Using Citrix Metaframe Presentation Server with Citrix ICA Client

I was trying to connect to my office Citrix farm using the Citrix Metaframe Presentation Server web interface which was setup by the windows administrator. I faced some issues and found ways to fix them and got it working under linux.

First of all this should be noted that the Citrix ICA client for linux is java based and hence I got it working on the java enabled Firefox. When I connected to the gateway server I was presented with a screen asking various authentication things and the same screen also had an option to download the Citrix ICA client for linux. I downloaded and installed the client although it was quite outdated – ver 7.0 as compared to the latest version 9.0. I still downloaded it as I knew the latest will not work on my slackware laptop as I did not have the required version of libmotif installed (actually lesstiff). After installing it, I connected to the gateway interface of my company and when I clicked on the required desktop, I was prompted by firefox as it did not understood how to handle the .ica file. So I chose the /usr/lib/ICAClient/wfica.sh to execute this. This prompting problem can be fixed using the file associations of your desktop environment. You should assiciate .ica files with the above shell script.

To my surprise I got prompted “You have chosen not to trust Thawte Premium Server CA”. I thought I needed to import the Thawte root certificates in firefox and hence downloaded them from http://www.thawte.com/roots/ website. But even after importing I got the same message. I then searched the web around and understood that I needed to import the root certificated to the

/usr/lib/ICAClient/keystore/cacerts

directory. The zip files of various Thawte certificates I downloaded above was having a file “Thawte Server Roots/ThawtePremiumServerCA.cer”, I copied this to /usr/lib/ICAClient/keystore/cacerts as ThawtePremiumServerCA.crt.

$ sudo cp ThawtePremiumServerCA.cer /usr/lib/ICAClient/keystore/cacerts/
$ sudo mv /usr/lib/ICAClient/keystore/cacerts/ThawtePremiumServerCA.cer /usr/lib/ICAClient/keystore/cacerts/ThawtePremiumServerCA.crt

The reason for rename was that the Citrix ICA client expects the .crt extension for the certificates.

This worked, and now I could see the desktop.

Posted in Work Life | Tagged | Leave a comment

Upgrading Slackware to 2.6 kernel

Yesterday I updated the slackware kernel to 2.6.16.22. I picked up this version from the testing directory on the slackware’s ftp site.

The packages I needed were:

kernel-generic-2.6.16.22-i486-1.tgz
kernel-modules-2.6.16.22-i486-1.tgz
alsa-driver-1.0.11_2.6.16.22-i486-1

Apart from these I installed the source package also

kernel-source-2.6.16.22-i486-1.tgz

After installing these packages using

installpkg

I created the initrd image for the kernel.

mkinitrd -c -k 2.6.16.22 -m reiserfs

Change LILO
I added following lines in my lilo.conf

# vi /etc/lilo.conf
image = /boot/vmlinuz
initrd=/boot/initrd.gz
root = /dev/hda2
label = Linux-2.6.16
read-only

and then

# lilo -v
# reboot

ALSA Driver
There is a seperate ALSA driver package for every slackware kernel and since I had already installed the required driver for the new kernel. I needed to run the

alsaconf

and any mixer program of choice like

alsamixer

or

aumix

Posted in FLOSS | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Moving data to a seperate filesystem

Often its required that the a directory (for example /home)be moved to a seperate filesystem. The steps are simple:

  • Boot system in single user mode (linux single), or if already booted take it down to single user using,
    init 1
    
  • Create a new partition if its not already done.
    fdisk /dev/hda
    
  • Create the filesystem on the new partition
    mkfs.ext3 /dev/hda3
    
  • Mount the filesystem under a suitable directory in /mnt
    mkdir /mnt/newpart && mount /dev/hda3 /mnt/newpart
    
  • Copy all files from the directory /usr to the new directory using
    cp -a /home/* /mnt/newpart/*
    

The following steps needs to be done in a sequence.

  • Rename /home
  • Create new /home/ directory
  • Mount the new filesystem in /home
  • Update the /etc/fstab
mv /usr /old-home && /bin/mkdir /home && /bin/mount /dev/hda3 /home
Posted in FLOSS, Solaris/AIX/HP-UX | Tagged | Leave a comment

Gandhiji’s view on western civilization

Gandhiji

Gandhiji

A journalist once asked the late Gandhiji what he thought of the western civilization. Gandhiji replied:

*”Western Civilization? I think it would be a good idea!”

Gandhiji described the whole of western civilization as the “Kingdom of Satan” which pollutes everybody who touches it. Everything which most people consider progress such as industrialization etc were rejected by Gandhiji and he used to pose ancient Indian civilization where the emphesis was on small, self-sufficient and self-governing village communities. He used to say that – “If the machinery craze grows in our country, it will become an unhappy land”
Gandhiji has time and again emphesized on the need for India to return to its own glorious civilization.

