This is a minimal web interface for LDAP directories.
Features:
- Directory tree view
- Entry creation / modification / deletion
- LDIF import / export
- JPEG support for
inetOrgPerson
- Schema aware
- Simple search (configurable)
- Asynchronous LDAP backend with decent scalability
- Available as Docker image
The app always requires authentication, even if the directory permits anonymous access. User credentials are validated through a simple bind
on the directory (SASL is not supported). What a particular user can see (and edit) is governed entirely by directory access rules. The app shows the directory contents, nothing less and nothing more.
Prerequisites:
- GNU make
- node.js with NPM
- Python3 >= 3.7
- pip3
- python-ldap; To compile the Python module:
- Debian / Ubuntu:
apt-get install libsasl2-dev python-dev libldap2-dev libssl-dev
- RedHat / CentOS:
yum install python-devel openldap-devel
- Debian / Ubuntu:
Check the configuration in settings.py. It is very short and mostly self-explaining.
Most settings can (and should) be overridden by environment variables or settings in a .env
file; see docker-demo/env-example.
The UI always uses a simple bind
operation to authenticate with the LDAP directory. How the bind
DN is obtained from a given user name depends on a combination of OS environment variables.
- Search by some attribute. By default, this is the
uid
, which can be overridden by the environment variableLOGIN_ATTR
, e.g.LOGIN_ATTR=cn
. - If the environment variable
BIND_PATTERN
is set, then no search is performed. Login with a full DN can be configured withBIND_PATTERN=%s
, which for example allows to login as usercn=admin,dc=example,dc=org
. If a partial DN likeBIND_PATTERN=%s,dc=example,dc=org
is configured, the corresponding login would becn=admin
. If a specific pattern likeBIND_PATTERN=cn=%s,dc=example,dc=org
is configured, the login name is justadmin
. - If security is no concern, then a fixed
BIND_DN
andBIND_PASSWORD
can be set in the environment. This is for demo purposes only, and probably a very bad idea if access to the UI is not restricted by any other means.
Run the app with
make run
and head over to http://localhost:5000/.
A Dockerfile is included. The container exposes port 5000. LDAP access is controlled by these environment variables:
LDAP_URL
: connection URL (optional), defaults toldap:///
).BASE_DN
: search base (required), e.g.dc=example,dc=org
.LOGIN_ATTR
: User name attribute (optional), defaults touid
.
For finer-grained control, check the variables in settings.py.
For the impatient: Run it with
docker run -e LDAP_URL=ldap://your.ldap.server/ -e BASE_DN=dc=example,dc=org dnknth/ldap-ui
For the even more impatient: A demo is provided in docker-demo. Run it with
docker-demo/start.sh
You are automatically logged in as Fred Flintstone
.
Search uses a fixed set of criteria (cn
, gn
, sn
, and uid
) if the query does not contain =
.
Wildcards are supported, e.g. f*
will match all cn
, gn
, sn
, and uid
starting with f
.
Additionally, arbitrary attributes can be searched with an LDAP filter specification, for example
sn=F*
or uidNumber>=100
.
- The software is fairly new. I use it on production directories, but you should probably test-drive it first.
- It works with OpenLdap using simple bind. Other directories have not been tested, and SASL authentication schemes are presently not supported.
- Passwords are transmitted as plain text. The LDAP server is expected to hash them (OpenLdap 2.4 does). I strongly recommend to expose the app through a TLS-enabled web server.
- HTTP Basic Authentication is triggered unless the
AUTHORIZATION
request variable is already set by some upstream HTTP server.
- Q: Why are some fields not editable?
- A: The RDN of an entry is read-only. To change it, rename the entry with a different RDN, then change the old RDN and rename back. To change passwords, click on the question mark icon on the right side. Binary fields (as per schema) are read-only. You do not want to modify them accidentally.
- Q: Why did you write this?
- A: PHPLdapAdmin has not seen updates for ages. I needed a replacement, and wanted to try Vue.
The Python backend uses Quart which is an asynchronous Flask. Kudos for the authors of these elegant frameworks!
The UI uses Vue.js with the excellent Bootstrap Vue components. Thanks to the authors for making frontend work much more enjoyable.