Configuring a Delegated Authentication Directory

A Delegated Authentication directory combines the features of an internal Crowd directory with delegated LDAP authentication. This means that you can have your users authenticated via an external LDAP directory while managing the users and groups in Crowd. You can use Crowd's flexible and simple group management when the LDAP groups do not suit your requirements. Alternatively, you can have Crowd import users' group memberships from LDAP each time they authenticate.


The username must be the same in the Crowd Delegated Authentication directory and in the LDAP directory. If a user is renamed in LDAP, Crowd will automatically rename the user in the Delegated Authentication directory.

Delegated Authentication directories do not allow you to browse the LDAP data. The directory delegates user authentication to LDAP, but to be able to list users and groups, you will need to add them to the directory. See more details in the Next Steps section of this page.




Example of using a Delegated Authentication Directory

You can set up a simple group configuration in Crowd for use with Confluence and other Atlassian products, while authenticating your users against the corporate LDAP directory. You can also avoid the performance issues which might result from downloading large numbers of groups from LDAP.

The diagram below gives a conceptual overview of delegated LDAP authentication. This example assumes that you have:

  • The Confluence application integrated with Crowd.
  • A Crowd Delegated Authentication directory called 'Employees' which contains the group 'confluence-users'.
  • An LDAP directory containing all your employees and their authentication details (e.g. username and password).

Configuration Steps

Before setting up a new Delegated Authentication Directory, please review to the notes on LDAP object structures in the page about LDAP connectors.

To configure a Delegated Authentication directory:

  1. Log in to the Crowd Administration Console.
  2. In the top navigation bar, click Directories.
    The Directory Browser will open.
  3. Click Add Director.
  4. Select Delegated Authentication button.
  5. Complete the configuration information required on each of the tabs to finish setting up the directory.

If a user logs in successfully via LDAP authentication but does not yet exist in Crowd, Crowd will automatically add them to the Delegated Authentication directory. You will then need to add the user to any necessary groups, to allow them to access applications where group membership is required. If you have enabled the "Synchronize Group Memberships" option, groups and group memberships from LDAP will be automatically imported each time a user authenticates.

Next Steps

After configuring your new directory:

  1. Map the directory to the appropriate applications.
  2. Consider how you would like to add your users to Crowd's Delegated Authentication directory. There are a few options:
    • Manually add the users to the Crowd directory.
    • Use Crowd's Directory importer to copy your LDAP users into your Delegated Authentication directory.
    • Let Crowd do it for you, at login time by enabling the Synchronize User Details option when you configure the directory.

  3. Configure LDAP connection pooling to improve the performance of your directory.


Last modified on Apr 15, 2024

Was this helpful?

Yes
No
Provide feedback about this article
Powered by Confluence and Scroll Viewport.