Posted in Views | Leave a comment

Windows-Linux Single Signon

Often I have been asked by the developers about the possibility of Linux servers authenticating against Active Directory so that the users do not have to change passwords on all the servers.Good suggestion, I thought! This will also free me from doing User management on the Linux Servers and let me focus on application and service monitoring and performance of my servers. So here is this paper explainig a brief howto on what I did to achieve this.

AD & Linux Integration – The Problem

From past many years Linux users have been using Samba for creating the Linux servers as Windows NT member servers or Primary Domain Controllers. With Microsoft moving towards Active Directory (AD) as a directory services, Samba has also evolved in letting Linux users integrate with Microsoft servers. AD was introduced with Windows 2000 and for the sake of backward compatibility supports the older NT domain controller protocols.

There are many problems encountered while trying to authenticate Linux servers to AD, couple of those issues are:

  • Windows passwords are encrypted using a technique which is unknown to Linux systems.
  • Windows domain controllers don’t maintain information which is critical for Linux systems, such as home directory, shell

Winbind to the rescue

Winbind is a service that allows Linux servers to authenticate against the NT Domain controllers or AD servers by linking the Windows database and the Linux native authentication system. Winbind achieves this using PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules) and NSS (Name Service Switch). request failed: No such user, PAM error was 10, NT error was NT_STATUS_NO_SUCH_USER

PAM is a suit of shared libraries that determine how a user will be authenticated to the Linux system. PAM allows to write a program independent of the authentication scheme being used. The only required thing is that these program needs to be compiled against the PAM libraries and need “authentication modules” to be attatched to them at run-time in order to work.

winbindd is a NSS daemon for resolving names from Windows servers. The NSS allows user and system information to be obtained from different databases such as local FILES, NIS or DNS etc. The winbind service maintains the ‘host’, ‘passwd’ and ‘group’ databases for NSS.

How this is done?

Following are the brief sequence of steps which I took to acheive single signon:

  1. Configure winbind options in the /etc/samba/smb.conf
  2. Configure the Kerberos libraries
  3. Join the Linux server to the windows AD using the net join command
  4. Start the Samba and Winbind services
  5. Test that the Winbind is able to authenticate against AD
  6. Configure the /etc/nsswitch file to query winbind
  7. Configure the PAM system to use winbind

Configure winbind options in the /etc/samba/smb.conf

Here is the global section of my /etc/samba/smb.conf file. I have put in additional comments so a further explanation of various options is not necessary.

[root@rhel3 root]# vi /etc/samba/smb.conf
[global]
# Parameters required for Active Directory Authentication 
workgroup = MYLINUXRULES 
realm = MYLINUXRULES.COM 
server string = %h 
security = ADS 
encrypt passwords = Yes 
password server = dc1.mylinuxrules.com

# Winbind options
# Because we have just one domain so we dont want the domain name to be a
# part of username. Alternatively if you have multiple domains and you are sure
# that user accounts are unique among each domain then you can use this. 
winbind use default domain = yes

# This option is useful in case the user logs on via ssh etc. Windows servers
# dont maintain this information and hence winbind does it. This value cant be
# customized on a per user basis, so all accounts maintained by winbind must
# use the same shell. 
template shell = /bin/bash

# This is to specify the home directory for a user. Windows servers do not
# maintain this information and hence winbind does it. The variables which can
# be used here are %D (for domain name) %U (for user name). Samba 3.0.6 onwards
# support %D, %N, %U and %u vriables only. Since we have just one domain we are
# using just the usernames within the /home for the individual home directories. 
template homedir = /home/%U

# This is the time (in seconds) for which the authentication information will be
# cached by winbind. After this time winbind will query the authetication
# server again. 
winbind cache time = 300

# This is the Linux UID range which will be assigned by winbind to users. Local
# Linux accounts must not be created in this range. In Linux UIDs 0-500 are
# reserved for system users (0 being the one for root), and above 500 is for
# ordinary accounts. We have reserved UIDs 1001-4000 for use by winbind
# If the Samba version being used is < 3.0.6 then this value has to be defined
# as the default value of undefined. From Samba version 3.0.6 onwards if this
# value is not set then Winbind will try to map NT domain username to locally
# defined accounts. This feature can be useful when you want to rely on domain
# controller for the password authentication. The only catch is that on different
# Linux systems users might get different UIDs which might cause problem with
# softwares such as NFS as they identify accounts on the basis of UIDs/GIDs and not
#username. 
idmap uid = 1001-4000

# This serves the same purpose for groups as above was for users. The default value
# of this is undefined. 
idmap gid = 1001-4000

#------------------------- Other options --------------------------------- 
printcap name = /etc/printcap 
load printers = yes 
cups options = raw 
log file = /var/log/samba/%m.log 
max log size = 50 
socket options = TCP_NODELAY SO_RCVBUF=8192 SO_SNDBUF=8192 
.......[[snipped...]]...... 

