YouTrack Standalone 2018.2 Help

Active Directory Auth Module

An Active Directory authentication module lets users log in to YouTrack with credentials that are stored in a directory service. This authentication module is pre-configured for Microsoft Active Directory. You can configure a module to use the standard LDAP scheme or LDAPS over SSL.

The Active Directory authentication module does not import all of the user accounts from the directory service. YouTrack only creates a user account when an unregistered user first logs in to YouTrack.

When Active Directory authentication is enabled, YouTrack checks the directory service for each login attempt. Users who have been removed from the directory service cannot log in.

Prerequisites

If you want to connect to the directory service over SSL, import the trusted SSL certificate for your Active Directory service before you enable the authentication module. If there are any intermediate certificates that sit between the SSL certificate and the root CA certificate, you need to upload a file that contains the full certificate chain.

The option to import a trusted SSL certificate is not supported in the settings for the Active Directory authentication module. Instead, you need to access the SSL Certificates page and import it there. For more information, see SSL Certificates.

Enable Active Directory Authentication

To allow users stored in Microsoft Active Directory to log in to YouTrack, enable an Active Directory authentication module.

To enable Active Directory authentication:

  1. In the Access Management section of the Administration menu, select Auth Modules.

  2. From the Add Module drop-down list, select Active Directory.
    • The New Module dialog opens in the sidebar.

      LDAPAddModuleDialog

  3. In the New Module dialog, enter values for the following settings:

    Setting

    Description

    Name

    Enter a name for the authentication module.

    Server

    Enter the server address of the directory service. For a connection over SSL, change the protocol part of the address to ldaps.

    Port

    Enter the number of the port used to communicate with the directory service.
    • The default port for standard LDAP is 389.

    • The default port for LDAPS is 636.

    SSL

    Select this option to connect to the directory service over SSL. Before you can establish a secure connection, you need to import the trusted SSL certificate for your LDAPS server. For instructions, see SSL Certificates.

    Search Base

    Enter the domain components that define the top-level LDAP DN where user accounts are stored. For example, if your company uses the domain mycompany.com, enter the top-level LDAP DN dc=mycompany,dc=com.
    The value entered in this field is added to the LDAP URL and cannot contain unsafe characters.
    If you use organizational units to manage users, create separate auth modules for each organization. Include the organizational unit in the search base to create a unique LDAP URL for each module. LDAP authentication modules do not support recursive search in the LDAP tree.

  4. Click the Create button.
    • The Active Directory authentication module is enabled. The current status of the module is displayed next to the name of the module in the header.

    • The Auth Modules page displays the settings for the Active Directory authentication module. The module is pre-configured with standard settings that are based on the information you provided in the Add Module dialog. For additional information about the settings on this page, see the Settings section.

      ldapAddedModuleSettings.png

Test the Connection to your Active Directory Service

To verify that the Active Directory authentication module is connected to your Active Directory service, test the connection.

To test the connection:

  1. Click the Test Login button.

  2. In the Test Authentication dialog, enter the credentials of a user who is stored in your Active Directory service:
    • In the Login field, enter the domainusername.

    • In the Password field, enter the password.

  3. Click the Test Login button.
    • YouTrack searches for the specified user account in the Active Directory service. If the user is found, a success notification is displayed. If you get an error, check your user credentials and server URL.

Settings

Use the following settings to fine-tune the connection to your directory service.

Field

Description

Type

Displays the type of directory service that is enabled for third-party authentication in YouTrack.

Name

Stores the name of the authentication module. Use this setting to distinguish this module from other authentication modules in the Auth Modules list. The name is also shown in the list of supported authentication providers on the login form.

Server URL

Stores the LDAP URL of the directory service used to authenticate a login request in YouTrack.

The LDAP URL uses the format ldap://host:port/DN. Enter the full distinguished name (DN) of the directory where user accounts are stored.

SSL keystore

Select an uploaded SSL keystore to encrypt the connection between YouTrack and the directory service. For more information about managing keystores in YouTrack, see SSL Keystores. Also, see the Set Up SSL Keys for SAML 2.0 page: You can follow the procedure to create a key store and use it here.

Bind account

Determines which account is used for the LDAP bind request. For more information, see Bind Account Options.

Bind DN

Stores the value that is used to bind with the directory service. For more information, see Bind Account Options.

