LDAP Integration
LDAP integration in TeamCity has two levels: authentication (login) and users synchronization:
authentication allows you to login in to TeamCity using LDAP server credentials.
once LDAP authentication is configured, you can enable LDAP synchronization which allows the TeamCity user-set to be automatically populated with the user data from LDAP.
LDAP integration is generic and can be configured for Active Directory or other LDAP servers.
LDAP integration might be not trivial to configure, so it might require some trial and error approach to get the right settings. Please review Typical LDAP Configurations. If a problem occurs, LDAP logs should give you enough information to understand possible misconfigurations. If you are experiencing difficulties configuring LDAP integration after going through this document and investigating the logs, please contact us and let us know your LDAP settings with a detailed description of what you want to achieve and what you currently get.
Authentication
To allow logging into TeamCity with LDAP credentials, you need to configure LDAP connection settings in the ldap-config.properties
file and enable LDAP authentication in the server's Authentication section.
If you need to configure authentication without access to web UI refer to the corresponding section in the previous documentation version.
When the Allow creating new users on the first login
option is selected (this is the default) a new user account will be created on the first successful login. The TeamCity user names for the new users will be derived from their LDAP data based on the configured setting. All newly created users belong to the User Group group and have all roles assigned to this group. If some specific roles are needed for the newly registered users, these roles can be granted via the All Users group.
TeamCity stores user accounts and details in its own database. For information on automatic user creation and automatic population of user details from LDAP, refer to Synchronization section below.
ldap-config.properties Configuration
LDAP integration settings are configured in the <TeamCity data directory> /config/ldap-config.properties
file on the server.
Create the file by copying <TeamCity data directory> /config/ldap-config.properties.dist
file and renaming it to the <TeamCity data directory> /config/ldap-config.properties
; follow the comments in the file to edit the default settings as required.
The file uses the standard Java properties file syntax, so all the values in the file must be properly escaped. The file is re-read on any modification so you do not need to restart the server to apply changes in the file.
It is strongly recommended to back up the previous version of the file: if you misconfigure LDAP integration, you may no longer be able to log in into TeamCity. The users who are already logged in are not affected by the modified LDAP integration settings because users are authenticated only on login.
The mandatory property in the ldap-config.properties
file is java.naming.provider.url
that configures the server and root DN. The property stores the URL to the LDAP server node that is used in following LDAP queries. For example, ldap://dc.example.com:389/CN=Users,DC=Example,DC=Com
. Please note that the value of the property should use URL-escaping if necessary. e.g. use %20
if you need the space character.
Configuring User Login
The general login sequence is as follows:
based on the username entered in the login form by the user, an LDAP search is performed (defined by the
teamcity.users.login.filter
LDAP filter where the user-entered username is referenced via the$login$
or$capturedLogin$
substring within the users base LDAP node (defined byteamcity.users.base
),if the search is successful, authentication (LDAP bind) is performed using the DN found during the search and the user-entered password,
if the authentication is successful, TeamCity user is created if necessary and the user is logged in. The name of the TeamCity user is retrieved from an attribute of the found LDAP entry (the attribute name is defined via the
teamcity.users.username
property)
When users log in via LDAP, TeamCity does not store the user passwords. On each user login, authentication is performed by a direct login into LDAP with the credentials based on the values entered in the login form.
Please note that in certain configurations (for example, with java.naming.security.authentication=simple
) the login information will be sent to the LDAP server in the unencrypted form. For securing the connection, refer to Sun documentation. Another option is to configure communications via the ldaps protocol.
The related external link: How To Set Up Secure LDAP Authentication with TeamCity by Alexander Groß.
Active Directory
The following template enables authentication against active directory:
Add the following code to the < >/config/ldap-config.properties
file (assuming the domain name is "Example.Com
" and domain controller is "dc.example.com
").
Advanced Configuration
If you need to fine-tune LDAP connection settings, you can add the java.naming
options to the ldap-config.properties
file: they will be passed to the underlying Java library. The default options are retrieved using java.naming.factory.initial=com.sun.jndi.ldap.LdapCtxFactory
. Refer to the Java documentation page for more information about property names and values.
