This was meant to catch the case where the client wasn't configured and
it missed the most obvious one: the client was installed and is now
uninstalled.
This started with the client uninstaller returning a 1 when not installed.
There was no way to tell whether the uninstall failed or the client
simply wasn't installed which caused no end of grief with the installer.
This led to a lot of certmonger failures too, either trying to stop
tracking a non-existent cert or not handling an existing tracked
certificate.
I moved the certmonger code out of the installer and put it into the
client/server shared ipapython lib. It now tries a lot harder and smarter
to untrack a certificate.
ticket 142
Move the netgroup compat configuration from the nis configuration to
the existing compat configuration.
Add a 'status' option to the ipa-copmat-manage tool.
ticket 91
Neither of these was working properly, I assume due to changes in the ldap
backend. The normalizer now appends the basedn if it isn't included and
this was causing havoc with these utilities.
After fixing the basics I found a few corner cases that I also addressed:
- you can't/shouldn't disable compat if the nis plugin is enabled
- we always want to load the nis LDAP update so we get the netgroup config
- LDAPupdate.update() returns True/False, not an integer
I took some time and fixed up some things pylint complained about too.
Ticket #83
If it does then the installation will fail trying to set up the
keytabs, and not in a way that you say "aha, it's because the host is
already enrolled."
This disables all but the ldapi listener in DS so it will be quiet when
we perform our upgrades. It is expected that any other clients that
also use ldapi will be shut down by other already (krb5 and dns).
Add ldapi as an option in ipaldap and add the beginning of pure offline
support (e.g. direct editing of LDIF files).
This is to make initial installation and testing easier.
Use the --no_hbac_allow option on the command-line to disable this when
doing an install.
To remove it from a running server do: ipa hbac-del allow_all
We have had a state file for quite some time that is used to return
the system to its pre-install state. We can use that to determine what
has been configured.
This patch:
- uses the state file to determine if dogtag was installed
- prevents someone from trying to re-install an installed server
- displays some output when uninstalling
- re-arranges the ipa_kpasswd installation so the state is properly saved
- removes pkiuser if it was added by the installer
- fetches and installs the CA on both masters and clients
We need to ask the user for a password and connect to the ldap so the
bind uninstallation procedure can remove old records. This is of course
only helpful if one has more than one IPA server configured.
- cache all interactive answers
- set non-interactive to True for the second run so nothing is asked
- convert boolean values that are read in
- require absolute paths for the external CA and signed cert files
- fix the invocation message for the second ipa-server-install run
This creates a new role, replicaadmin, so a non-DM user can do
limited management of replication agreements.
Note that with cn=config if an unauthorized user performs a search
an error is not returned, no entries are returned. This makes it
difficult to determine if there are simply no replication agreements or
we aren't allowed to see them. Once the ipaldap.py module gets
replaced by ldap2 we can use Get Effective Rights to easily tell the
difference.
There are now 3 cases:
- Install a dogtag CA and issue server certs using that
- Install a selfsign CA and issue server certs using that
- Install using either dogtag or selfsign and use the provided PKCS#12 files
for the server certs. The installed CA will still be used by the cert
plugin to issue any server certs.
Also get rid of functions get_host_name(), get_realm_name() and
get_domain_name(). They used the old ipapython.config. Instead, use the
variables from api.env. We also change them to bootstrap() and
finalize() correctly.
Additionally, we add the dns_container_exists() function that will be
used in ipa-replica-prepare (next patch).
Remove a bunch of trailing spaces
Add the --ca option
Add the --no-host-dns option
Add the --subject option
Fix the one-character option for --no-ntp, should be -N not -n
Add missing line break between --no-ntp and --uninstall
Resolves#545260
Let the user, upon installation, set the certificate subject base
for the dogtag CA. Certificate requests will automatically be given
this subject base, regardless of what is in the CSR.
The selfsign plugin does not currently support this dynamic name
re-assignment and will reject any incoming requests that don't
conform to the subject base.
The certificate subject base is stored in cn=ipaconfig but it does
NOT dynamically update the configuration, for dogtag at least. The
file /var/lib/pki-ca/profiles/ca/caIPAserviceCert.cfg would need to
be updated and pki-cad restarted.
We use kadmin.local to bootstrap the creation of the kerberos principals
for the IPA server machine: host, HTTP and ldap. This works fine and has
the side-effect of protecting the services from modification by an
admin (which would likely break the server).
Unfortunately this also means that the services can't be managed by useful
utilities such as certmonger. So we have to create them as "real" services
instead.
If a replica is not up for some reason (e.g. you've already deleted it)
this used to quit and not let you delete the replica, generating errors in
the DS logs. This will let you force a deletion.
The new framework uses default.conf instead of ipa.conf. This is useful
also because Apache uses a configuration file named ipa.conf.
This wipes out the last vestiges of the old ipa.conf from v1.
The pyOpenSSL PKCS#10 parser doesn't support attributes so we can't identify
requests with subject alt names.
Subject alt names are only allowed if:
- the host for the alt name exists in IPA
- if binding as host principal, the host is in the services managedBy attr