Install samba-common-bin and krb5-user for kerberos usage
In /etc/samba/smb.conf
[global] workgroup = WORKGROUP realm = WORKGROUP.DOM kerberos method = system keytab security = ADS
Then do: “net ads join -U adminuser”
After this you will have a /etc/krb5.keytab with current AD kerberos key
In /etc/ssh/sshd_config
# GSSAPI options GSSAPIAuthentication yes
Check if /etc/ssh/sshd_config contains “AllowUsers” and add user to list
AllowUsers admin user1 user2
Or us AllowGroups in sshd_config Example
AllowGroups admin linux_admins
#aptitude install sssd krb5-user
#adcli join –host-fqdn=$( hostname -f ) –login-user=<username> –domain=example.dom
Example that will add HTTP service in addition to host (need to check if SPN records are being handled as well or if there is a need to manually add those with the setspn.exe command)
#adcli join --host-fqdn=$( hostname -f ) --login-user=<username> --domain=example.dom -V host -V HTTP
Edit /etc/sssd/sssd.conf (based on /usr/share/doc/sssd-common/examples/sssd-example.conf)
[sssd] config_file_version = 2 services = nss, pam # SSSD will not start if you do not configure any domains. # Add new domain configurations as [domain/<NAME>] sections, and # then add the list of domains (in the order you want them to be # queried) to the "domains" attribute below and uncomment it. domains = EXAMPLE.DOM [nss] [pam] # Example LDAP domain ; [domain/LDAP] ; id_provider = ldap ; auth_provider = ldap # ldap_schema can be set to "rfc2307", which stores group member names in the # "memberuid" attribute, or to "rfc2307bis", which stores group member DNs in # the "member" attribute. If you do not know this value, ask your LDAP # administrator. ; ldap_schema = rfc2307 ; ldap_uri = ldap://ldap.mydomain.org ; ldap_search_base = dc=mydomain,dc=org # Note that enabling enumeration will have a moderate performance impact. # Consequently, the default value for enumeration is FALSE. # Refer to the sssd.conf man page for full details. ; enumerate = false # Allow offline logins by locally storing password hashes (default: false). ; cache_credentials = true # An example Active Directory domain. Please note that this configuration # works for AD 2003R2 and AD 2008, because they use pretty much RFC2307bis # compliant attribute names. To support UNIX clients with AD 2003 or older, # you must install Microsoft Services For Unix and map LDAP attributes onto # msSFU30* attribute names. ; [domain/AD] ; id_provider = ldap ; auth_provider = krb5 ; chpass_provider = krb5 ; ; ldap_uri = ldap://your.ad.example.com ; ldap_search_base = dc=example,dc=com ; ldap_schema = rfc2307bis ; ldap_sasl_mech = GSSAPI ; ldap_user_object_class = user ; ldap_group_object_class = group ; ldap_user_home_directory = unixHomeDirectory ; ldap_user_principal = userPrincipalName ; ldap_account_expire_policy = ad ; ldap_force_upper_case_realm = true ; ; krb5_server = your.ad.example.com ; krb5_realm = EXAMPLE.COM [domain/EXAMPLE.DOM] id_provider = ad access_provider = ad dyndns_update = true dyndns_refresh_interval = 43200 dyndns_update_ptr = true dyndns_ttl = 3600 ad_hostname = <hostname>.example.dom