You can use an LDAP explorer to browse LDAP directory and verify the settings (for example, http://www.jxplorer.org/ or http://www.ldapbrowser.com/softerra-ldap-browser.htm).
There is an ability to specify failover servers using the following pattern:
The servers are contacted until any of them responds. There is no particular order in which the address list is processed.
Synchronization
Synchronization with LDAP in TeamCity allows you to:
Retrieve the user's profile data from LDAP
Update the user groups membership based on LDAP groups
Automatically create and remove users in TeamCity based on information retrieved from LDAP
TeamCity supports one-way synchronization with LDAP: the data is retrieved from LDAP and stored in the TeamCity database. Periodically, TeamCity fetches data from LDAP and updates users in TeamCity.
When synchronization is enabled, you can review the related data and run on-demand synchronization in the Administration | LDAP Synchronization section of the server settings.
Common Configuration
You need to have LDAP authentication configured for the synchronization to function.
By default, the synchronization is turned off. To turn it on, add the following option to ldap-config.properties
file:
You also need to specify the following mandatory properties:
java.naming.security.principal
andjava.naming.security.credentials
- they specify the user credentials which are used by TeamCity to connect to LDAP and retrieve data,teamcity.users.base
andteamcity.users.filter
- these specify the settings to search for usersteamcity.users.username
- the name of the LDAP attribute containing the TeamCity user's username. Based on this setting LDAP entries are mapped to the TeamCity users.
No users are created or deleted on enabling user's synchronization. Check the section Creating-and-Deleting-Users for the related configuration.
User Profile Data
When synchronization is properly configured, TeamCity can retrieve user-related information from LDAP (e-mail, full name, or any custom property) and store it as TeamCity user's details. If updated in LDAP, the data will be updated in the user's profile in TeamCity. If modified in user's profile in TeamCity, the data will no longer be updated from LDAP for the modified fields. All the user fields synchronization properties store the name of LDAP field to retrieve the information from.
The user's profile synchronization is performed on user creation and also periodically for all users.
The list of supported user settings:
teamcity.users.username
teamcity.users.property.displayName
teamcity.users.property.email
teamcity.users.property.plugin:notificator:jabber:jabber-account
teamcity.users.property.plugin:vcs:<VCS type>:anyVcsRoot
— VCS username for all <VCS type> roots. The following VCS types are supported: svn, perforce, jetbrains.git, cvs, tfs, vss, clearcase, starteam.
Example properties can be seen by configuring them for a user in the web UI and then listing the properties via REST API.
Since TeamCity 8.0, there is an experimental feature which allows mapping user profile properties in TeamCity to a formatted combination of LDAP properties rather than to a specific property on user synchronization. To enable the mapping, add teamcity.users.properties.resolve=true
into ldap-config.properties. Then you can use the %-references to LDAP attributes in the form of %ldap.userEntry.<attribute>%
in the user property definitions, e.g.
User Group Membership
TeamCity can automatically update users membership in groups based on the LDAP-provided data.
To configure Group membership:
Create groups in TeamCity manually.
Specify the mapping of LDAP groups to TeamCity groups in the
<TeamCity data directory> /config/ldap-mapping.xml
file. Use theldap-mapping.xml.
TeamCity Data Directory as an example: TeamCity user groups are determined by the Group Key, LDAP groups are specified by the group DN.Set the required properties in the
ldap-config.properties
file, the groups settings section:teamcity.options.groups.synchronize
- enables user group membership synchronizationteamcity.groups.base
andteamcity.groups.filter
- specifies the LDAP base node and filter to find the groups in LDAP (those configured in the ldap-mapping.xml file should be a subset of the groups found by these settings )teamcity.groups.property.member
specifies the LDAP attribute holding the members of the group.
Note that TeamCity openly operates with the users matched by teamcity.users.base
and teamcity.users.filter
settings, so only the users found by these properties will be processed during the group membership synchronization process.
On each synchronization run, TeamCity updates the membership of users in the groups configured in the mapping. By default, TeamCity synchronizes membership only for users residing directly in the groups.
