameField
: Field name where the username is found, defaults to username -
passwordField
: Field name where the password is found, defaults to password -
credentialsLookup
: Optional, synchronous function that provides the login credentials fromreq
. See below for more. -
missingCredentialsStatus
: Returned HTTP status code when credentials could not be found in the request. Defaults to 400 -
handleErrorsAsFailures
: Whentrue
, unknown errors and ldapjs emitted errors are handled as authentication failures instead of errors (default:false
). -
failureErrorCallback
: Optional, synchronous function that is called with the received error whenhandleErrorsAsFailures
is enabled. -
passReqToCallback
: Whentrue
,req
is the first argument to the verify callback (default:false
):passport.use(new LdapStrategy(..., function(req, user, done) { ... done(null, user); } ));
Note: you can pass a function instead of an object as options
, see the example below
Use passport.authenticate()
, specifying the 'ldapauth'
strategy, to authenticate requests.
In addition to default authentication options the following flash message options are available for passport.authenticate()
:
badRequestMessage
: missing username/password (default: 'Missing credentials')invalidCredentials
:InvalidCredentialsError
and/no such user/i
LDAP errors (default: 'Invalid username/password')noSuchObject
:NoSuchObjectError
LDAP errors (default: 'Bad search base')userNotFound
: LDAP returns no error but also no user (default: 'Invalid username/password')constraintViolation
: user account is locked (default: 'Exceeded password retry limit, account locked')
And for Microsoft AD messages, these flash message options can also be used (used instead of invalidCredentials
if matching error code is found):
invalidLogonHours
: not being allowed to login at this current time (default: 'Not Permitted to login at this time')invalidWorkstation
: not being allowed to login from this current location (default: 'Not permited to logon at this workstation')passwordExpired
: expired password (default: 'Password expired')accountDisabled
: disabled account (default: 'Account disabled')accountExpired
: expired account (default: 'Account expired')passwordMustChange
: password change (default: 'User must reset password')accountLockedOut
: locked out account (default: 'User account locked')
var express = require('express'),
passport = require('passport'),
bodyParser = require('body-parser'),
LdapStrategy = require('passport-ldapauth');
var OPTS = {
server: {
url: 'ldap://localhost:389',
bindDN: 'cn=root',
bindCredentials: 'secret',
searchBase: 'ou=passport-ldapauth',
searchFilter: '(uid={{username}})'
}
};
var app = express();
passport.use(new LdapStrategy(OPTS));
app.use(bodyParser.json());
app.use(bodyParser.urlencoded({extended: false}));
app.use(passport.initialize());
app.post('/login', passport.authenticate('ldapauth', {session: false}), function(req, res) {
res.send({status: 'ok'});
});
app.listen(8080);
Simple example config for connecting over ldaps://
to a server requiring some internal CA certificate (often the case in corporations using Windows AD).
var fs = require('fs');
var opts = {
server: {
url: 'ldaps://ad.corporate.com:636',
bindDN: 'cn=non-person,ou=system,dc=corp,dc=corporate,dc=com',
bindCredentials: 'secret',
searchBase: 'dc=corp,dc=corporate,dc=com',
searchFilter: '(&(objectcategory=person)(objectclass=user)(|(samaccountname={{username}})(mail={{username}})))',
searchAttributes: ['displayName', 'mail'],
tlsOptions: {
ca: [
fs.readFileSync('/path/to/root_ca_cert.crt')
]
}
}
};
...
A synchronous function that receives the req
object and returns an objec with keys username
and password
(or name
and pass
) can be provided. Note, that when this is provided the default lookup is not performed. This can be used to eg. enable basic auth header support:
var basicAuth = require('basic-auth');
var ldapOpts = {
server: { ... },
credentialsLookup: basicAuth
}
Instead of providing a static configuration object, you can pass a function as options
that will take care of fetching the configuration. It will be called with the req
object and a callback function having the standard (err, result)
signature. Notice that the provided function will be called on every authenticate request.
var getLDAPConfiguration = function(req, callback) {
// Fetching things from database or whatever
process.nextTick(function() {
var opts = {
server: {
url: 'ldap://localhost:389',
bindDN: 'cn=root',
bindCredentials: 'secret',
searchBase: 'ou=passport-ldapauth',
searchFilter: '(uid={{username}})'
}
};
callback(null, opts);
});
};
var LdapStrategy = require('passport-ldapauth');
passport.use(new LdapStrategy(getLDAPConfiguration,
function(user, done) {
...
return done(null, user);
}
));
ldapsearch is a great command line tool for testing your config. The user search query performed in the Express example above when user logging in has uid john
is the same as the following ldapsearch
call:
ldapsearch \
-H ldap://localhost:389 \
-x \
-D cn=root \
-w secret \
-b ou=passport-ldapauth \
"(uid=john)"
If the query does not return expected user the configuration is likely incorrect.
MIT
passport-ldapauth
has been partially sponsored by Leonidas Ltd.