Set Up User Authentication and Authorization with LDAP
On this page
- Required Access
- Prerequisites
- Recommendation
- Considerations
- Conflicts between LDAP Authorization and X.509 Users
- Usernames
- Connection String
- Rolling Restart on Configuration Change
- Using Public IP Addresses
- Limitations
- Procedures
- Configure Authentication with LDAP
- Configure Authorization
- Add an LDAP Database User or Group
- View LDAP Configuration
- Disable LDAP Configuration
- Tutorials for Third-Party LDAP Providers
Note
Starting with MongoDB 8.0, LDAP authentication and authorization is deprecated. The feature is available and will continue to operate without changes throughout the lifetime of MongoDB 8. LDAP will be removed in a future major release.
For details, see LDAP Deprecation.
Note
This feature is not available for any of the following deployments:
Serverless instances
M0
clustersM2/M5
clustersFlex clusters
To learn more, see Limits.
Atlas provides the ability to manage user authentication and authorization from all MongoDB clients using your own Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) server over TLS. A single LDAPS (LDAP over TLS) configuration applies to all clusters in a project.
If you enable user authorization with LDAP, you can create LDAP
groups on the admin
database by mapping LDAP groups to MongoDB
roles on your Atlas databases. To use LDAP groups effectively,
create additional projects within
Atlas to control access to specific deployments in your
organization, such as creating separate Atlas projects for
development and production environments. You can then map an LDAP
group to a role in the Atlas project to provide access to the
desired deployment.
Note
When you enable user authorization and an LDAP user doesn't belong to any LDAP group, Atlas doesn't assign any database roles to the user. When you enable user authentication and you disable user authorization, Atlas assigns MongoDB database roles to the LDAP user.
If you have multiple departments with their own billing needs, alert settings, and project members, consider creating a new set of projects or a new organization for each department or business unit.
Note
Required Access
To manage LDAP users or groups, you must have
Organization Owner
or Project Owner
access to Atlas.
Prerequisites
You must meet the following prerequisites to manage user authentication and authorization using LDAP in Atlas:
Atlas cluster using MongoDB 4.0 or later.
LDAP server using TLS that your Atlas clusters can access over the network using either VPC or VNet peering connection or the cluster nodes' public IP addresses.
LDAP group memberships embedded as an attribute for each user in the LDAP entry for user authorization only.
Recommendation
For your LDAPS service to access Atlas clusters, MongoDB recommends one of two configurations:
Using a VPC or VNet:
Run your LDAP server in a VPC or VNet.
Establish a peering connection to your Atlas project.
Use a public FQDN that resolves to the private IP address of your LDAP server.
Using your data center:
Run your LDAP server with a public FQDN that resolves to a public IP address.
Configure the LDAP server to allow inbound access from the Atlas cluster nodes' public IP addresses.
Considerations
Conflicts between LDAP Authorization and X.509 Users
If you enable LDAP authorization, you can't connect to your clusters with users that authenticate with an Atlas-managed X.509 certificate.
After you enable LDAP authorization, you can connect to your clusters with users that authenticate with an self-managed X.509 certificate. However, the user's Common Name in their X.509 certificate must match the Distinguished Name of a user who is authorized to access your database with LDAP.
Usernames
Atlas uses the full Distinguished Name (DN) of users in your LDAP
server as the Atlas username. For example, an example LDAP user
named ralph
has the following username in Atlas:
cn=ralph,cn=Users,dc=aws-atlas-ldap-01,dc=myteam,dc=com
Connection String
If the administrator enables user authentication or both user authentication and authorization with LDAP, database users must override the following parameters in the connection string for their clients.
authSource
must be$external
authenticationMechanism
must bePLAIN
Example
The following connection string for mongosh
authenticates an LDAP user named rob
:
mongosh "mongodb+srv://cluster0-tijis.mongodb.net/test?authSource=%24external" \ --authenticationMechanism PLAIN \ --username cn=rob,cn=Users,dc=ldaps-01,dc=myteam,dc=com
To copy the connection string:
In Atlas, go to the Clusters page for your project.
