Manual Chapter :
User Management
Applies To:
Show VersionsF5OS-A
- 1.5.0
User Management
User management overview
You can manage the
rSeries
system from the CLI, the webUI, or using REST APIs. The
rSeries
system
has two
levels of user
management:- System level
- At the system level, after basic configuration is complete, the system includes default root (Bash access only) and admin accounts that you can use to log in to the system. The system administrator uses the admin account and changes the default passwords when logging in the first time. At that point, the admin user can also create additional accounts for other users, such as other system administrators, terminal server administrators, or operators.
- Tenant level
- Since the tenants are independent of the rest of therSeriessystem, management of tenant users is not covered in this guide. For more information, see the tenant documentation (such asBIG-IPsoftware documentation at my.f5.com).
User roles overview
There are multiple user roles for managing the
rSeries
system, and each role performs different sets of
administrative actions at conceptually different levels.User roles
This table lists user roles at the system level.
Role |
Description |
---|---|
admin |
Provides access to the system CLI or webUI to configure the system-level settings with unrestricted read/write access. Can unlock any system users. Logs in to the active management IP address. No Bash access.
Has broader ability and can configure management interfaces, install Base OS system software, modify system settings, activate licensing, perform user management, and configure network settings, port groups, interfaces, VLANs, LAGs, log settings, tenant deployments, and system settings. The default login credentials are admin/admin. When logging in as admin for the first time, the system prompts you to change the password. This also changes the default password for the root account to match that of the admin account. |
limited |
F5 internal use only. |
operator |
Allows read access to system level configuration from the CLI or webUI and write access to change password only. Logs in to the active management IP address. No Bash access.
Has read-only access to every screen and every configuration object at the level in which they are working. If an operator tries to modify any setting, however, the system displays a warning that explains that their role is unauthorized to make the configuration change. |
resource admin |
Similar to the Admin user role, but cannot create, modify, or delete local user accounts; create, modify, or delete server groups; or modify any authentication settings. This user role can modify their own user detail to change their own password. |
root |
Created by the system. Used by the system administrator. Provides Bash shell access to the entire system including all components. The root user is the only user that has Bash access. The system root account can be accessed from the management IP address and from a console. The root role can only be accessed by the root user. The root password can be changed using the passwd command, or by an admin user from the CLI.
On first login, you are forced to change the password. If you change the root user password and the admin password is ‘admin’ at that time, the admin user will have the same new password. F5 recommends disabling the root account using appliance mode in production to reduce the attack surface of the system and protect it from any vulnerabilities. |
tenant-console |
Has virtual console access to tenants from the CLI. Tenant console access is authenticated by tenant root credentials. No access to any part of the rSeries system. |
Remote authentication overview
The
rSeries
system
includes support for using a remote authentication server to store system user
accounts. After you have created system accounts on the remote server (using
the server vendor's instructions), you can configure the rSeries
system to use that server type
to authenticate and authorize users. You can enable all available remote
authentication methods and use the CLI to indicate the order in which you
would like the methods to be attempted when a user logs in.Group IDs (GIDs) and system authentication roles
Users with the admin role can configure the system to use these
authentication methods to authenticate users:
- External LDAP Server (includes Active Directory)
- External RADIUS Server
- External TACACS+ Server
- Local (local UNIX authentication)
Each user role is internally mapped to a group ID. Users
created and managed on external LDAP, Active Directory, RADIUS, or TACACS+
servers must have the same group IDs on the external servers as they do on
F5
rSeries
systems to enable authentication and authorization
to occur on rSeries
systems. Users
created on external LDAP, Active Directory, RADIUS, or TACACS+ servers must be
associated with one of these group IDs on the system.You can only use existing roles and
cannot create new roles.
The group IDs are specified in a user configuration file on
the external server (file locations vary on different servers). You can assign
these F5 user attributes:
F5-F5OS-UID=1001 F5-F5OS-GID=9000 <-- THIS MUST MATCH /etc/group items F5-F5OS-HOMEDIR=/tmp <-- Optional; prevents sshd warning msgs F5-F5OS-USERINFO=test_user <-- Optional user info F5-F5OS-SHELL=/bin/bash <-- Ignored; always set to /var/lib/controller/f5_confd_cli
Setting
F5-F5OS-HOMEDIR=/tmp
is a good idea to avoid warning messages
from sshd that the directory does not exist. Also, the source address in the
TACACS+ configuration is not used by the rSeries
system.If F5-F5OS-UID is not set, it defaults to 1001. F5-F5OS-GID is required; if
not set, user authentication will fail. The F5-F5OS-USERINFO is a comment field.
Essentially, F5-F5OS-GID is the only hard requirement and must coincide with the group
ID's user role.
Group IDs for system roles
This table lists the default group IDs for system
roles.
