1 / 12

User Management in LHCb

Gary Moine, CERN 04/01/2020. User Management in LHCb. 1. Introduction. Overview of internal network Description of system administration First problem: a classic: Unix and Windows A requirement : Single Sign On solution for experiment users Adopted solution: pGina and pam module

cunninghamn
Télécharger la présentation

User Management in LHCb

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Gary Moine, CERN 04/01/2020 User Management in LHCb 1

  2. Introduction • Overview of internal network • Description of system administration • First problem: a classic: Unix and Windows • A requirement : Single Sign On solution for experiment users • Adopted solution: pGina and pam module • Home directories common to both world: NFS and SAMBA • Summary Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 2

  3. Experiment Internal Network 2 main Networks completely separate: DAQ & Control. System administration services on Control. Additional private Network for switch/router management All are disconnected from CERN. Access only via Application Gateways. Dedicated link to CERN for storage of Physic data. Central services used: Castor - DNS Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 3

  4. Experiment Internal Network 4

  5. Network services used NIS for User information Authentication with Kerberos NFS + Automount Active Directory - RIS Quattor DNS, DHCP,NTP, TFTP, PXE … Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 5

  6. One problem: User management Obvious to say: 2 different system = 2 very different ways of doing management We have: all farms node PCs + most of control PCs on Linux [1000/1500], remaining control PCs and most of Desktop for control room on Windows [50/100]. We do not want : Necessity to manage users accounts on both systems: Need to find a Single Sign On solution: An Open Source project meet our needs: pGina Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 6

  7. What is Gina What is GINA ? it stands for: Graphical Identification aNd Authentication. It’s a “kind of” PAM for Windows. GINA is a dynamically linked library that is loaded in the context of the Winlogon process when the machine is started... In other words, it’s something behind this: 7 Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC

  8. What is pGina What is pGina • pGina is an Open source replacement for MS Gina dynamic library • pGina is a Pluggable GINA: It provides various modules to allow different other authenticationmethods on Windows. • PAM Plugin is the one used in our setup • It consist of 2 parts: pGina with PAM plugin on each Windows client . And 1 Linux PC running a PAM-aware daemon which use the PAM authentication stack: Kerberos in our case. • More on pGina: http://www.pgina.org Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 8

  9. What the User sees • LHCb pGina login prompt: Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 9

  10. Overview of pGina • pGina provides a Domain Interaction. A user can be added to AD when he/she successfully authenticates. • It also include others usefull Windows options like Drive mapping on login or Groups membership, etc.. Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 10

  11. Home Directories • Home directories stored centrally on a Disk server • NFS exported and Samba shared • Automount'ed on Linux client • Mapped drive on Windows PC Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 11

  12. Summary User management done on Linux side Kerberos for authentication pGina with PAM plugin' for integrating Windows user mgmt to this Unix schema. Home stored on Linux side, NFS exported and SAMBA shared. Gary Moine – CERN PH/LBC 12

More Related