If it's not already displayed, select the organization that contains your desired project from the Organizations menu in the navigation bar.
If it's not already displayed, select your desired project from the Projects menu in the navigation bar.
If it's not already displayed, click Clusters in the sidebar.
The Clusters page displays.
Note
If your passwords, database names, or connection strings contain
reserved URI characters, you must escape the characters. For example,
if your password is @bc123
, you must escape the @
character when specifying the password in the connection
string, such as %40bc123
. To learn more, see Special Characters in Connection String Password.
Rolling Restart on Configuration Change
If you change your LDAP configuration, Atlas performs a rolling restart of your cluster. This restart allows Atlas to use the correct settings to authenticate users.
Using Public IP Addresses
You can use public IP addresses that refer to other internal or private IP addresses using Network Address Translation to allow Atlas traffic to your LDAP server. If you do this, be aware that certain activities trigger a change in the Atlas cluster's public IP addresses.
If you allowed LDAP server access based on public IP addresses, changes to the Atlas cluster's public IP address prevent LDAP access. To restore LDAP access, add the new Atlas cluster public IP addresses to the LDAP access list.
Limitations
You cannot use both LDAP and SCRAM authentication for the same database user.
Procedures
Configure Authentication with LDAP
Note
You can use the same Atlas CLI command to configure LDAP authentication and LDAP authorization.
To save one LDAP configuration for the project you specify using the Atlas CLI, run the following command:
atlas security ldap save [options]
To learn more about the command syntax and parameters, see the Atlas CLI documentation for atlas security ldap save.
Use the following procedure to configure user authentication with LDAP for all clusters in a project.
In Atlas, go to the Advanced page for your project.
If it's not already displayed, select the organization that contains your project from the Organizations menu in the navigation bar.
If it's not already displayed, select your project from the Projects menu in the navigation bar.
In the sidebar, click Advanced under the Security heading.
The Advanced page displays.
Toggle the button next to LDAP Authentication to On.
Note
You might incur additional costs when you enable this feature. See Advanced Security.
Configure Authorization
Note
You can use the same Atlas CLI command to configure LDAP authentication and LDAP authorization.
To save one LDAP configuration for the project you specify using the Atlas CLI, run the following command:
atlas security ldap save [options]
To learn more about the command syntax and parameters, see the Atlas CLI documentation for atlas security ldap save.
Use the following procedure to configure user authorization with LDAP for all clusters in a project.
Important
You must enable authentication with LDAP before enabling authorization.
When you enable and configure LDAP authorization, database users who are only configured for LDAP authentication will no longer be able to access databases.
In Atlas, go to the Advanced page for your project.
If it's not already displayed, select the organization that contains your project from the Organizations menu in the navigation bar.
If it's not already displayed, select your project from the Projects menu in the navigation bar.
In the sidebar, click Advanced under the Security heading.
The Advanced page displays.
Enter a query template in Query Template.
When a user attempts to perform an action, Atlas executes the LDAP query template to obtain the LDAP groups to which the authenticated user belongs. Atlas permits the action if the query returns at least one group that is authorized to perform the action. Atlas does not permit the action if the query returns no groups that are authorized to perform the action.
Atlas substitutes the authenticated username in the {USER}
placeholder when it runs the query. The query is relative to the host
specified in Server Hostname.
The formatting for the query must conform to RFC4515.
If you do not provide a query template, Atlas applies the default
value: {USER}?memberOf?base
.
Add an LDAP Database User or Group
To create a database user for your project using the Atlas CLI, run the following command:
atlas dbusers create [builtInRole]... [options]
To learn more about the command syntax and parameters, see the Atlas CLI documentation for atlas dbusers create.
After you configure authorization with LDAP, follow these steps to create an LDAP database user or group:
In Atlas, go to the Database Access page for your project.
If it's not already displayed, select the organization that contains your project from the Organizations menu in the navigation bar.