Role |
Group ID |
---|---|
admin |
9000 |
operator |
9001 |
resource admin |
9003 |
tenant-console |
9100 |
Group ID configuration examples
RADIUS server
The user configuration file is often named
/etc/raddb/users
. This is
an example of an entry for an administrator with admin privileges:radius_user Cleartext-Password := test F5-F5OS-UID := 1001, F5-F5OS-GID := 9000, F5-F5OS-HOMEDIR := "/tmp", F5-F5OS-SHELL := "/var/lib/controller/f5_confd_cli"
TACACS+ server
For example, on a TACACS+ server, the user configuration file is
typically named
/etc/tac_plus.conf
. This is an example of an entry for an
administrator with admin privileges:group = admin { service = ppp protocol = ip { default attribute=permit F5-F5OS-UID=1001 F5-F5OS-GID=9000 F5-F5OS-HOMEDIR=/tmp F5-F5OS-USERINFO=test_user } } user = test_tacacs_user { global = cleartext "test-tacplus" member = admin }
Display user roles from the CLI
You can display the administrator roles
with their associated group IDs from the CLI using an account with admin or
operator access.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Display user roles for the system.show system aaa authentication rolesA summary similar to this example displays:appliance-1# show system aaa authentication roles REMOTE ROLENAME GID USERS GID ------------------------------------- admin 9000 - 9000 operator 9001 - 9001 resource-admin 9003 - 9003 root 0 - 0 tenant-console 9100 - 9100
Custom remote group IDs (GIDs)
Using an account with admin or operator access, you can
configure a custom remote group ID (GID) for all remote authentication methods
(LDAP, TACACS+, RADIUS). For example, this enables LDAP administrators to
specify admin and operator groups, and then associate those GIDs to the
associated roles rather than the hard-coded 9000 and 9001. The default GID
fields (that is, 9000 and 9001) are not affected, and the system maps the
remote GID to the default GID.
You can assign remote GID mappings for only one remote
authentication method at a time. If you switch from LDAP to RADIUS, for
example, you will have to reconfigure the settings for RADIUS. If you then
decide to go back to LDAP, you will have to reconfigure again. F5 recommends
that you avoid assigning multiple F5-mapped GIDs to a single user
account.
Configure remote group IDs (GIDs) from the CLI
Using an account with admin or operator
access, you can configure a custom group ID (GID) for all remote
authentication methods (LDAP, TACACS+, RADIUS) from the CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Configure a remote GID.system aaa authentication roles role <role-name> config remote-gidThis example assigns a remote GID to the admin user:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication roles role admin config remote-gid (<unsignedInt>) (9000): 6000
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
- Return to user (operational) mode.end
- Verify that the operator user role is assigned the custom remote GID.show system aaa authentication rolesA summary similar to this example displays:appliance-1# show system aaa authentication roles REMOTE ROLENAME GID USERS GID ------------------------------------- admin 9000 - 6000 operator 9001 - 9001 resource-admin 9003 - 9003 tenant-console 9100 - 9100
Verify that the remote GID for the user matches the GID on the remote
authentication server.
LDAP/AD configuration overview
You can configure the
rSeries
system to
use an LDAP or Microsoft Windows Active Directory (AD) server for
authenticating rSeries
system user
accounts.Before you begin:
- Verify that the LDAP service is set up on a server that is accessible to therSeriessystem. The default port for the LDAP service is 389 for unsecure protocol (LDAP) or 636 for secure protocol (LDAPS). If the service is configured with a different port, make note of it, as you will need that port number during configuration.
- Import one or more LDAP certificates if you want to verify the certificate of the authentication server.
- Assign users to valid system group IDs on the external LDAP or Active Directory servers. For more information, see Group IDs (GIDs) and system authentication roles.
- For the system to recognize an Active Directory user, the user's uidNumber attribute must be set to a valid value. The gidNumber for important groups must also be set to a valid value. While these attributes are typically present in a basic LDAP configuration, they are often missing from a basic AD configuration.
LDAP/AD configuration from the webUI
Configure LDAP/AD authentication from the webUI
You can configure the use of LDAP/Active
Directory (AD) authentication with
rSeries
systems from the webUI.- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- To enable an external authentication server, in Authentication Methods, selectLDAP.The LDAP server must be configured and reachable from the system.By default, local authentication is always enabled, so an administrator can access the system in case of external authentication server failure.
- In the Common LDAP Configuration area, forBase DN, type the base distinguished name (name-value pairs) from which to start the search for the LDAP user (for example,dc=example,dc=org).The settings in the Common LDAP Configuration area are required only if you want to use LDAP and create LDAP server groups with LDAP servers.
- ForBind, specify the information for binding the LDAP service account.
- ForDN, enter the distinguished name with which to bind to the LDAP directory server for lookups (for example:cn=admin,dc=example,dc=org).
- ForPassword, enter the admin password for the LDAP server.F5 recommends that the LDAP service account password is set to never expire. Otherwise, if it expires, LDAP authentication will not be possible and might result in users getting locked out of the system.
- ForConfirm, retype the password.
- To clear the password, clickClear.
- ForConnect Timeout (seconds), specify the maximum amount of time, in seconds, that the system waits before timing out when trying to reach the LDAP server.
- ForRead Timeout (seconds), specify the maximum amount of time, in seconds, that the system waits to receive an LDAP response before aborting the read attempt.
- ForIdle Timeout (seconds), specify the maximum amount of time, in seconds, that an LDAP connection can be inactive before the connection is closed.
- ForLDAP Version, select the version of the LDAP protocol to use.The default value is3.
- ForChase Referrals, select whether to enable LDAP referral chasing.The default value isTrue, which specifies that the system queries all LDAP servers in the domain. This might cause delays and timeouts when authenticating against an LDAP server.