Configure the Kerberos libraries

Next edit the /etc/krb5.conf file and place following entries:

[root@rhel3 root]# vi /etc/krb5.conf
[logging]
default = FILE:/var/log/krb5libs.log
kdc = FILE:/var/log/krb5kdc.log
admin_server = FILE:/var/log/kadmind.log

[libdefaults]
ticket_lifetime = 24000
default_realm = MYLINUXRULES.COM
dns_lookup_realm = false
dns_lookup_kdc = false

[realms]
MYLINUXRULES.COM = {
kdc = dc1.mylinuxrules.com:88
admin_server = dc1.mylinuxrules.com:749
default_domain = mylinuxrules.com
}
mickymouse
[domain_realm]
.mylinuxrules.com = MYLINUXRULES.COM
mylinuxrules.com = MYLINUXRULES.COM

[kdc]
profile = /var/kerberos/krb5kdc/kdc.conf
[appdefaults]

pam = {
debug = false
ticket_lifetime = 36000
renew_lifetime = 36000
forwardable = true
krb4_convert = false
}

Start the Samba and Winbind services as follows:

[root@rhel3 root]# service smb restart
Shutting down SMB services:                                [  OK  ]
Shutting down NMB services:                                [  OK  ]
Starting SMB services:                                     [  OK  ]
Starting NMB services:                                     [  OK  ]

[root@rhel3 root]# service winbind restart
Shutting down Winbind services: 			   [ OK ] 
Starting Winbind services: 				   [ OK ] 

Test that the winbind is able to authenticate against AD

To test whether the kerberos libraries are able to authenticate against ADS, we can run the ‘kinit’ program:

[root@rhel3 root]# kinit myaduser01@MYLINUXRULES.COM
Password for myaduser01@MYLINUXRULES.COM:

If you just gets the command prompt back then everything is alright.
Now you can join the Linux box to the ADS in the (dn:ou=Linux,ou=Servers,dc=MYLINUXRULES,dc=COM):

[root@rhel3 root]# net ads join Servers\/Unix -U ad_admin_user01
ad_admin_user01's password:
Using short domain name -- MYLINUXRULES
Joined 'RHEL3' to realm 'MYLINUXRULES.COM'

To test whether the winbind service is able to query the AD we can use the wbinfo program. The -t option tests the trust account we have created and the basic winbind functionality. The resons I have explicitly specified the domain using "–domain" option because we have multiple windows domains runnining on old Windows servers (which all will die soon) and if I dont use this option I cannot make sure that the active directory domain which I wanted to check has been queried. The -u option lists all the usernames from the specified domain. In the username listing the usernames will appear as "\domain\user" if the "winbind use default domain" has been set to "no" in the "/etc/samba/smb.conf" file. If this parameter has been set to "yes" (that’s what I have done) then you will just see the usernames in the output.

[root@rhel3 root]# wbinfo --domain=MYLINUXRULES.COM -t
checking the trust secret via RPC calls succeeded
[root@rhel3 root]# wbinfo --domain=MYLINUXRULES.COM -u
Guest
SUPPORT_388945a0
msadc_user_01
msadc_user_02
.....[[snipped...]]....

After these tests are successfull then you can further test the authentication against the Active Directory by using the "-a" switch of "wbinfo".

root@rhel3 root]# wbinfo --domain=MYLINUXRULES.COM -a msadc_user01%password
plaintext password authentication succeeded
challenge/response password authentication succeeded

Configure /etc/nsswitch to query winbind

To configure the PAM and NSS to use Winbind to authenticate users and return additional account information to the programs needing them we need pam_winbind.so and libnss_winbind.so. The default location of all PAM modules is /lib/security in Linux so the pam_winbind.so should be present in this directory in order for PAM libraries to find it automatically. The libnss_winbind.so is a library and hence should be present in the /lib directory with soft link in /usr/lib directory. On my machines these files are located at the following locations:

  • On RHEL AS and Fedora
  • [root@rhel3 root]# ls -l /lib/security/pam_winbind.so
    -rwxr-xr-x    1 root     root        16032 Jul 21 16:22 /lib/security/pam_winbind.so
    [root@rhel3 root]# ls -l /usr/lib/libnss_winbind.so
    lrwxrwxrwx    1 root     root           24 Dec  9 16:12 /usr/lib/libnss_winbind.so -> /lib/libnss_winbind.so.2
    [root@rhel3 root]# ls -l /lib/libnss_winbind.so.2
    -rwxr-xr-x    1 root     root        17928 Jul 21 16:22 /lib/libnss_winbind.so.2
    [root@rhel3 root]# ls -l /lib/libnss_winbind.so
    lrwxr-xr-x    1 root     root           19 Dec  9 14:15 /lib/libnss_winbind.so -> libnss_winbind.so.2
    
  • On Debian
  • [root@debian root]# ls -l /lib/security/pam_winbind.so
    -rw-r--r--  1 root root 16544 2005-05-27 08:19 /lib/security/pam_winbind.so
    [root@debian root]# ls -l /lib/libnss_winbind.so.2
    -rw-r--r--  1 root root 17840 2005-05-27 08:19 /lib/libnss_winbind.so.2
    

To configure NSS edit the /etc/nsswitch file and edit it to use winbind service. Modify the "passwd" and "group" fields to contain winbind as an source for account and group information. Do not touch any other lines (including the line containing the "shadow" word) unless you know what you are doing.

  • On RHEL AS and Fedora
  • [root@rhel3 root]# vi /etc/nsswitch.conf
    .....[[snipped..]].....
    passwd:     files winbind
    shadow:     files
    group:      files winbind
    .....[[snipped..]].....
    
  • On Debian
  • [root@debian root]# vi /etc/nsswitch.conf
    .....[[snipped..]].....
    passwd:     compat winbind
    shadow:     compat
    group:      compat winbind
    .....[[snipped..]].....
    

Configure the PAM System to Use winbind

The power of PAM lies in that it enables us to customize authentication on a per-service basis. For example the system can be configured to use the local accounts for console logins, and to use NT domain authentication for remote SSH or FTP logins. For this changes can be done on either /etc/pam.conf file or various configuration files (one per service) located in /etc/pam.d/

Different distributions have PAM configured in different manner. For example RHEL and Fedora uses pam_stack.so modules which pushes part of the PAM configuration in the /etc/pam.d/system-auth file. Similarly Debian Sarge maintains a set of three files /etc/pam.d/common-account (authorization settings common to all services), /etc/pam.d/common-auth (authentication settings common to all services), /etc/pam.d/common-password (containing password related settings common to all services) and /etc/pam.d/common-session (session-related modules common to all services)

So if it is required that all services use Windows authentication then modify the /etc/pam.d/system-auth file on RHEL and Fedora Systems and /etc/pam.d/common-account /etc/pam.d/common-auth /etc/pam.d/common-password /etc/pam.d/common-session files. Otherwise individually each service file can also be modified.

Please note that the sequence of the lines is very important. If you need more info on PAM configuration then you can visit A Linux PAM page

I had to use the winbind on all the services so I changed the /etc/pam.d/system-auth file. Here is how my file looks like:

[root@rhel3 root]# vi /etc/pam.d/system-auth
#%PAM-1.0
# This file is auto-generated.
# User changes will be destroyed the next time authconfig is run. 
auth required /lib/security/$ISA/pam_env.so 
auth sufficient pam_winbind.so 
auth sufficient /lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so likeauth nullok try_first_pass 
auth required /lib/security/$ISA/pam_deny.so

account sufficient pam_winbind.so 
account required /lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so

password required /lib/security/$ISA/pam_cracklib.so retry=3 type= 
password sufficient /lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so nullok use_authtok md5 shadow min=6 max=255
password required /lib/security/$ISA/pam_deny.so

session required /lib/security/$ISA/pam_limits.so 
session required /lib/security/$ISA/pam_unix.so 
session required pam_mkhomedir.so skel=/etc/skel umask=0027 

Please note that if you happen to run the Red Hat’s "authconfig" tool then this file will be overwritten, so please make a backup copy of this file.

Important points to keep in mind

I use mod_auth_pam with Apache for secure areas on our intranet. This works fine with Winbind and Samba. But if in the PAM files you reverse the order of pam_winbind.so and pam_unix_so in the auth and account lines then although your local unix authentication will work, but Apache does not let you through to the secure area. It is probably because if pam_unix.so is first and you try to use the ADS account, the first time PAM tries to authenticate against local Unix database, it fails and that’s what Apache gets. I dont know the details of all this, but this is what I have found and when I reverse the order it all works very well. If someone comes to know the details then please let me know.

Posted in FLOSS | Tagged , | Leave a comment