Filter

Stores an expression that locates the record for a specific user in the LDAP service. The substitution variable in the expression is replaced with the value entered as the username or email on the login page.

LDAP referral

Determines whether the LDAP authentication module ignores or follows requests from the service to locate additional information in the LDAP directory.
  • If your directory service stores attributes that are mapped to Hub accounts in different partitions, enable the Follow option.

  • When following redirects is not required for user authentication, enable the Ignore option to increase performance.

Bind Account Options

You can configure the module to perform the bind request with the Active Directory service in one of two ways. The method used is determined by the option selected for the Bind account setting.

The value that you use for the Bind DN setting depends on the option that you select for the Bind account setting. Use the following guidelines to set the value for the Bind DN setting:

Option

Description

Guideline for Bind DN Setting

Fixed

Uses a fixed account to bind to the LDAP service and searches for the user you want to authenticate on behalf of the bind user. With this option, you can set up an LDAP authentication module and still use logins that are not part of the Distinguished Name (DN), like an email address or token. This method is also commonly called search + bind or two-step authentication.

To use this method, you need a special account on the directory server that has permission to look up other user accounts in the directory service.

Enter the full DN of the user account that you want to use for the LDAP bind request. This account must have permission to look up other user accounts in the directory service.

Use the Set password control to store the password for this account in YouTrack. The password for the bind user is stored as a hash of the plain-text value.

Dynamic

Derives the user DN from the login and attempts to bind to the LDAP service as the user directly. This method is also commonly called direct bind.

Use a query to bind with the directory service. This query looks up the distinguished name of the user to be authenticated. Reference the username with an expression. The expression maps a substitution variable to the attribute that stores the username in the directory service. The attribute you select determines which query is used in the filter string.

The value entered as the username on the login page is trimmed before it replaces the substitution variable. If the user specifies a domain, it is discarded. For example, a username with the value WORKGROUP\smith is trimmed to smith. To specify a domain, enter the domain name as a static value. For example, WORKGROUP\%u.

Attribute Mapping

When YouTrack finds a record in the LDAP service that matches a filter, it fetches values from the LDAP attributes that are specified for each field and copies them to the user profile in YouTrack. Use the following settings to define the filter criteria and map attributes that are stored in your directory service to Hub accounts that are linked to users in YouTrack.

Field

Description

Login

Required. Maps to the LDAP attribute that stores the value to copy to the Login field in the Hub account. For Active Directory, the default value is sAMAccountName.

Full name

Maps to the LDAP attribute that stores the value to copy to the Full name field in the Hub account.

Email

Maps to the LDAP attribute that stores the value to copy to the Email field in the Hub account.

Jabber

Maps to the LDAP attribute that stores the value to copy to the Jabber field in the Hub account.

VCS user name

Maps to the LDAP attribute that stores the value to copy to the VCS user name field in the Hub account.

Additional Settings

The following options are located at the bottom of the page. Use these settings to manage Hub account creation, group membership, and connection options.

Option

Description

User creation

Enables creation of Hub accounts for unregistered users who log in with an account that is stored in the connected directory service. YouTrack uses the email address to determine whether the user has an existing account.

All LDAP authentication modules must allow user creation. If user creation is denied, unregistered users are shown an error.

Auto-join groups

Adds users to a group when they log in with an account that is stored in the connected directory service. You can select one or more groups. New users that auto-join a group inherit all of the permissions assigned to this group.
We recommend that you add users to at least one group. Otherwise, a new user is only granted the permissions that are currently assigned to the All Users group.

Connection timeout

Sets the period of time to wait to establish a connection to the authorization service. The default setting is 5000 milliseconds (5 seconds).

Read timeout

Sets the period of time to wait to read and retrieve user profile data from the authorization service. The default setting is 5000 milliseconds (5 seconds).

Audit

Links to the Audit Events page in YouTrack. There, you can view a list of changes that were applied to this authentication module.

Sample Configurations

Use the following patterns to configure an Active Directory auth module using the LDAP protocol:

Setting

Value

Server URL

ldap://ldap.company.com:389/dc=company,dc=com

Bind DN

%u@<domain name>

Filter

sAMAccountName=%u

Use the following patterns to configure an Active Directory auth module with a secure connection over SSL:

Setting

Value

Server URL

ldaps://ldap.company.com:636/dc=company,dc=com

Bind DN

%u@<domain name>

Filter

sAMAccountName=%u

Last modified: 7 March 2019