- If the LDAP server has Transport Layer Security (TLS) support, from theTLSlist, select whether to use TLS to encrypt the transfer of authentication data between the LDAP server and the system.OptionDescriptionOnUse TLS to secure all connections.OffDo not use TLS.StartTLSStarts a connection in unencrypted mode on a port configured for plain text and negotiates the encryption with the client. If selected, it is used rather than raw LDAP over SSL.If set toOnorStartTLS, additional TLS-related fields are enabled.
- ForTLS Certificate Validation, specify what checks to perform on a server-supplied certificateOptionDescriptionNeverTLS certificate is not required.AllowAllow the connection. The server certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided, the session proceeds normally. If a bad certificate is provided, it is ignored and the session proceeds normally.TryRequest the TLS certificate. The server certificate is requested. If no certificate is provided, the session proceeds normally. If a bad certificate is provided, the session is immediately terminated.DemandRequest the certificate. If no certificate is provided, or a bad certificate is provided, the session is immediately terminated.HardRequest the certificate. If no certificate is provided, or a bad certificate is provided, the session is immediately terminated.
- ForTLS CA Certificate, clickShowand paste the contents of the X.509 certificate (self-signed or from a CA) for peer authentication.
- ForCipher String, enter the cipher string to specify the type of encryption to use (for example, ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384 or ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256).The cipher string can take several additional forms. It can consist of a single cipher suite such as RC4-SHA. It can represent a list of cipher suites containing a certain algorithm, or cipher suites of a certain type. For example, SHA1 represents all cipher suites using the digest algorithm SHA1, and SSLv3 represents all SSLv3 algorithms.You can combine lists of cipher suites into a single cipher string using the + character as a logical AND operation. For example, SHA1+DES represents all cipher suites containing the SHA1 and DES algorithms.For additional information, see the ciphers man page at www.openssl.org/docs/manpages.html.
- In theTLS Certificatefield, clickShowand paste the text of the local certificate for client TLS authentication.
- In theTLS Keyfield, clickShowand paste the text of the private key for client TLS authentication.
- ForAuthenticate with Active Directory, selectTrueif you want LDAP to authenticate against an Active Directory (AD) server.
- ClickSave.
LDAP/AD authentication for users is
configured on the system. When a user logs in, the system attempts to
authenticate them against the configured authentication method. When the
account has a match within any of the configured authentication methods, the
user is authenticated and given access.
Next, you can create a server group.
Configure an LDAP/AD server group from the webUI
You can configure an LDAP/Active
Directory (AD) server group from the webUI.
- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- ClickAdd.
- ForName, create a recognizable name for the server group.
- ForProvider Type, selectLDAPto qualify the type of servers that will be in the group.
- ClickSave & Close.
- Click the server group to which you want to add servers.The Edit Server Group screen displays.
- ClickAdd.
- ForServer, type the IPv4, IPv6 address, or FQDN of the LDAP server to add.
- ForPort, make sure the port number is correct for LDAP traffic.The default value is636.
- From theTypelist, selectLDAP over TCPorLDAP over SSL(secured) depending on which is supported.
- ClickSave & Close.
Add as many servers as needed to the
group.
LDAP/AD configuration from the CLI
Configure LDAP/Active Directory authentication
from the CLI
You can configure LDAP/Active Directory
authentication from the CLI. You can also create an LDAP server group
(including Active Directory servers), if you have multiple external LDAP
servers to which you want to connect.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Set the authentication method to LDAP.system aaa authentication config authentication-method LDAP_ALL
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
- Set the LDAP or Active Directory configuration details.system aaa authentication ldap active_directory {true|false} base <dn-name> bind_timelimit <number-of-seconds> binddn <dn-acct-info> bindpw <password> chase-referrals {true|false} idle_timelimit <number-of-seconds> ldap_version <version-number> ssl {on|off|start_tls} timelimit <number-of-seconds> tls_cacert <path-to-cert>tls_cert <path-to-cert> tls_ciphers <cipher-suite> tls_key <path-to-file> tls_reqcert {never|allow|try|demand|hard}This example specifies a search base distinguished name for LDAP authentication:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication ldap base dc=example,dc=localThis example enables Active Directory authentication, by setting theactive_directoryoption to true:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication config authentication-method LDAP all system aaa authentication ldap active_directory true
- Add the LDAP/AD server details to the authentication server groups.
- Create a server group.system aaa server-groups server-group <group-name> config name <group-name> type LDAPThis example creates an LDAP server group namedldap-group:appliance-1(config)# system aaa server-groups server-group ldap-group config name ldap-group type LDAP
- Add a server to the server group.servers server <ip-address> config address <ip-address>This example adds a server at specified IP address:appliance-1(config-server-group-ldap-group)# servers server 192.0.2.21
- Customize other LDAP configuration details, as needed.ldap config auth-port <port-number> type {ldap|ldaps}This example shows configuring a port number and LDAP over SSL.appliance-1(config-server-192.0.2.21)# ldap config auth-port 636 type ldaps
- Exit to the top level.top
- Add the host name for the LDAP service.This host name might have to be resolved in/etc/hostsor by DNS.system aaa server-groups server-group <group-name> servers server <host-name>This example adds a host name to the LDAP service:appliance-1(config)# system aaa server-groups server-group ldap-group servers server ldap.company.com
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
LDAP/AD authentication for users is
configured on the system. When a user logs in, the system attempts to
authenticate them against the configured authentication method. When the
account has a match within any of the configured authentication methods, the
user is authenticated and given access.
