passport-ldapauth
Passport authentication strategy against LDAP server. This module is a Passport strategy wrapper for ldapauth-fork
Usage
var LdapStrategy = require('passport-ldapauth').Strategy;
passport.use(new LdapStrategy({
server: {
url: 'ldap://localhost:389',
...
}
}));
If you wish to e.g. do some additional verification or initialize user data to local database you may supply a verify
callback which accepts user
object and then calls the done
callback supplying a user
, which should be set to false
if user is not allowed to authenticate. If an exception occured, err
should be set.
var LdapStrategy = require('passport-ldapauth').Strategy;
passport.use(new LdapStrategy({
server: {
url: 'ldap://localhost:389',
...
}
},
function(user, done) {
...
return done(null, user);
}
));
Install
npm install passport-ldapauth
Status
Configuration options
-
server
: LDAP settings. These are passed directly to ldapauth-fork. See its documentation for all available options.
url
: e.g. ldap://localhost:389
adminDn
: e.g. cn='root'
adminPassword
: Password for adminDnsearchBase
: e.g. o=users,o=example.com
searchFilter
: LDAP search filter, e.g. (uid={{username}})
. Use literal {{username}}
to have the given username used in the search.searchAttributes
: Optional array of attributes to fetch from LDAP server, e.g. ['displayName', 'mail']
. Defaults to undefined
, i.e. fetch all attributestlsOptions
: Optional object with options accepted by Node.js tls module.
-
usernameField
: Field name where the username is found, defaults to username
-
passwordField
: Field name where the password is found, defaults to password
-
passReqToCallback
: When true
, req
is the first argument to the verify callback (default: false
):
passport.use(new LdapStrategy(..., function(req, user, done) {
...
done(null, user);
}
));
Express example
var express = require('express'),
passport = require('passport'),
LdapStrategy = require('passport-ldapauth').Strategy;
var OPTS = {
server: {
url: 'ldap://localhost:389',
adminDn: 'cn=root',
adminPassword: 'secret',
searchBase: 'ou=passport-ldapauth',
searchFilter: '(uid={{username}})'
}
};
var app = express();
passport.use(new LdapStrategy(OPTS));
app.configure(function() {
app.use(express.bodyParser());
app.use(passport.initialize());
});
app.post('/login', passport.authenticate('ldapauth', {session: false}), function(req, res) {
res.send({status: 'ok'});
});
app.listen(8080);
Active Directory over SSL example
Simple example config for connecting over ldaps://
to a server requiring some internal CA certificate (often the case in corporations using Windows AD).
var fs = require('fs');
var opts = {
server: {
url: 'ldaps://ad.corporate.com:636',
adminDn: 'non-person@corporate.com',
adminPassword: 'secret',
searchBase: 'dc=corp,dc=corporate,dc=com',
searchFilter: '(&(objectcategory=person)(objectclass=user)(|(samaccountname={{username}})(mail={{username}})))',
searchAttributes: ['displayName', 'mail'],
tlsOptions: {
ca: [
fs.readFileSync('/path/to/root_ca_cert.crt')
]
}
}
};
...
Asynchronous configuration retrieval
Instead of providing a static configuration object, you can pass to the LdapStrategy a function that will take care of fetching the configuration.
Example (here process.nextTick illustrates the asynchronous workings; in a real world this will for example be a database query):
function getLDAPConfiguration(callback) {
process.nextTick(function() {
var opts = {
server: {
url: 'ldap://localhost:389',
adminDn: 'cn=root',
adminPassword: 'secret',
searchBase: 'ou=passport-ldapauth',
searchFilter: '(uid={{username}})'
}
};
callback(null, opts);
});
}
var LdapStrategy = require('passport-ldapauth').Strategy;
passport.use(new LdapStrategy(getLDAPConfiguration,
function(user, done) {
...
return done(null, user);
}
));
License
MIT