Application servers

If you need to install the Kerberos V5 programs on an application server, please refer to the Kerberos V5 Installation Guide. Once you have installed the software, you need to add that host to the Kerberos database (see Adding, modifying and deleting principals), and generate a keytab for that host, that contains the host’s key. You also need to make sure the host’s clock is within your maximum clock skew of the KDCs.

Keytabs

A keytab is a host’s copy of its own keylist, which is analogous to a user’s password. An application server that needs to authenticate itself to the KDC has to have a keytab that contains its own principal and key. Just as it is important for users to protect their passwords, it is equally important for hosts to protect their keytabs. You should always store keytab files on local disk, and make them readable only by root, and you should never send a keytab file over a network in the clear. Ideally, you should run the kadmin command to extract a keytab on the host on which the keytab is to reside.

Adding principals to keytabs

To generate a keytab, or to add a principal to an existing keytab, use the ktadd command from kadmin.

ktadd

ktadd [options] principal
ktadd [options] -glob princ-exp

Adds a principal, or all principals matching princ-exp, to a keytab file. Each principal’s keys are randomized in the process. The rules for princ-exp are described in the list_principals command.

This command requires the inquire and changepw privileges. With the -glob form, it also requires the list privilege.

The options are:

-k[eytab] keytab
Use keytab as the keytab file. Otherwise, the default keytab is used.
-e enc:salt,…
Uses the specified keysalt list for setting the new keys of the principal. See Keysalt lists in kdc.conf for a list of possible values.
-q
Display less verbose information.
-norandkey
Do not randomize the keys. The keys and their version numbers stay unchanged. This option cannot be specified in combination with the -e option.

An entry for each of the principal’s unique encryption types is added, ignoring multiple keys with the same encryption type but different salt types.

Example:

kadmin: ktadd -k /tmp/foo-new-keytab host/foo.mit.edu
Entry for principal host/foo.mit.edu@ATHENA.MIT.EDU with kvno 3,
     encryption type aes256-cts-hmac-sha1-96 added to keytab
     FILE:/tmp/foo-new-keytab
kadmin:

Examples

Here is a sample session, using configuration files that enable only AES encryption:

kadmin: ktadd host/daffodil.mit.edu@ATHENA.MIT.EDU
Entry for principal host/daffodil.mit.edu with kvno 2, encryption type aes256-cts-hmac-sha1-96 added to keytab FILE:/etc/krb5.keytab
Entry for principal host/daffodil.mit.edu with kvno 2, encryption type aes128-cts-hmac-sha1-96 added to keytab FILE:/etc/krb5.keytab
kadmin:

Removing principals from keytabs

To remove a principal from an existing keytab, use the kadmin ktremove command.

ktremove

ktremove [options] principal [kvno | all | old]

Removes entries for the specified principal from a keytab. Requires no permissions, since this does not require database access.

If the string “all” is specified, all entries for that principal are removed; if the string “old” is specified, all entries for that principal except those with the highest kvno are removed. Otherwise, the value specified is parsed as an integer, and all entries whose kvno match that integer are removed.

The options are:

-k[eytab] keytab
Use keytab as the keytab file. Otherwise, the default keytab is used.
-q
Display less verbose information.

Example:

kadmin: ktremove kadmin/admin all
Entry for principal kadmin/admin with kvno 3 removed from keytab
     FILE:/etc/krb5.keytab
kadmin:

Clock Skew

A Kerberos application server host must keep its clock synchronized or it will reject authentication requests from clients. Modern operating systems typically provide a facility to maintain the correct time; make sure it is enabled. This is especially important on virtual machines, where clocks tend to drift more rapidly than normal machine clocks.

The default allowable clock skew is controlled by the clockskew variable in [libdefaults].

Getting DNS information correct

Several aspects of Kerberos rely on name service. When a hostname is used to name a service, the Kerberos library canonicalizes the hostname using forward and reverse name resolution. (The reverse name resolution step can be turned off using the rdns variable in [libdefaults].) The result of this canonicalization must match the principal entry in the host’s keytab, or authentication will fail.

Each host’s canonical name must be the fully-qualified host name (including the domain), and each host’s IP address must reverse-resolve to the canonical name.

Configuration of hostnames varies by operating system. On the application server itself, canonicalization will typically use the /etc/hosts file rather than the DNS. Ensure that the line for the server’s hostname is in the following form:

IP address      fully-qualified hostname        aliases

Here is a sample /etc/hosts file:

# this is a comment
127.0.0.1      localhost localhost.mit.edu
10.0.0.6       daffodil.mit.edu daffodil trillium wake-robin

The output of klist -k for this example host should look like:

viola# klist -k
Keytab name: /etc/krb5.keytab
KVNO Principal
---- ------------------------------------------------------------
   2 host/daffodil.mit.edu@ATHENA.MIT.EDU

If you were to ssh to this host with a fresh credentials cache (ticket file), and then klist, the output should list a service principal of host/daffodil.mit.edu@ATHENA.MIT.EDU.

Configuring your firewall to work with Kerberos V5

If you need off-site users to be able to get Kerberos tickets in your realm, they must be able to get to your KDC. This requires either that you have a slave KDC outside your firewall, or that you configure your firewall to allow UDP requests into at least one of your KDCs, on whichever port the KDC is running. (The default is port 88; other ports may be specified in the KDC’s kdc.conf file.) Similarly, if you need off-site users to be able to change their passwords in your realm, they must be able to get to your Kerberos admin server on the kpasswd port (which defaults to 464). If you need off-site users to be able to administer your Kerberos realm, they must be able to get to your Kerberos admin server on the administrative port (which defaults to 749).

If your on-site users inside your firewall will need to get to KDCs in other realms, you will also need to configure your firewall to allow outgoing TCP and UDP requests to port 88, and to port 464 to allow password changes. If your on-site users inside your firewall will need to get to Kerberos admin servers in other realms, you will also need to allow outgoing TCP and UDP requests to port 749.

If any of your KDCs are outside your firewall, you will need to allow kprop requests to get through to the remote KDC. kprop uses the krb5_prop service on port 754 (tcp).

The book UNIX System Security, by David Curry, is a good starting point for learning to configure firewalls.