Title: LDAP Authentication Notice: Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at . http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 . Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. The authentication in the Apache Rave portal is handled through Spring Security. The supported login mechanisms are currently basic authentication with users stored in the database, OpenId and, since version 0.8-incubating, LDAP. When an LDAP user logs in for the first time in the Apache Rave portal, a user profile in the portal is created with the same username, email address and display name as in the LDAP. When this user logs in again, he is still authenticated against the LDAP server. ## Demo login For the LDAP authentication the demo setup comes with an embedded ApacheDS. To login with the demo setup the following credentials can be used: * johnldap/johnldap * janeldap/janeldap ## LDAP configuration The demo setup of the Apache Rave portal is configured to use an embedded ApacheDS, populated by a users.ldiff file: Authentication is handled by LDAP first. If this fails, Spring Security tries the basic authentication against the database: An Apache Rave portal specific class maps the authenticated LDAP user to an Apache Rave portal profile: With "mailAttributeName" and "displayNameAttributeName" you can configure the names of the attributes from your own LDAP that contain the mail address and display name for a user. When the LdapUserDetailsContextMapper create a user profile, the user gets access to the portal and gets the layout configured in "pageLayoutCode". ## Customizing the LDAP setup First create a custom portal project. There are multiple ways to build your custom Apache Rave instance, but the quickest is to use a Maven WAR overlay. See [Extending Rave](rave-extensions.html) for an example overlay. For the LDAP configuration, the default applicationContext-security.xml needs to be overridden. ### LDAP as only authentication provider If you don't want the fallback to the database for authentication, remove: ### External LDAP server The following line is configured to use the embedded ApacheDS: To use an external LDAP server, replace it with: ## Reference * [Spring Security LDAP documentation](http://static.springsource.org/spring-security/site/docs/3.1.x/reference/ldap.html) * [ApacheDS](http://directory.apache.org/apacheds/1.5/)