Add LDAP certificates from the CLI
You can add the LDAP certificates
and key from the CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Add the TLS config key:system aaa tls config key (<AES-encrypted-string>)Press Enter to enable multi-line mode and paste the contents. Press Ctrl-D to exit multi-line mode.A summary similar to this example displays:appliance-1(config)# system aaa tls config key (<AES encrypted string>): [Multiline mode, exit with ctrl-D.] > -----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY----- > MIIEvQIBADANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAASCBKcwggSjAgEAAoIBAQDarxbhnYlm8DoQ > W23fxEm6qZF5+DEBinym3IAZe7V3eV/v1UmuqSMKmz3pLX5oYTZ0Fqj+mW4XdMxK > kW93w91xYLZoOOn/P9ELt4Cu9YIoDTy3OU68EETjQarw9wd+0/JqKTRPWa+VAWGn > hMg6N2OCY7hNc8FWFU2YD2x6MryacVCgCi20uhzde2G89pJlqGrm9KpbCN1ZV4Hc > 4OWEnMAO/yyb8FceKQNgJ0pk9+kBosKfyYypZ8SjP9Bg4E76of5xMHBtbXNu/f3Y > hJk/0gmMyuoTKl5d9AAUhU+gOZP6z2GTc2UfWnG0dfG6SWUGVmBtZ8u8y3nPi7Y9 > G1K5R3TzAgMBAAECggEAVamQhQB4+mHP3OhzudviJcSWv/iA+eGNwq9NXq4e/5YE > Bqa+HjUTDOyS6+xuP+UUt5TIzjK79WRDQlKGH5wR+n+v9FOXFe2hrb1MIzz4p0fI > KN3CAdk9oufuVkXuIbhUlVFetFalePD5l+1joapgyIrXfz+A1H+zzYT9MUD+sGBJ > bYkTqxFgAwsJoMaPruemfzFLHeWRDh/o0fG7aA6v4AA+urIaK13bEs+U/38A6D4X > j+Mzr2RP4bQJHBKE5vYJ0bwqfO3we21CPYpkla4APJUNGOLuZwfGhH1QREQy31rA > sIru7KRBcxYikvfKI4oL8aUfPurcZbnaCD1bdUhlQQKBgQD3lQ4Qp53c3QGww/bQ > s0tvJD6T86t5ve47j0V6hKHbp8Kq/zm+3jkRVNjH8nipyleQ44YJuSqPfo4EVKLC > OYPDEEQP+2fAWmt1LUugoB/ilQHOHMJVuPUj9Hyt7wetp1EeFZqNqpgohdP9eM5/ > R8jSIuNhqIjPKTliqwOn4hLnvwKBgQDiHoE/O87/GadvmS/G6ExWFAE2j7l16y1f > pz/cqY/p674TF/VUYsyKaLKM08iOhT6XeDACto+z7TYd5YNYAgawuxcDvDWXOZxe > mWLpdzlQGzumeTz2Rsx3U3NnXETlGBWEjj6kAUq4oqFrRSBNGbHb4D7XVNuQPPSX > rZ8CfNxfzQKBgG/rZ7JLs2c2WR9JVve9NWqGnetQCcI9A8bU23mpH2omii+2tKn9 > 1xpomp64k6ddmvwafmtC02SOtzBp+jGGwnOZlMsMwTgJJ+6OjVONTxykc25zPb52 > oAqi6QHPvk7YBiltZrKH3cTjypMY23BaSQQFVXi+MSpE3nYmDL8FyboNAoGAVIDp > 9GO5nAROWpp5DHDL9m9LdMSJntPhBRpP93s22UjMo/4UJRE3N5KhB5guH3UUSy8T > YjAvzCIeU1Xum/lF3s5Mb4zqyjUxhvjzyiRQOuuygyhT7AXRa9a4DiyhYqx5fixa > pJgHALFmedw/khDEM1O+qGKCG4lsLzMndZqMERECgYEA5LQ128pxYmpp3lyK6a62 > 01W/1/BtuiApuEFdcqwk6MTtateS5Kpb5uA9orWISmtd7mZLcXZGTBuJEoWsHBs4 > BE/B1urijsnmFzGRwmwF9DwhhDuyLW/cAqQSWAb4IBkU0lo0MOwm80EgcLwoy/53 > zicLAzdPQOiNQEyIh5U46xg= > -----END PRIVATE KEY-----
- Add the TLS config certificate:system aaa tls config certificate (<string>)Press Enter to enable multi-line mode and paste the contents. Press Ctrl-D to exit multi-line mode.In this example, you add a certificate:appliance-1(config)# system aaa tls config certificate (<string>): [Multiline mode, exit with ctrl-D.] > -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- > MIIESzCCAzOgAwIBAgIJALgGgs+5qgX1MA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBCwUAMIG7MQswCQYD > VQQGEwItLTESMBAGA1UECAwJU29tZVN0YXRlMREwDwYDVQQHDAhTb21lQ2l0eTEZ > MBcGA1UECgwQU29tZU9yZ2FuaXphdGlvbjEfMB0GA1UECwwWU29tZU9yZ2FuaXph > dGlvbmFsVW5pdDEeMBwGA1UEAwwVbG9jYWxob3N0LmxvY2FsZG9tYWluMSkwJwYJ > KoZIhvcNAQkBFhpyb290QGxvY2FsaG9zdC5sb2NhbGRvbWFpbjAeFw0yMDEwMjMy > MjMwNTZaFw0yMTEwMjMyMjMwNTZaMIG7MQswCQYDVQQGEwItLTESMBAGA1UECAwJ > U29tZVN0YXRlMREwDwYDVQQHDAhTb21lQ2l0eTEZMBcGA1UECgwQU29tZU9yZ2Fu > aXphdGlvbjEfMB0GA1UECwwWU29tZU9yZ2FuaXphdGlvbmFsVW5pdDEeMBwGA1UE > AwwVbG9jYWxob3N0LmxvY2FsZG9tYWluMSkwJwYJKoZIhvcNAQkBFhpyb290QGxv > Y2FsaG9zdC5sb2NhbGRvbWFpbjCCASIwDQYJKoZIhvcNAQEBBQADggEPADCCAQoC > ggEBANqvFuGdiWbwOhBbbd/ESbqpkXn4MQGKfKbcgBl7tXd5X+/VSa6pIwqbPekt > fmhhNnQWqP6Zbhd0zEqRb3fD3XFgtmg46f8/0Qu3gK71gigNPLc5TrwQRONBqvD3 > B37T8mopNE9Zr5UBYaeEyDo3Y4JjuE1zwVYVTZgPbHoyvJpxUKAKLbS6HN17Ybz2 > kmWoaub0qlsI3VlXgdzg5YScwA7/LJvwVx4pA2AnSmT36QGiwp/JjKlnxKM/0GDg > Tvqh/nEwcG1tc279/diEmT/SCYzK6hMqXl30ABSFT6A5k/rPYZNzZR9acbR18bpJ > ZQZWYG1ny7zLec+Ltj0bUrlHdPMCAwEAAaNQME4wHQYDVR0OBBYEFJ8f90ExRYYD > 0j2rQSKhMbRaKz0vMB8GA1UdIwQYMBaAFJ8f90ExRYYD0j2rQSKhMbRaKz0vMAwG > A1UdEwQFMAMBAf8wDQYJKoZIhvcNAQELBQADggEBACzFSIiJ01qLtl9Nom5rtFRh > m+iH0RewmO2YV9rQTl53shma1/Wa2D5PXsFt6w0wiXRa6Gab1YVxaHkP9E4RK6us > B5s5pR+SijP02Ijw5y4RICegkWApx86wlW09NDBgPFQdz+xQnpx8LfAFDzkAEf02 > eI4SI25Vi3fDW6qeOKeQmS5itcRFXBi/E2+FwYu3zvtMEIp7WB90f0mvxiEd1bz8 > UY0pODHlYUzc/4jl9CGWGPl+80KHsjppqwsFzZs3koe2IyKbzMKfpdQ+oIiJP17+ > IVJgNbRCO5TgGXtFW3p3CJ2fHzEPongFdvbPOTr/cE/KkGxKqcoeN7d22g7POas= > -----END CERTIFICATE-----
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
RADIUS configuration overview
You can configure the
rSeries
system to use a RADIUS server for authenticating rSeries
system user accounts.Before you begin, you must verify that the RADIUS service is set up on a
server that is accessible to the
rSeries
system. The default port for RADIUS service is
1812. If the service is configured with a different port, make note of it,
as you will need it during the configuration.- Assign users to valid system group IDs on the external RADIUS server. For more information, see Group IDs (GIDs) and system authentication roles.
RADIUS dictionary
When configuring remote RADIUS authentication for the
F5
system, you add these F5OS
vendor-specific attributes (VSA) to the F5
vendor-specific RADIUS
dictionary file on the RADIUS server.ATTRIBUTE F5-F5OS-UID 21 integer ATTRIBUTE F5-F5OS-GID 22 integer ATTRIBUTE F5-F5OS-HOMEDIR 23 string ATTRIBUTE F5-F5OS-SHELL 24 string ATTRIBUTE F5-F5OS-USERINFO 25 string
RADIUS configuration from the webUI
Configure RADIUS authentication from the webUI
You can configure the use of RADIUS
authentication with
rSeries
systems
from the webUI.- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- To enable an external authentication server, in Authentication Methods, selectRADIUS.The RADIUS server must be configured and reachable from the system.By default, local authentication is always enabled, so an administrator can access the system in case of external authentication server failure.
- ClickSave.
RADIUS authentication for users is
configured on the system. When a user logs in, the system attempts to
authenticate them against the configured authentication method. When the
account has a match within any of the configured authentication methods, the
user is authenticated and given access.
Next, you can create a server
group.
Configure a RADIUS server group from the webUI
You can configure a RADIUS server
group from the webUI.
- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- ClickAdd.
- ForName, create a recognizable name for the server group.
- ForProvider Type, selectRADIUSto qualify the type of servers that will be in the group.
- ClickSave & Close.
- Click the server group to which you want to add servers.The Edit Server Group screen displays.
- ClickAdd.
- ForServer, enter the IPv4, IPv6 address, or FQDN of the RADIUS server to add.
- ForPort, make sure the port number is correct for RADIUS traffic.The default value is1812.
- ForSecret, enter the shared secret used to access the server.
- ForTimeout (seconds), type the number of seconds to timeout if unable to access the server.The default value is5.
- ClickSave & Close.
Add as many servers as needed to the group.
RADIUS configuration from the CLI
Configure RADIUS authentication from the CLI
You can configure the system for RADIUS
authentication from the CLI. You can also create a RADIUS server group, if you
have multiple external RADIUS servers to which you want to connect.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Set the authentication method to RADIUS.system aaa authentication config authentication-method RADIUS_ALL
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
- Add the RADIUS service details to the authentication server groups:
- Create a server group.system aaa server-groups server-group <group-name> config name <group-name> type RADIUSThis example creates an RADIUS server group namedradius-group:appliance-1(config)# system aaa server-groups server-group radius-group config name radius-group type RADIUS
- Add a server to the server group.servers server <ip-address> config address <ip-address>This example adds a server at specified IP address:appliance-1(config-server-group-radius-group)# servers server 192.0.2.20
- Customize other RADIUS configuration details, as needed.radius config auth-port <port-number> secret-key <secret> timeout <timeout-in-seconds>This example shows configuring a port number:appliance-1(config-server-192.0.2.20)# radius config port 1812
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
RADIUS authentication for users is
configured on the system. When a user logs in, the system attempts to
authenticate them against the configured authentication method. When the
account has a match within any of the configured authentication methods, the
user is authenticated and given access.
TACACS+ configuration overview
You can configure the
rSeries
system to
use a TACACS+ server for
authenticating rSeries
system user
accounts.Before you begin:
- Verify that TACACS+ is set up on a server that is accessible to therSeriessystem.
- Assign users to valid system group IDs on the external TACACS+ server. For more information, see Group IDs (GIDs) and system authentication roles.
TACACS+ configuration from the webUI
Configure TACACS+ authentication from the webUI
You can configure the use of
TACACS+ authentication with
rSeries
systems from the webUI.- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- To enable an external authentication server, in Authentication Methods, selectTACACS+.The TACACS+ server must be configured and reachable from the system.By default, local authentication is always enabled, so an administrator can access the system in case of external authentication server failure.
- ClickSave.
TACACS+ authentication for users is
configured on the system. When a user logs in, the system attempts to
authenticate them against the configured authentication method. When the
account has a match within any of the configured authentication methods, the
user is authenticated and given access.
Next, you can create a server
group.
Configure a TACACS+ server group from the webUI
You can configure a TACACS+ server group
from the webUI.
- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- ClickAdd.
- ForName, create a recognizable name for the server group.
- ForProvider Type, selectTACACS+to qualify the type of servers that will be in the group.
- ClickSave & Close.
- Click the server group to which you want to add servers.The Edit Server Group screen displays.
- ClickAdd.
- ForServer, type the IPv4, IPv6 address, or FQDN of the TACACS+ server to add.
- ForPort, make sure the port number is correct for TACACS+ traffic.The default value is49.
- ForSecret, enter the shared secret used to access the server.
- ClickSave & Close.
Add as many servers as needed to the group.
TACACS+ configuration from the CLI
Configure TACACS+ authentication from the
CLI
You can configure
TACACS+ authentication from the CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Set the authentication method to TACACS+.system aaa authentication config authentication-method TACACS_ALL
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
- Add the TACACS+ service details to the authentication server groups.
- Create a server group.system aaa server-groups server-group <group-name> config name <group-name> type TACACSThis example creates a TACACS+ server group namedtacacs-group:appliance-1(config)# system aaa server-groups server-group tacacs-group config name tacacs-group type TACACS
- Add a server to the server group.servers server <ip-address> config address <ip-address>This example adds a server at specified IP address:appliance-1(config-server-group-tacacs-group)# servers server 192.0.2.22
- Customize other TACACS+ configuration details, as needed.tacacs config port <port-number> secret-key <secret> source-address <ip-address>This example shows configuring a port number:appliance-1(config-server-192.0.2.22)# tacacs config port 49
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
TACACS+ authentication for users is
configured on the system. When a user logs in, the system attempts to
authenticate them against the configured authentication method. When the
account has a match within any of the configured authentication methods, the
user is authenticated and given access.