If it's not already displayed, select your project from the Projects menu in the navigation bar.
In the sidebar, click Database Access under the Security heading.
The Database Access page displays.
Select LDAP.
In the Authentication Method section of the Add New Database User modal window, select the box labeled LDAP.
Note
If you don't see an LDAP option, you must configure authorization with LDAP.
Enter LDAP authentication string.
Enter the authentication string for the LDAP user or LDAP group.
Example
For the LDAP user named myUser in the project named projectName, enter the following:
cn=myUser,ou=projectName,dc=com
If you enable LDAP authorization, you can create LDAP users, but they can't access your clusters. Add an LDAP group to access clusters with LDAP authorization enabled.
Assign privileges.
Select the database user privileges. You can assign privileges to the new user in one or more of the following ways:
Select a built-in role from the Built-in Role dropdown menu. You can select one built-in role per database user within the Atlas UI. If you delete the default option, you can click Add Built-in Role to select a new built-in role.
If you have any custom roles defined, you can expand the Custom Roles section and select one or more roles from the Custom Roles dropdown menu. Click Add Custom Role to add more custom roles. You can also click the Custom Roles link to see the custom roles for your project.
Expand the Specific Privileges section and select one or more privileges from the Specific Privileges dropdown menu. Click Add Specific Privilege to add more privileges. This assigns the user specific privileges on individual databases and collections.
Atlas can apply a built-in role, multiple custom roles, and multiple specific privileges to a single database user.
To remove an applied role or privilege, click Delete next to the role or privilege you wish to delete.
Note
Atlas doesn't display the Delete icon next to your Built-in Role, Custom Role, or Specific Privilege selection if you selected only one option. You can delete the selected role or privilege once you apply another role or privilege.
For more information on authorization, see Role-Based Access Control and Built-in Roles in the MongoDB manual.
Specify the resources in the project that the user can access.
By default, users can access all the clusters and federated database instances in the project. You can restrict access to specific clusters and federated database instances by doing the following:
Toggle Restrict Access to Specific Clusters/Federated Database Instances to ON.
Select the clusters and federated database instances to grant the user access to from the Grant Access To list.
Save as a temporary user or temporary group.
Toggle Temporary User or Temporary Group to On.
Choose a time after which Atlas can delete the user or group from the Temporary User Duration or Temporary Group Duration dropdown. You can select one of the following time periods for the user or group to exist:
6 hours
1 day
1 week
In the Database Users tab, temporary users and groups display the time remaining until Atlas will delete the user or group. Once Atlas deletes the user or group, any client or application that uses the temporary user's or group's credentials loses access to the cluster.
View LDAP Configuration
To return the details for one LDAP configuration using the Atlas CLI, run the following command:
atlas security ldap get [options]
To learn more about the command syntax and parameters, see the Atlas CLI documentation for atlas security ldap get.
To view your current LDAP settings using the Atlas UI:
In Atlas, go to the Advanced page for your project.
If it's not already displayed, select the organization that contains your project from the Organizations menu in the navigation bar.
If it's not already displayed, select your project from the Projects menu in the navigation bar.
In the sidebar, click Advanced under the Security heading.
The Advanced page displays.
Disable LDAP Configuration
Note
You can use the same Atlas CLI command to disable LDAP authentication settings and LDAP authorization settings.
To delete one LDAP configuration using the Atlas CLI, run the following command:
atlas security ldap delete [options]
To learn more about the command syntax and parameters, see the Atlas CLI documentation for atlas security ldap delete.
To disable your current LDAP settings using the Atlas UI:
In Atlas, go to the Advanced page for your project.
If it's not already displayed, select the organization that contains your project from the Organizations menu in the navigation bar.
If it's not already displayed, select your project from the Projects menu in the navigation bar.
In the sidebar, click Advanced under the Security heading.
The Advanced page displays.
Tutorials for Third-Party LDAP Providers
Use the following tutorials to configure Atlas to authenticate and authorize users from third-party LDAP providers: