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FAQ#

Logs#

When it comes to troubleshooting issues in the Gluu Server--from service hiccups to outages--your server logs are the best place to gather relevant information.

See what's going on by tailing the identity and oxauth logs:

$ tail -f /opt/gluu-server-3.1.1/opt/gluu/jetty/identity/logs/* \
          /opt/gluu-server-3.1.1/opt/gluu/jetty/oxauth/logs/*

Running out of disk space#

Run the following commands if you find your instance running out of disk space:

# /etc/init.d/gluu-server-3.1.1 stop
# rm -rf /opt/gluu-server-3.1.1/opt/jetty-9.3/temp/*
# /etc/init.d/gluu-server-3.1.1 start

Connect a remote debugger#

Connecting your local debugger up to Gluu can help with troubleshooting.

Enable remote debugging#

Change the configuration of the init.d scripts for the identity and oxauth processes:

# /etc/init.d/gluu-server-3.1.1 login
# vim /etc/default/identity

Change:

JAVA_OPTIONS="-server -Xms256m -Xmx858m -XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=368m
-XX:+DisableExplicitGC -Dgluu.base=/etc/gluu
-Dserver.base=/opt/gluu/jetty/identity
-Dlog.base=/opt/gluu/jetty/identity -Dpython.home=/opt/jython
-Dorg.eclipse.jetty.server.Request.maxFormContentSize=50000000"

To:

JAVA_OPTIONS="
  -server -Xms256m -Xmx858m 
  -XX:MaxMetaspaceSize=368m 
  -XX:+DisableExplicitGC 
  -Dgluu.base=/etc/gluu 
  -Dserver.base=/opt/gluu/jetty/identity 
  -Dlog.base=/opt/gluu/jetty/identity 
  -Dpython.home=/opt/jython 
  -Dorg.eclipse.jetty.server.Request.maxFormContentSize=50000000 
  -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=n,address=6005
"

The important bit is the last line starting with -Xrunjdwp.

Then restart the identity process:

# /etc/init.d/identity restart

Do the same in /etc/default/oxauth, but choose a different port for the debugger to connect to:

-Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=n,address=5005"

Then restart oxauth:

# /etc/init.d/oxauth restart

Now, if you're running the gluu system inside a virtual machine (or just a different machine than your host machine), forward the ports 6005 and 5005 to your local machine. Type this command on your local machine, where you forward these two ports as you ssh into the Gluu machine:

$ ssh -L5005:localhost:5005 -L6005:localhost:6005 user@gluu

As long as you keep this ssh connection open, you can access the debug ports 5005 and 6005 as if they were running locally.

Now, you can open up your favorite IDE like IntelliJ IDEA, Eclipse or Emacs and set up the debugger to connect to 5005 for oxauth and 6005 for identity.

Grab the source#

For remote debugging to make sense, you must have the source code checked out locally and you must check out the Git tag corresponding to the gluu server you're running.

For oxAuth:

$ git clone https://github.com/GluuFederation/oxAuth.git
$ cd oxAuth
$ git checkout version_3.1.1

For identity:

$ git clone https://github.com/GluuFederation/oxTrust.git
$ cd oxTrust
$ git checkout version_3.1.1

Connect an external LDAP browser#

Sooner or later you will probably want to peek at what is stored in the Gluu Server's local LDAP. This means connecting something like Apache Directory Studio to the slapd process running inside the chroot container.

You can find the configuration you need in /opt/gluu-server-3.1.1/etc/gluu/conf/ox-ldap.properties, e.g.:

bindDN: cn=directory manager,o=gluu
bindPassword: foobar
servers: localhost:1636

Forward the 1636 the same way as you did with the debug ports above. You can then see full details like how OpenID Connect clients are stored and how user objects are mapped in the LDAP tree.

Changing hostnames/IP addresses/listening ports#

It is not recommended to change the hostname or IP address or the listening port of any installed Gluu Server instance. The hostname and the IP address is used in many settings stored in LDAP configuration entries, Apache/Jetty configuration and into the custom authentication script. It is strongly recommended to use a fresh install in a new VM.

Note

Please use static IP address with reverse proxy or load balancer or simple port forwarding.

Setting the port to something other than 443#

Ports other than 443 are not supported as the port is used by Apache Web Server. In theory, the change must reflect in the SAML and OpenID Connect metadata and still there might be errors.

Note

Please use a virtual ethernet interface and a different IP address on your server

Request email instead of username for login#

In oxTrust navigate to the Manage Authentication tab within the Configuration section. By default the Primary Key and Local Key are set to uid. Set those va lues to mail and now your Gluu Server will expect email as the identifier instead of username.

change2mail

Now you will want to update your IDP login page to display Email Address as the requested identifier. In order to do that you need to modify the login.xhtm   l file, which is located in /opt/jetty-x.x/temp/jetty-localhost-xxxx-oxauth.war-_oxauth-any-1234.dir/webapp. Insert Email Address as the value for outputLabel; this snippet is under the dialog class. S   ee the screenshot below. Alternative solution is to put customized login.xhtml into /opt/gluu/jetty/oxauth/custom/pages and restart oxauth service after that:

# service oxauth restart

update-login

Warning

oxTrust is a tool for administrators and it must nto be used as a user facing application.

Installing a patch#

Follow the documentation for updating a .war file.

Adding admin users#

Please follow these steps to restore your Gluu admin account (you will probably need to substitute actual port, bind names and hostnames with ones used by your installation):

1) Login into Gluu's chroot environment with the command below:

# service gluu-server login

2) Run this command:

#/opt/opendj/bin/ldapsearch -p 1636 -Z -X -D 'cn=directory manager,o=gluu' -w 'YOUR_BIND_PASSWORD' -b o=gluu gluuGroupType=gluuManagerGroup 1.1

and remember the displayed dn of the Gluu Manager Group for future use.

3) Run this command:

# /opt/opendj/bin/ldapsearch -p 1636 -Z -X -D 'cn=directory manager,o=gluu' -w 'YOUR_BIND_PASSWORD' -b o=gluu ou=people 1.1

and remember the displayed dn of the People ou for future use.

4) While staying in the chrooted environment, create the file ~/add_user.ldif using your favorite text editor, and copy the following lines to it:

dn: inum=tempadmin,ou=people,o=@!F9CC.D762.4778.1032!0001!2C72.BB87,o=gluu
changetype: add
uid: tempadmin
objectClass: gluuPerson
objectClass: top
givenName: tempadmin
sn: tempadmin
inum: tempadmin
gluuStatus: active
userPassword: 1q2w3e

Please note the string's segment marked with bold: you will have to substitute it with dn of your own People ou which you've acquired in step 3).

5) Run this command:

# /opt/opendj/bin/ldapmodify -p 1636 -Z -X -D 'cn=directory manager,o=gluu' -w 'YOUR_BIND_PASSWORD' -f ~/add_user.ldif

This will create new user tempadmin with attributes provided via file created in step 4).

6) Now create file add_2_group.ldif in your home ("~/") directory and copy the following lines to it:

dn: inum=@!F9CC.D762.4778.1032!0001!2C72.BB87!0003!60B7,ou=groups,o=@!f9cc.d762.4778.1032!0001!2c72.bb87,o=gluu
changetype: modify
add: member
member: inum=tempadmin,ou=people,o=@!f9cc.d762.4778.1032!0001!2c72.bb87,o=gluu

Again, please note the strings' segment marked with bold: you will have to substitute contents of the "dn:" string with dn of your own Gluu Manager Group which you've acquired in step 2), and for "member:" string you will have to use the dn of tempadmin user (the one you already specified in the 1st line of the file in step 4).

7) Run this command:

# /opt/opendj/bin/ldapmodify -p 1636 -Z -X -D 'cn=directory manager,o=gluu' -w 'YOUR_BIND_PASSWORD' -f ~/add_2_group.ldif

This will add tempadmin user to the IdP managers group and you can then login and assign another user to act as admin.

DNS errors#

It is possible that even after configuring everything there is a DNS resolve error in Gluu Server. The reason is the DNS used inside the chroot container; the dns used by the container is the Google DNS servers and the DNS for the host OS is not used. Therefore to fix this issue:

  • Change the DNS inside the container by editing the /etc/resolv.conf file and adding the DNS used by your organization

How to recover an admin password#

The Gluu Server stores the admin password in the file /install/community-edition-setup/setup.properties.last under the property ldapPass. Retrieve the data using the following command:

# grep ldapPass= /install/community-edition-setup/*.last

Warning

It is strongly recommended to remove the file from any production environment or encrypt the file

Revert an authentication method#

You should always test new authentication methods in a different browser to reduce the chance of lockout. However, while testing authentication scripts and mechanisms it is not unlikely that you will find yourself locked out of the Gluu Server admin GUI. There are two Methods included in 'Default Authentication Mode': (a) Default acr and (b) oxTrust acr. LDAP attributes value of these two methods are 'oxAuthenticationMode' and 'oxTrustAuthenticationMode' accordingly.

If you changed both values ( Default acr + oxTrust acr ) durning testing, you have to modify both attribute values. Otherwise just one. The following method can be used to revert back to the previous authentication method:

  1. Run the following command to collect the inum for the Gluu Server installation:

    $/opt/opendj/bin/ldapsearch -h localhost -p 1636 -Z -X -D "cn=directory manager,o=gluu" -j ~/.pw -b "ou=appliances,o=gluu" -s one "objectclass=*" oxAuthenticationMode [ Use `oxTrustAuthenticationMode` for oxTrust acr ] 
    
  2. Create a LDIF file with the contents below, here we are replacing both Default acr and oxTrust acr:

dn: inum=@!C40A.6FB7.42B8.3D7A!0002!899B.18F8,ou=appliances,o=gluu
changetype: modify
replace: oxAuthenticationMode
oxAuthenticationMode: auth_ldap_server
-
replace: oxTrustAuthenticationMode
oxTrustAuthenticationMode: auth_ldap_server
As an example, we shall call this file `changeAuth.ldif`.

!!! Note
    Replace the `inum` from the example above with the `inum` of your Gluu Server from the `ldapsearch` command.
  1. Replace the the authentication mode using ldapmodify command.
    $/opt/opendj/bin/ldapmodify -h localhost -p 1636 -Z -x -D "cn=directory manager,o=gluu" -w "{password provided during setup}" -f revert.ldif
    

Reverting authentication could also done using LDAP browser and modifying oxAuthenticationMode to 'internal'. Below are the steps:

  1. Open LDAP in a LDAP Browser (JXplorer is used here and recommended).
  2. Navigate to "gluu > appliances > {GUID or appliance number}". Revert authentication
  3. Search for "oxAuthenticationMode" and "oxTrustAuthenticationMode" attribute and delete the values. Revert authentication attrb
    • OxAuthenticationMode attribute is used for Login pages, which stores the name of the custom script used.
    • OxTrustAuthenticationMode is used for OxTrust Admin UI page.
  4. Submit the changes.
  5. Try to access the login page or Gluu Admin UI. As a secondary option, InPrivate or Incognito or Private Browser from various Browsers can be used.

No admin access after Cache Refresh?#

Add the password for your admin account to ~/.pw and then use the commands below to add yourself as an admin.

# set this to your actual user name
export newgluuadmin='myusername'

# this is the file that will hold the info to be imported
export ldiffile='addManagers.ldif'

# run this and verify that the output is for your account
/opt/opendj/bin/ldapsearch -h localhost -p 1636 -D "cn=directory manager,o=gluu" -j ~/.pw -Z -X -b "o=gluu" "uid=$newgluuadmin" uid givenName sn cn

dn: inum=@!134D.3C3D.796E.FECE!0001!E022.CC3C!0000!A8F2.DE1E.D7FB,ou=people,o=@!134D.
 3C3D.796E.FECE!0001!E022.CC3C,o=gluu
uid: myusername
givenName: John
sn: Doe
cn: John Doe

Now you can run these commands to make the file above:

head -n1 /opt/opendj/ldif/groups.ldif > $ldiffile
echo 'changetype: modify' >> $ldiffile
echo 'add: member' >> $ldiffile
echo "member: $(/opt/opendj/bin/ldapsearch -h localhost -p 1636 -D "cn=directory manager,o=gluu" -j ~/.pw -Z -X -b "o=gluu" "uid=$newgluuadmin" uid givenName sn cn |grep -A1 dn |cut -d ' ' -f 2- | sed 'N;s/\n//')" >> $ldiffile

The resulting ldif will look like this:

dn: inum=@!134D.3C3D.796E.FECE!0001!E022.CC3C!0003!60B7,ou=groups,o=@!134D.3C3D.796E.FECE!0001!E022.CC3C,o=gluu
changetype: modify
add: member
member: inum=@!134D.3C3D.796E.FECE!0001!E022.CC3C!0000!A8F2.DE1E.D7FB,ou=people,o=@!134D.3C3D.796E.FECE!0001!E022.CC3C,o=gluu

Once the ldif looks right, run this to grant your account admin rights in Gluu:

/opt/opendj/bin/ldapmodify -h localhost -p 1636 -D "cn=directory manager,o=gluu" -j ~/.pw -Z -X -f addManagers.ldif

Log into the web interface and pick up where you left off :)

How do I present a different login page depending on where the user came from (i.e. based on the SP/RP)?#

SAML#

The SAML IDP sends an authorization request to oxAuth for user authentication.. In the request there is a JWT state parameter which contains a claim called relyingPartyId. You can use this relyingPartyId to render the proper form based on the SP... so SP=relyingPartyId.