OCSP configuration overview
Admin users can configure the
rSeries
system to use Online Certificate Status Protocol
(OCSP) to verify certificate validity and revoke expired certificates. The
system sends an OCSP request, which includes the certificate serial number, to
an OCSP responder, and receives a response with the certificate status (good,
revoked, or unknown). OCSP is a similar to CRL checking, and you can configure
the system to use both at the same time.Configure OCSP for certificate validation from the
CLI
You can configure Online
Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) for certificate validation from the
CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Enable OCSP.system aaa authentication ocsp config enabled
- Configure the OCSP responder address that will be used for client certificate validation using one of these methods:
- Provide the OCSP responder address using the client certificate.appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication ocsp config override-responder off
- Provide the OCSP IP address using a server group.appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication ocsp config override-responder on appliance-1(config)# system aaa server-groups server-group ocsp1 config name ocsp1 type OCSP appliance-1(config-server-group-ocsp1)# servers server 192.0.2.10 appliance-1(config-server-192.0.2.10)# config address 192.0.2.10 appliance-1(config-server-192.0.2.10)# ocsp config port 23456
- Configure additional OCSP options, if needed.The system creates the responder address using default values fornonce-request(on) andresponse-time-skew(300).system aaa authentication ocsp config nonce-request {off|on} response-max-age <time-in-seconds> response-time-skew <time-in-seconds>Fornonce-request, the default value ison. Forresponse-max-age, the default value is-1, which disables the maximum age check. The range is from -1 to 214748364. Forresponse-time skew, the default value is300.
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
Configure an OCSP server group from the CLI
You can configure an Online Certificate
Status Protocol (OCSP) server group from the CLI. The server group can contain
only one OCSP server.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Create an OCSP server group.system aaa server-groups server-group <group-name> config name <group-name> type OCSPThis example creates an OCSP server group namedocsp-group:appliance-1(config)# system aaa server-groups server-group ocsp-group config type OCSP
- Add an OCSP server to the server group.servers server <ip-address> config address <ip-address>This example adds a server at a specified IP address, with the default value for port number (80):appliance-1(config-server-group-ocsp-group)# servers server 192.0.2.25 ocsp config port 88
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
SSH public key authentication overview
Using SSH public key authentication to connect to a remote system is a robust, more
secure alternative to logging in with an account password or passphrase. SSH public key
authentication relies on asymmetric cryptographic algorithms that generate a pair of
separate keys (a key pair), one "private" and the other "public". You keep the private
key a secret and store it on the computer you use to connect to the remote system.
Configure SSH public key authentication from the CLI
You can configure Secure Shell (SSH) public
key authentication from the CLI. You can configure multiple authorized keys in one step.
This feature supports all SSH key algorithms that are supported in the latest SSHD
version. Root users cannot use this feature.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Configure the SSH public key authentication.system aaa authentication users user <username> config authorized_keysPress Enter to enable multi-line mode and paste the contents. Paste the first SSH public key into the prompt, hit enter to paste the next key, and continue until you have entered all keys. Press Ctrl-D to exit multi-line mode.In this example, you configure public key authentication for a specified user:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication users user jdoe config authorized_keys (<string, min: 1 chars>): [Multiline mode, exit with ctrl-D.] > hdsjhfashlksdfklahkjdhsakfdhaskhfkjasdhfjashd
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
- Remove the authorized key.no system aaa authentication users user <username> config authorized_keys
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
User management from the webUI
Configure local password policy from the webUI
A password policy enables you to qualify criteria
for valid passwords and configure maximum password attempts for local authentication
(
/etc/passwd
).- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- In the Local Password Policy area, forMinimum Length, type the minimum number of characters required for a password.The allowed range is 6 to 255.
- ForRequired Characters, enter the minimum number ofNumeric,Uppercase,Lowercase, andSpecialcharacters required in a valid password.
- ForNew/Old Password Differential, enter the number of character changes in the new password that differentiate it from the old password.The default value is 8.
- ForDisallow Username, select whether to check the password for the user name in forward or reversed form.When set toTrue, if any variant of the username is found in the password, the new password is rejected.
- SetApply Password Policy to Root AccounttoTrueto use the same password policy for the root account.The default value isFalse.
- ForMaximum Password Retries, enter the number of times a user can try to create an acceptable password at the prompt.The default value is 3.
- ForMaximum Login Attempts, enter the allowed number of times a user can attempt to log in before the account is temporarily suspended.The default value is 10 tries. If set to 0, there is no limit to the number of login attempts.
- ForLockout Duration, type the amount of time in minutes that must lapse before a previously suspended user's account is unlocked.The default auto value is 1 minute. If the value is set to 0, the administrator will have to manually unlock the user's account.
- ForMax Password Age, type the maximum number of days the password will expire after being changed.If the last change was today and Maximum Password Age is 90, then the password will expire in 91 days. If set to 0 (the default), the password never expires.
- ClickSave.
You have configured the local password
policy. On the same screen, you can configure other authentication
settings.
Add users from the webUI
You can add users to the
rSeries
system from the webUI. Default
root and admin accounts are provided on the system. You can change the
passwords on those accounts, but they cannot be deleted. You can create only admin and operator users from
the webUI. You can create other roles from the CLI.
- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- ClickAdd.
- ForUsername, create a name for the user.
- ForSet Password, create a valid password according to the local password policy defined in the Authentication Settings.
- ForConfirm Password, retype the password.
- From theRolelist, select the role to assign appropriate capabilities for the user.OptionDescriptionAdminUsed for the system administrator. Provides access to the CLI or webUI to configure the system (unrestricted read/write access). Can unlock any users.Resource AdminSimilar to the Admin user role, but cannot create, modify, or delete local user accounts; create, modify, or delete server groups; or modify any authentication settings. This user role can modify their own user detail to change their own password.OperatorProvides read access to system. Has write access to change password only.
- ClickSave & Close.