To map nested LDAP groups to TeamCity:
either (since TeamCity 2017.1) specify
teamcity.groups.retrieveUsersFromNestedGroups=true
in ldap-config.properties file and make sure all the groups hierarchy is matched by the teamcity.groups.base'/'teamcity.groups.filter
settingsor copy your LDAP groups structure in TeamCity groups, together with the group inclusions. Then configure the mapping between the TeamCity groups and corresponding LDAP groups.
If either an LDAP group or a TeamCity group that is configured in the mapping is not found, an error is reported. You can review the errors found during the last synchronization run in the Administration | LDAP Synchronization section of the server settings.
See also example settings for Active Directory synchronization.
Creating and Deleting Users
TeamCity can automatically create users in TeamCity, if they are found in one of the mapped LDAP groups and groups synchronization is turned on via teamcity.options.groups.synchronize
option.
By default, automatic user creation is turned off. To turn it on, set teamcity.options.createUsers
property to true
in ldap-config.properties
file.
TeamCity can automatically delete users in TeamCity if they cannot be found in LDAP or do not belong to an LDAP group that is mapped to predefined "All Users" group. By default, automatic user deletion is turned off as well; set teamcity.options.deleteUsers
property to turn it on.
Username migration
The username for the existing users can be updated upon first successful login. For instance, suppose the user previously logged in using 'DOMAIN\user' name, thus the string 'DOMAIN\user' was stored in TeamCity as the username. To synchronize the data with LDAP, the user can change the username to 'user' using the following options:
The first property allows you to capture the username from the input login and use it to authenticate the user (can be particularly useful when the domain 'DOMAIN' isn't stored anywhere in LDAP). The second property teamcity.users.login.filter
allows you to fetch the username from LDAP by specifying the search filter to find this user (other mandatory properties to use this feature: teamcity.users.base
and teamcity.users.username
). The third property allows you to find the 'DOMAIN\user' username when login with just 'user', and replace it with either the captured login, or with the username from LDAP.
Note that if any of these properties are not set or cannot be applied, the username isn't changed (the input login name is used). More configuration examples are available here.
Miscellaneous
Switching to LDAP Authentication
When you add the LDAP authentication module on a TeamCity server which already has users, the users can still log in using the previous authentication modules credentials (unless you remove the modules). On a successful LDAP login, LDAP retrieves a username as configured by the teamcity.users.username
property and if there is already a user with such TeamCity username, user logs in as the matching user. If there is no existing user, a new one is created with the username retrieved from LDAP.
Scrambling credentials in ldap-config.properties file
Since TeamCity 9.0 java.naming.security.credentials
property can be used to configure either plain-text or scrambled-form passwords. To get the scrambled password value, execute the following command (must be executed from <TeamCity installation directory>/webapps/ROOT/WEB-INF/lib directory:
For Windows: java -cp serviceMessages.jar;common-api.jar;commons-codec.jar;commons-codec-1.3.jar;log4j-1.2.12.jar jetbrains.buildServer.serverSide.crypt.ScrambleMain "<text to scramble>"
For Linux: java -cp serviceMessages.jar: common-api.jar: commons-codec.jar: commons-codec-1.3.jar:log4j-1.2.12.jar jetbrains.buildServer.serverSide.crypt.ScrambleMain "<text to scramble>"
Note that scrambling is not encryption: it protects the password from being easily remembered when seen occasionally, but it does not protect against getting the real password value when someone gets the scrambled password value.
Debugging LDAP Integration
Internal LDAP logs are stored in logs/teamcity-ldap.log*
files in the server logs. If you encounter an issue with LDAP configuration, it is advised that you look into the logs as the issue can often be figured out from the messages in there. To get detailed logs of LDAP login and synchronization processes, use the "debug-ldap" logging preset.
If you want to report an LDAP issue to us, make sure to include LDAP settings (<TeamCity data directory>/config/ldap-config.properties
and ldap-mapping.xml
files, with password inldap-config.properties
masked) and debug LDAP logs fully covering a login/synchronization sequence (include all teamcity-ldap.log* files ). Please make sure to describe the related structure of your LDAP (noting the attributes of related LDAP entities) and detail expected/actual behavior. The archive with the data can be sent to us via one of the supported ways.