Create as many users as needed to manage the
system.
Configure basic authentication from the webUI
You can configure basic authentication (user
name and password) from the webUI.
- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- ForBasic Authentication, select whether to enable authenticating using a username and password.The default value isEnabled.
- ClickSave.
Configure token lifetime from the webUI
You can choose how long your webUI session
will remain active (in minutes) by configuring the token lifetime from the
webUI.
- Log in to the webUI using an account with admin access.
- On the left, click.
- ForToken Lifetime, enter the token lifetime length in minutes.The range is from 1 to 1440 minutes. The default value is15.
- ClickSave.
User management from the CLI
Add a user from the CLI
You can create additional users on your system from the CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Add a user.system aaa authentication users user <user-name> config username <user-name> role <role> expiry-date <yyyy-mm-dd>Where expiry-date is the date <yyyy-mm-dd> you want the account to expire. Some other values for expiry-date are -1 for no expiration date (the default value), and 1 for expired.This example creates an admin user namedtestuserwith an account expiration date of November 20, 2025:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication users user testuser config username test role admin expiry-date 2023-11-20These roles are available:RoleDescriptionadminHas full read/write access and can make configuration changes at the level in which they are working.limitedF5 internal use onlyoperatorHas read-only access to every screen and every configuration object at the level in which they are working.resource-adminSimilar to the Admin user role, but cannot create, modify, or delete local user accounts; create, modify, or delete server groups; or modify any authentication settings. This user role can modify their own user detail to change their own password.tenant consoleHas virtual console access to tenants from the CLI but no access to the rSeries system.
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
The system creates the account with the specified role.
Disable a user from the CLI
You can disable user accounts on your system from
the CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Disable a user.An expiry-date of 1 disables the account immediately.system aaa authentication users user <user-name> config expiry-date 1This example disables a user namedtestuser:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication users user testuser config expiry-date 1
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
Delete a user from the CLI
You can delete a specified user from the
CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Delete a user.no system aaa authentication users user <user-name>This example deletes a user namedtestuser:appliance-1(config)# no system aaa authentication users user testuser
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
Set an admin password from the CLI
You can set an admin user's password from the
CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Set a password for an admin user.system aaa authentication users user <user-name> config set-passwordThis example sets the password for an admin user namedtestadmin:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication users user testadmin config set-passwordThe system prompts you to set a new password for the specified admin user.
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
Set maximum password age
You can globally set the maximum password age for
all users from the CLI. To do this, you specify the number of days after which the
password will expire since it was last changed. For example, if the last change was
today and the maximum age is 1, the password will expire tomorrow.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Specify the number of days after which a password will expire since it was last changed.system aaa password-policy config max-age <number-of-days>In this example, you set the number of days to 14:appliance-1(config)# system aaa password-policy config max-age 14
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
When you log in to the CLI, you receive a
message that the password will expire in the specified number of
days.
appliance-1# ssh admin@localhostadmin@localhost's password: Warning: your password will expire in 1 day Last login: Wed Jan 18 05:56:21 2020 from ::1
Change a password from the CLI
You can change the password for a specified user
from the CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Change a specified user's password.system aaa authentication users user <user-name> config change-passwordThis example changes the password for a user namedtestuser:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication users user testuser config change-passwordThe system prompts you to confirm the old password, set a new password, and confirm the new password for the specified user.
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
Modify user options from the CLI
You can modify or set options for a specified user
from the CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Change user options for a user.system aaa authentication users user <user-name> config last-change <time> expiry-date <yyyy-mm-dd>This example sets a last change date of zero (0) and an expiration date of January 1, 2030 for an admin user namedtestuser:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication users user testuser config last-change 0 expiry-date 2030-01-01
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
Configure basic authentication from the CLI
You can configure basic authentication
(that is, logging in to the system using a username and password) from the
CLI.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Configure basic authentication.system aaa authentication config basic {disabled|enabled}This example enables basic authentication:appliance-1(config)# system aaa authentication config basic enabled
- Commit the configuration changes.commit
Configure system idle timeout from the CLI
You can configure how long the CLI is
inactive before you are logged out of the system. If you are connected using an SSH
connection, the system closes the SSH connection after this time expires. You can also
configure how long the system is inactive for a root user before the user is logged out
of the system.
- Log in to the command line interface (CLI) of the system using an account with admin access.When you log in to the system, you are in user (operational) mode.
- Change to config mode.configThe CLI prompt changes to include(config).
- Configure the CLI system idle timeout setting.system settings config idle-timeout <time-in-seconds>A value of 0 (zero) sets the time to infinity, so the user is never logged out. The timeout can be a value from 0 through 8192 seconds. The default value is 1800 seconds (30 minutes).This example sets an idle timeout of 3600 seconds (one hour):appliance-1(config)# system settings config idle-timeout 3600
- Configure the SSH system idle timeout setting for a root user.system settings config sshd-idle-timeout <time-in-seconds>A value of 0 (zero) sets the time to infinity, so the user is never logged out. The timeout can be a value from 0 through 8192 seconds. The default value is 0 (zero).This example sets an SSH system idle timeout of 3600 seconds (one hour):appliance-1(config)# system settings config sshd-idle-timeout 3600
- Commit the configuration changes.commit